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Showing papers on "Nervous system published in 2000"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The mechanisms that specify the identity of neural cells have been examined in many regions of the nervous system and reveal a high degree of conservation in the specification of cell fate by key signalling molecules.
Abstract: Neural circuits are assembled with remarkable precision during embryonic development, and the selectivity inherent in their formation helps to define the behavioural repertoire of the mature organism. In the vertebrate central nervous system, this developmental program begins with the differentiation of distinct classes of neurons from progenitor cells located at defined positions within the neural tube. The mechanisms that specify the identity of neural cells have been examined in many regions of the nervous system and reveal a high degree of conservation in the specification of cell fate by key signalling molecules.

2,060 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A number of novel p75NTR-interacting proteins have been identified that transmit growth, survival, and apoptotic signals.

1,925 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using fluorescence-activated cell sorting, it is shown that radial glial cells also are neuronal precursors and only later, after neurogenesis, do they shift towards an exclusive generation of astrocytes.
Abstract: The developing central nervous system of vertebrates contains an abundant cell type designated radial glial cells. These cells are known as guiding cables for migrating neurons, while their role as precursor cells is less clear. Since radial glial cells express a variety of astroglial characteristics and differentiate as astrocytes after completing their guidance function, they have been considered as part of the glial lineage. Using fluorescence-activated cell sorting, we show here that radial glial cells also are neuronal precursors and only later, after neurogenesis, do they shift towards an exclusive generation of astrocytes. These results thus demonstrate a novel function for radial glial cells, namely their ability to generate two major cell types found in the nervous system, neurons and astrocytes.

1,123 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The most primitive neurotrophin genes have been isolated from jawless fishes, a river lamprey and the Atlantic hagfish, and they encode pre-pro-neurotrophins, which may serve the purpose of limiting their range of action.
Abstract: Neurons are specialized cells with a complex morphology that represent the functional unit of the nervous system. They are generated in remarkable numbers, particularly in higher vertebrates. In the human brain, for example, there may be ∼85 billion neurons (Williams and Herrup 1988). There is little cell division in the adult nervous system of vertebrates, and in most areas, the final number of neurons is determined early in development, at about the time when neurons extend axons (Oppenheim 1991). Neuronal numbers are controlled both by cell-intrinsic and cell-extrinsic programs. Cell-intrinsic programs govern basic aspects of neuronal differentiation in vertebrates, and a number of transcription factors have been shown to be expressed in well-defined areas of the nervous system (for review, see Rubenstein et al. 1998). Cell-extrinsic mechanisms play a prominent role in vertebrates. They involve the secretion of diffusible molecules controlling the survival of neurons produced in excess early in development, a process thought to help match the size of neuronal populations with the territory they innervate (Purves 1988; Oppenheim 1991). However, much of the developmental growth of the animal must still take place by the time these numerical adjustments are completed (Purves 1988). The neurons that have escaped elimination grow proportionally with the organism, enlarging their size by adding dendrites that grow out from the cell bodies. Secreted proteins play a crucial role in the control of neuronal numbers and of dendritic growth. The best studied group is a family of structurally related molecules termed neurotrophins (Barde 1990). The first neurotrophin identified was originally designated “the” nerve growth factor (NGF; Levi-Montalcini 1966). However, only very few neurons were found to be NGF responsive in the central nervous system (CNS), and the isolation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) from the brain helped establish the concept that the fate and the shape of most vertebrate neurons can be regulated by diffusible growth factors (Hofer and Barde 1988). In the context of the regulation of neuronal shape, a particularly