Literature DB >> 9535294

Factors governing activity-dependent structural plasticity of the hypothalamoneurohypophysial system.

D T Theodosis1, M El Majdoubi, K Pierre, D A Poulain.   

Abstract

1. The adult hypothalamoneurohypophysial system (HNS) undergoes reversible morphological changes in response to physiological stimulation. 2. In the hypothalamus, stimulation of neurohormone secretion results in reduced astrocytic coverage of oxytocinergic somata and dendrites so that their surfaces become directly juxtaposed. Concurrently, there is a significant increase in the number of GABAergic, glutamatergic. and noradrenergic synapses impinging on the neurons. 3. In the neurohypophysis, stimulation induces retraction of pituicyte processes from the perivascular area and enlargement and multiplication of neurosecretory terminals. 4. These neuronal-glial and synaptic changes are reversible with cessation of stimulation, thus rendering the HNS an excellent model to study physiologically linked structural neuronal plasticity in the adult CNS. 5. We still do not know the cellular mechanisms and factors underlying such plasticity. Recent studies indicate, however, that the adult HNS expresses molecular characteristics normally associated with histogenesis and/or tissue reorganization in developing or regenerating neural systems. They include expression of cell adhesion molecules such as the highly sialylated isoform of the neural cell adhesion molecule, PSA-NCAM, and the glycoproteins, F3 and tenascin-C. 6. The expression of PSA-NCAM and tenascin-C does not show striking differences in terms of age, sex or physiological condition but that of F3 varies considerably with neurohypophysial stimulation. 7. We postulate that such molecular features allow magnocellular neurons and their glia to undergo neuronal-glial and synaptic plasticity throughout life, provided the proper stimulus intervenes. 8. Thus, in the hypothalamic nuclei, centrally released oxytocin acting in synergy with steroids can induce such plasticity, while adrenaline, acting through beta-adrenergic mechanisms, does so in the neurohypophysis.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9535294     DOI: 10.1023/a:1022577105819

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Mol Neurobiol        ISSN: 0272-4340            Impact factor:   5.046


  66 in total

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