Literature DB >> 7482804

How do thalamic axons find their way to the cortex?

Z Molnár1, C Blakemore.   

Abstract

A cascade of simple mechanisms influences thalamic innervation of the neocortex. The cortex exerts a remote growth-promoting influence on thalamic axons when they start to grow out, becomes growth-permissive when the axons begin to invade, and later expresses a 'stop signal', causing termination in layer 4. However, any part of the thalamus will innervate any region of developing cortex in culture, and the precise topographic distribution of thalamic fibres in vivo is unlikely to depend exclusively on regional chemoaffinity. The 'handshake hypothesis' proposes that axons from the thalamus and from early-born cortical preplate cells meet and intermingle in the basal telencephalon, whereafter thalamic axons grow over the scaffold of preplate axons, and become 'captured' for a waiting period in the subplate layer below the corresponding part of the cortex. The bizarre pattern of development of thalamic innervation in the mutant reeler mouse provides strong evidence that thalamic axons are guided by preplate axons.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7482804     DOI: 10.1016/0166-2236(95)93935-q

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Trends Neurosci        ISSN: 0166-2236            Impact factor:   13.837


  78 in total

1.  Morphology and growth patterns of developing thalamocortical axons.

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2.  The initial stages of the differentiation of pyramidal cells in the deep layers of the neocortex in mice during prenatal development.

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5.  N-cadherin regulates ingrowth and laminar targeting of thalamocortical axons.

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7.  Subplate in the developing cortex of mouse and human.

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8.  Formation of cortical fields on a reduced cortical sheet.

Authors:  K J Huffman; Z Molnár; A Van Dellen; D M Kahn; C Blakemore; L Krubitzer
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9.  Contributions of cortical subventricular zone to the development of the human cerebral cortex.

Authors:  Nada Zecevic; Yanhui Chen; Radmila Filipovic
Journal:  J Comp Neurol       Date:  2005-10-17       Impact factor: 3.215

10.  The requirement for Phr1 in CNS axon tract formation reveals the corticostriatal boundary as a choice point for cortical axons.

Authors:  A Joseph Bloom; Bradley R Miller; Joshua R Sanes; Aaron DiAntonio
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2007-09-27       Impact factor: 11.361

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