attractive and important feature of the neurotrophins is that they are synthesized and released by neurons and that both their biosynthesis and secretion depend on neuronal activity (Thoenen 1995). In addition to ngf and bdnf, two other neurotrophin genes have been identified in mammals, neurotrophin-3 (nt3) and neurotrophin-4/5 (nt4/5). These four genes encode pre-pro-neurotrophins. The processed proteins have a size of ∼13,000 D, and they exist in solution as noncovalently linked homodimers (for review, see Barde 1990; Ibanez 1998). They all have very basic isoelectric points, a somewhat unusual property for secreted proteins, which may serve the purpose of limiting their range of action. The structural hallmark of the protomer is a characteristic arrangement of the disulfide bridges known as the cystine knot (McDonald et al. 1991), later identified in other secreted proteins such as the plateletderived growth factors and the transforming growth factor– s (TGFs; McDonald and Hendrickson 1993). With the exception of NT4/5, neurotrophin sequences are highly conserved in mammals. In bony fishes, more neurotrophin and receptor genes have been isolated than in mammals (for review, see Hallbook 1999). Based on sequence comparisons and on the isolation of neurotrophin genes in various vertebrates, it is thought that ngf/nt3 and bdnf/nt4/5 evolved from separate duplication events (Hallbook 1999). The most primitive neurotrophin genes have been isolated from jawless fishes, a river lamprey and the Atlantic hagfish. The jawless fish lineage diverged about 460 million years ago in vertebrate history, and the neurotrophin receptors of the trk family (see below) seem to have coevolved with the neurotrophin genes (Hallbook, 1999). So far, no neurotrophin-like sequences have been detected in invertebrates typically used by geneticists, and unlike other growth factors such as members of the Wnt, fibroblast growth factor or TGFfamilies, genes coding for neurotrophins and their receptors have not been identified in the genome of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans (Bargmann 1998). Clearly then, a nervous system can be put together in the absence of neurotrophins, including precise wiring, chemical neurotransmission, and the 1Corresponding author. E-MAIL yves.barde@neuro.mpg.de; FAX 49-89-8578-3749. Article and publication are at www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/ gad.841400.

1,048 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present review outlines the methods used to discover, define and describe zinc-containing neurons; the neuroarchitecture and synaptology of zinc- containing neural circuits; the physiology of regulated vesicular zinc release; the "life cycle" and molecular biology of vesicle zinc; the importance of synaptically released zinc in the normal and pathological processes of the cerebral cortex; and the role of specific and nonspecific stressors in the release of zinc.
Abstract: Zinc is essential to the structure and function of myriad proteins, including regulatory, structural and enzymatic. It is estimated that up to 1% of the human genome codes for zinc finger proteins. In the central nervous system, zinc has an additional role as a neurosecretory product or cofactor. In this role, zinc is highly concentrated in the synaptic vesicles of a specific contingent of neurons, called "zinc-containing" neurons. Zinc-containing neurons are a subset of glutamatergic neurons. The zinc in the vesicles probably exceeds 1 mmol/L in concentration and is only weakly coordinated with any endogenous ligand. Zinc-containing neurons are found almost exclusively in the forebrain, where in mammals they have evolved into a complex and elaborate associational network that interconnects most of the cerebral cortices and limbic structures. Indeed, one of the intriguing aspects of these neurons is that they compose somewhat of a chemospecific "private line" of the mammalian cerebral cortex. The present review outlines (1) the methods used to discover, define and describe zinc-containing neurons; (2) the neuroarchitecture and synaptology of zinc-containing neural circuits; (3) the physiology of regulated vesicular zinc release; (4) the "life cycle" and molecular biology of vesicular zinc; (5) the importance of synaptically released zinc in the normal and pathological processes of the cerebral cortex; and (6) the role of specific and nonspecific stressors in the release of zinc.

800 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: All the types of neurons in the enteric nervous system of the small intestine of the guinea-pig have now been identified in terms of their morphologies, projections, primary neurotransmitters and physiological identification.
Abstract: This paper, written for the symposium in honour of more than 40 years' contribution to autonomic research by Professor Geoffrey Burnstock, highlights the progress made in understanding the organisation of the enteric nervous system over this time. Forty years ago, the prevailing view was that the neurons within the gut wall were post-ganglionic neurons of parasympathetic pathways. This view was replaced as evidence accrued that the neurons are part of the enteric nervous system and are involved in reflex and integrative activities that can occur even in the absence of neuronal influence from extrinsic sources. Work in Burnstock's laboratory led to the discovery of intrinsic inhibitory neurons with then novel pharmacology of transmission, and precipitated investigation of neuron types in the enteric nervous system. All the types of neurons in the enteric nervous system of the small intestine of the guinea-pig have now been identified in terms of their morphologies, projections, primary neurotransmitters and physiological identification. In this region there are 14 functionally defined neuron types, each with a characteristic combination of morphological, neurochemical and biophysical properties. The nerve circuits underlying effects on motility, blood flow and secretion that are mediated through the enteric nervous system are constructed from these neurons. The circuits for simple motility reflexes are now known, and progress has been made in analysing those involved in local control of blood flow and transmucosal fluid movement in the small intestine.

739 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that ATF3 is specifically induced in sensory and motoneurons in the spinal cord following nerve injury and should be regarded as an unique neuronal marker of nerve injury in the nervous system.

710 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results reveal pronounced subtype specificity in the anatomical plasticity and susceptibility to loss of neuromuscular synapses and suggest that degenerative motoneuron diseases involve a common early pathway of selective and progressive synaptic weakening also associated with aging.
Abstract: The addition or loss of synapses in response to changes in activity, disease, or aging is a major aspect of nervous system plasticity in the adult. The mechanisms that affect the turnover and maintenance of synapses in the adult are poorly understood and are difficult to investigate in the brain. Here, we exploited a unique anatomical arrangement in the neuromuscular system to determine whether subtypes of synapses can differ in anatomical plasticity and vulnerability. In three genetic mouse models of motoneuron disease of diverse origin and severity, we observed a gradual and selective loss of synaptic connections that begun long before the onset of clinical deficits and correlated with the timing of disease progression. A subgroup of fast-type (fast-fatiguable) neuromuscular synapses was highly vulnerable and was lost very early on. In contrast, slow-type synapses resisted up to the terminal phase of the disease. Muscle-specific differences were also evident. Similar selective losses were detected in aged mice. These selective vulnerability properties of synapses coincided with hitherto unrecognized major differences in stimulus-induced anatomical plasticity that could also be revealed in healthy mice. Using paralysis and/or growth-associated protein 43 overexpression to induce synaptic sprouting, we found that slow-type, disease-resistant synapses were particularly plastic. In contrast, fast-type synapses with the highest vulnerability failed to exhibit any stimulus-induced change. The results reveal pronounced subtype specificity in the anatomical plasticity and susceptibility to loss of neuromuscular synapses and suggest that degenerative motoneuron diseases involve a common early pathway of selective and progressive synaptic weakening also associated with aging.

654 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that Na(v)1.6 is highly concentrated at nodes of Ranvier of both sensory and motor axons in the peripheral nervous system and at nodes in the central nervous system, and a single sodium channel isoform is targeted to different neuronal domains and can influence both axonal conduction and synaptic responses.
Abstract: Voltage-gated sodium channels perform critical roles for electrical signaling in the nervous system by generating action potentials in axons and in dendrites. At least 10 genes encode sodium channels in mammals, but specific physiological roles that distinguish each of these isoforms are not known. One possibility is that each isoform is expressed in a restricted set of cell types or is targeted to a specific domain of a neuron or muscle cell. Using affinity-purified isoform-specific antibodies, we find that Nav1.6 is highly concentrated at nodes of Ranvier of both sensory and motor axons in the peripheral nervous system and at nodes in the central nervous system. The specificity of this antibody was also demonstrated with the Nav1.6-deficient mouse mutant strain med, whose nodes were negative for Nav1.6 immunostaining. Both the intensity of labeling and the failure of other isoform-specific antibodies to label nodes suggest that Nav1.6 is the predominant channel type in this structure. In the central nervous system, Nav1.6 is localized in unmyelinated axons in the retina and cerebellum and is strongly expressed in dendrites of cortical pyramidal cells and cerebellar Purkinje cells. Ultrastructural studies indicate that labeling in dendrites is both intracellular and on dendritic shaft membranes. Remarkably, Nav1.6 labeling was observed at both presynaptic and postsynaptic membranes in the cortex and cerebellum. Thus, a single sodium channel isoform is targeted to different neuronal domains and can influence both axonal conduction and synaptic responses.

640 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review shall give a comprehensive summary of the main functional properties of ion channels and ionotropic receptors expressed by macroglial cells, i.e., by astrocytes, oligodendrocycles and Schwann cells, as well as glutamate, GABA and ATP activated ionotropic receptor.

498 citations


Book
28 Apr 2000
TL;DR: Neural Induction Polarity and Segmentation Birth and Migration Determination and Differentiation Axon Growth and Guidance Target Selection Naturally Occuring Neuron Death Synapse Formation and Function Refinement of Synaptic Connectivity Behavioral Development
Abstract: Neural Induction Polarity and Segmentation Birth and Migration Determination and Differentiation Axon Growth and Guidance Target Selection Naturally Occuring Neuron Death Synapse Formation and Function Refinement of Synaptic Connectivity Behavioral Development

Journal ArticleDOI
07 Jan 2000-Science
TL;DR: DNA topoisomerase IIβ is shown to have an unsuspected and critical role in neural development and clusters of acetylcholine receptors were concentrated in the central region of skeletal muscles, thereby revealing patterning mechanisms that are autonomous to skeletal muscle.
Abstract: DNA topoisomerase IIβ is shown to have an unsuspected and critical role in neural development. Neurogenesis was normal in IIβ mutant mice, but motor axons failed to contact skeletal muscles, and sensory axons failed to enter the spinal cord. Despite an absence of innervation, clusters of acetylcholine receptors were concentrated in the central region of skeletal muscles, thereby revealing patterning mechanisms that are autonomous to skeletal muscle. The defects in motor axon growth in IIβ mutant mice resulted in a breathing impairment and death of the pups shortly after birth.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2000-Gut
TL;DR: The enteric nervous system (ENS) is a quasi autonomous part of the nervous system and includes a number of neural circuits that control motor functions, local blood flow, mucosal transport and secretions, and modulates immune and endocrine functions.
Abstract: The enteric nervous system (ENS) is a quasi autonomous part of the nervous system and includes a number of neural circuits that control motor functions, local blood flow, mucosal transport and secretions, and modulates immune and endocrine functions. Although these functions operate in concert and are functionally interlinked, it is useful to consider the neural circuits involved in each separately.1 This short summary will concentrate mainly on the neural circuits involved in motor control.2 The enteric neural circuits are composed of enteric neurones arranged in networks of enteric ganglia connected by interganglionic strands. Most enteric neurones involved in motor functions are located in the myenteric plexus with some primary afferent neurones located in the submucous plexus. As in all nervous systems involved in sensory-motor control, the ENS comprises primary afferent neurones, sensitive to chemical and mechanical stimuli, interneurones and motorneurones that act on the different effector cells including smooth muscle, pacemaker cells, blood vessels, mucosal glands, and epithelia, and the distributed system of intestinal cells involved in immune responses and endocrine and paracrine functions. The digestive tract is unique among internal organs because it is exposed to a large variety of physicochemical stimuli from the external world in the form of ingested food. As a consequence, the intestine has developed a rich repertoire of coordinated movements of its muscular apparatus to ensure the appropriate mixing and propulsion of contents during digestion, absorption, and excretion. The oro-aboral transit of the intestinal contents can be regarded as a form of adaptive locomotion that occurs over a wide range of spatial and temporal domains.3 The movements of the intestine are the result of interaction of the neural apparatus and the muscular apparatus.4 The muscular apparatus is organised in muscle layers made up of large collections of smooth muscle cells …

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Wnts have been shown to regulate the anatomy of the neuronal cytoskeleton and the differentiation of synapses in the cerebellum and may participate in degenerative processes leading to cell death in the aging brain.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two discrete sequences within the 21 kb region are identified that are conserved between mouse and human, and are sufficient for driving a lacZ reporter gene in these domains of Math1 expression in transgenic mice, suggesting that a common regulatory mechanism controls these apparently unrelated domains of expression.
Abstract: Development of the vertebrate nervous system requires the actions of transcription factors that establish regional domains of gene expression, which results in the generation of diverse neuronal cell types. MATH1, a transcription factor of the bHLH class, is expressed during development of the nervous system in multiple neuronal domains, including the dorsal neural tube, the EGL of the cerebellum and the hair cells of the vestibular and auditory systems. MATH1 is essential for proper development of the granular layer of the cerebellum and the hair cells of the cochlear and vestibular systems, as shown in mice carrying a targeted disruption of Math1. Previously, we showed that 21 kb of sequence flanking the Math1-coding region is sufficient for Math1 expression in transgenic mice. Here we identify two discrete sequences within the 21 kb region that are conserved between mouse and human, and are sufficient for driving a lacZ reporter gene in these domains of Math1 expression in transgenic mice. The two identified enhancers, while dissimilar in sequence, appear to have redundant activities in the different Math1 expression domains except the spinal neural tube. The regulatory mechanisms for each of the diverse Math1 expression domains are tightly linked, as separable regulatory elements for any given domain of Math1 expression were not found, suggesting that a common regulatory mechanism controls these apparently unrelated domains of expression. In addition, we demonstrate a role for autoregulation in controlling the activity of the Math1 enhancer, through an essential E-box consensus binding site.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is functional redundancy among the three KIF5s and that KIF3A and KIF4B prevented the KIF7C null mice from the severe phenotype, and three Kif5s showed high similarity in the amino acid sequence, could rescue the K IF5B mutant cells, and could form heterodimers.
Abstract: Kinesin superfamily proteins (KIFs) are the molecular motors conveying cargos along microtubules. KIF5s, the heavy chains of conventional kinesin (KHC), are originally identified members of KIFs, and neuronal KIF5A and ubiquitous KIF5B have been identified so far. In the present work, we cloned a novel member of KIF5, KIF5C, and generated specific antibodies against three KIF5s to investigate their distribution and functions. KIF5A showed pan-neuronal distribution in the nervous system. KIF5B showed a glial cell distribution pattern in general; however, interestingly, its expression was strongly upregulated in axon-elongating neurons, such as olfactory primary neurons and mossy fibers. KIF5C was also a neuronal KIF5 like KIF5A but was highly expressed in lower motor neurons in 2-week-old or older mice, suggesting its important roles in the maintenance of motor neurons rather than in their formation, such as axonal elongation. Because a large part of KIF5s in adult motor neurons were expected to be KIF5C, we generated mice lacking the kif5C gene to investigate the functions of KIF5C in neurons in living animals. The mutant mice showed smaller brain size but were viable and did not show gross changes in the nervous system. Closer examinations revealed the relative loss of motor neurons to sensory neurons. Because three KIF5s showed high similarity in the amino acid sequence, could rescue the KIF5B mutant cells, and could form heterodimers, we think that there are functional redundancy among the three KIF5s and that KIF5A and KIF5B prevented the KIF5C null mice from the severe phenotype.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate that Robos and Slits alone do not directly control RGC axon divergence at the optic chiasm and may additionally function as a general inhibitory guidance system involved in determining the relative position of the optic Chiasm at the ventral midline of the developing hypothalamus.
Abstract: The ventral midline of the nervous system is an important choice point at which growing axons decide whether to cross and project contralaterally or remain on the same side of the brain. In Drosophila, the decision to cross or avoid the CNS midline is controlled, at least in part, by the Roundabout (Robo) receptor on the axons and its ligand, Slit, an inhibitory extracellular matrix molecule secreted by the midline glia. Vertebrate homologs of these molecules have been cloned and have also been implicated in regulating axon guidance. Using in situ hybridization, we have determined the expression patterns of robo1,2 and slit1,2,3 in the mouse retina and in the region of the developing optic chiasm, a ventral midline structure in which retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axons diverge to either side of the brain. The receptors and ligands are expressed at the appropriate time and place, in both the retina and the ventral diencephalon, to be able to influence RGC axon guidance. In vitro, slit2 is inhibitory to RGC axons, with outgrowth of both ipsilaterally and contralaterally projecting axons being strongly affected. Overall, these results indicate that Robos and Slits alone do not directly control RGC axon divergence at the optic chiasm and may additionally function as a general inhibitory guidance system involved in determining the relative position of the optic chiasm at the ventral midline of the developing hypothalamus.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Research that has investigated the role of the Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK)/c-Jun signalling pathway in neuronal apoptosis, focusing on work carried out with developing sympathetic neurons, suggests that JNKs and c-Jun are important regulators of the cell death programme in the mammalian nervous system, but that their biological effects depend on the neuronal type and stage of development.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that Drosophila Lis1 is highly expressed in the nervous system and is essential for neuroblast proliferation and axonal transport, as shown by a mosaic analysis using a Lis1 null mutation.
Abstract: Haplo-insufficiency of human Lis1 causes lissencephaly. Reduced Lis1 activity in both humans and mice results in a neuronal migration defect. Here we show that Drosophila Lis1 is highly expressed in the nervous system. Lis1 is essential for neuroblast proliferation and axonal transport, as shown by a mosaic analysis using a Lis1 null mutation. Moreover, it is cell-autonomously required for dendritic growth, branching and maturation. Analogous mosaic analysis shows that neurons containing a mutated cytoplasmic-dynein heavy chain (Dhc64C) exhibit phenotypes similar to Lis1 mutants. These results implicate Lis1 as a regulator of the microtubule cytoskeleton and show that it is important for diverse physiological functions in the nervous system.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: H hippocampal neurons in culture are used to demonstrate that vasoactive intestinal polypeptide promotes neuronal differentiation through activity-dependent neurotrophic factor (ADNF), a protein secreted by VIP-stimulated astroglia, and suggest that the VIP–ADNF–NT-3 neuronal–glial pathway regulates glutamate responses from an early stage in the synaptic development of excitatory neurons.
Abstract: Astrocytes are present in large numbers in the nervous system, are associated with synapses, and propagate ionic signals. Astrocytes influence neuronal physiology by responding to and releasing neurotransmitters, but the mechanisms that establish the close interaction between these cells are not defined. Here we use hippocampal neurons in culture to demonstrate that vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) promotes neuronal differentiation through activity-dependent neurotrophic factor (ADNF), a protein secreted by VIP-stimulated astroglia. ADNF is produced by glial cells and acts directly on neurons to promote glutamate responses and morphological development. ADNF causes secretion of neurotrophin 3 (NT-3), and both proteins regulate NMDA receptor subunit 2A (NR2A) and NR2B. These data suggest that the VIP-ADNF-NT-3 neuronal-glial pathway regulates glutamate responses from an early stage in the synaptic development of excitatory neurons and may also contribute to the known effects of VIP on learning and behavior in the adult nervous system.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The misexpression of the pdf gene from the grasshopperRomalea in the CNS of Drosophila concluded that PDF acts as a neuromodulator in the dorsal central brain that is involved in the rhythmic control of behavior.
Abstract: To study the function of the neuropeptide pigment-dispersing factor (PDF) in the circadian system of Drosophila , we misexpressed the pdf gene from the grasshopper Romalea in the CNS of Drosophila and investigated the effect of this on behavioral rhythmicity. pdf was either ectopically expressed in different numbers of neurons in the brain or the thoracical nervous system or overexpressed in the pacemaker neurons alone. We found severe alterations in the activity and eclosion rhythm of several but not all lines with ectopic pdf expression. Only ectopic pdf expression in neurons that projected into the dorsal central brain severely influenced activity rhythms. Therefore, we conclude that PDF acts as a neuromodulator in the dorsal central brain that is involved in the rhythmic control of behavior. Overexpression of pdf in the pacemaker neurons alone or in the other neurons that express the clock genes period ( per ) and timeless ( tim ) did not disturb the activity rhythm. Such flies still showed a rhythm in PDF accumulation in the central brain terminals. This rhythm was absent in the terminals of neurons that expressed PDF ectopically. Probably, PDF is rhythmically processed, transported, or secreted in neurons expressing per and tim , and additional PDF expression in these cells does not influence this rhythmic process. In neurons lacking per and tim , PDF appears to be continuously processed, leading to a constant PDF secretion at their nerve terminals. This may lead to conflicting signals in the rhythmic output pathway and result in a severely altered rhythmic behavior.

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, a discussion of developmental milestones and the relevance of transient effects on developmental endpoints are presented, in light of scientific uncertainties regarding perturbation-induced compensation in the developing nervous system.
Abstract: The susceptibility of the developing nervous system to damage following exposure to environmental contaminants has been well recognized. More recently, from a regulatory perspective, an increased emphasis has been placed on the vulnerability of the developing nervous system to damage following pesticide exposure. The publication of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) report on Pesticides in the Diets of Infants and Children (1995) and the passage of the Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA) and Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) amendments have significantly escalated the scientific debate regarding age-related susceptibility. Key concerns raised in the NAS report include the qualitative and quantitative differences that distinguish the developing nervous system from that of the adult. It was suggested that neurotoxicity testing on adult animals alone may not be predictive of these differences in susceptibility. The age-related susceptibility of the nervous system is compounded by the protracted period of time over which this complex organ system develops. This temporal vulnerability spans the embryonic, fetal, infant, and adolescent periods. Normal development of the nervous system requires the concomitant and coordinated ontogeny of proliferation, migration, differentiation, synaptogenesis, gliogenesis, myelination and apoptosis to occur in a temporally- and regionally-dependent manner. Perturbations of these processes during development can result in long-term irreversible consequences that affect the structure and function of the nervous system and could account for qualitative differences in age-related susceptibility of the developing nervous system as compared to the adult nervous system. A discussion of developmental milestones and the relevance of transient effects on developmental endpoints are presented. Transient effects following developmental perturbations can be missed or dismissed depending on the experimental design or screening strategy employed. This subject is discussed in light of scientific uncertainties regarding perturbation-induced compensation in the developing nervous system. Thus, utilization of age-appropriate tests of these developmental processes may improve the detection and reduce uncertainty about the nature of adverse effects following developmental exposure to environmental neurotoxicants.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The author concludes that the serotonergic raphe system found in vertebrates originated in the larval brain of deuterostome invertebrates, and the neural tube of chordates appears to be derived, at least in part, from the ciliary band of deuterspecific larvae.
Abstract: The pattern of development of the serotonergic nervous system is described from the larvae of ctenophores, platyhelminths, nemerteans, entoprocts, ectoprocts (bryozoans), molluscs, polychaetes, brachiopods, phoronids, echinoderms, enteropneusts and lampreys. The larval brain (apical ganglion) of spiralian protostomes (except nermerteans) generally has three serotonergic neurons and the lateral pair always innervates the ciliary band of the prototroch. In contrast, brachiopods, phoronids, echinoderms and enteropneusts have numerous serotonergic neurons in the apical ganglion from which the ciliary band is innervated. This pattern of development is much like the pattern seen in lamprey embryos and larvae, which leads the author to conclude that the serotonergic raphe system found in vertebrates originated in the larval brain of deuterostome invertebrates. Further, the neural tube of chordates appears to be derived, at least in part, from the ciliary band of deuterostome invertebrate larvae. The evidence shows no sign of a shift in the dorsal ventral orientation within the line leading to the chordates.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The expression of NCAM and PSA have been shown to be regulated by neuronal activity suggesting that the NCAM may promote structural remodelling in an activity dependent manner associated with learning and regeneration.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is reviewed to suggest that ATP may also act presynaptically rather than solely postsynaptically in the nervous system.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The neural subtypes defined in the present study are similar in many respects to those found in the small intestine, although differences are evident, especially in populations of interneurons, presumably reflect the differing physiological roles of the two intestinal regions.
Abstract: Previous studies have identified the chemistries, shapes, projections and electrophysiological characteristics of several populations of neurons in the distal colon of the guinea-pig but it is unknown how these characteristics correlate to define the classes of neurons present. We have used double-label immunohistochemical techniques to identify neurochemically distinct subgroups of enteric neurons in this region. On the basis of colocalisation of neurochemical markers and knowledge gained from previous studies of neural projections, 17 classes of neurons were identified. The myenteric plexus contained the cell bodies of 13 distinct types of neurons. Four classes of descending interneurons and three classes of ascending interneurons were identified, together with inhibitory and excitatory motor neurons to both the circular and longitudinal muscle layers. Dogiel type II neurons, which are presumed to be intrinsic primary afferent neurons, were located in myenteric and submucosal ganglia; they were all immunoreactive for choline acetyltransferase and often calbindin and tachykinins. Three classes of secretomotor neurons with cell bodies in submucosal ganglia were defined. Two of these classes were immunoreactive for choline acetyltransferase and the other class was immunoreactive for both vasoactive intestinal peptide and nitric oxide synthase. Some of the secretomotor neurons probably also have a vasomotor function. The neural subtypes defined in the present study are similar in many respects to those found in the small intestine, although differences are evident, especially in populations of interneurons. These differences presumably reflect the differing physiological roles of the two intestinal regions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Accumulating evidence indicates that p53 is perturbed in the CNS in a number of neurodegenerative disorders, leading to the hypothesis that longterm oxidative damage and/or excitotoxicity ultimately trigger p53-dependent apoptosis in the chronically degenerating nervous system.
Abstract: Recent evidence indicates that the p53 tumor suppressor protein, and its related family member, p73, play an essential role in regulating neuronal apoptosis in both the developing and injured, mature nervous system. In the developing nervous system, they do so by regulating naturally-occurring cell death in neural progenitor cells and in postmitotic neurons, acting to ensure the apoptosis of cells that either do not appropriately undergo the progenitor to postmitotic neuron transition, or that fail to compete for sufficient quantities of trophic support. Somewhat surprisingly, in developing postmitotic neurons, p53 plays a proapoptotic role, while a naturally-occurring, truncated form of p73, DeltaNp73, antagonizes p53 and plays an anti-apoptotic role. In the mature nervous system, numerous studies indicate that p53 is essential for the neuronal death in response to a variety of insults, including DNA damage, ischemia and excitotoxicity. It is likely that all of these insults culminate in DNA damage, which may well be a common trigger for neuronal apoptosis. In this regard, the signaling pathways that are responsible for triggering p53-dependent neuronal apoptosis are starting to be elucidated, and involve cell cycle deregulation and activation of the JNK pathway. Finally, accumulating evidence indicates that p53 is perturbed in the CNS in a number of neurodegenerative disorders, leading to the hypothesis that longterm oxidative damage and/or excitotoxicity ultimately trigger p53-dependent apoptosis in the chronically degenerating nervous system.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review summarises the evidences indicating that proteoglycans have an important role as modulators of neurite outgrowth and neuronal polarity in the vertebrate Central Nervous System and special emphasis will be placed on those studies that have shown that proteglycans of certain subtypes inhibit neurite extension either during the development and/or the regeneration of the vertebrates Central Nerve System.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: F focal inflammation in brain tissue with HIVE may up-regulate neuronal FKN levels, which in turn may be a neuroimmune modulator recruiting peripheral macrophages into the brain, and in a paracrine fashion protecting glutamatergic neurons.
Abstract: HIV-1 infection of the brain results in chronic inflammation, contributing to the neuropathogenesis of HIV-1 associated neurologic disease. HIV-1-infected mononuclear phagocytes (MP) present in inflammatory infiltrates produce neurotoxins that mediate inflammation, dysfunction, and neuronal apoptosis. Neurologic disease is correlated with the relative number of MP in and around inflammatory infiltrates and not viral burden. It is unclear whether these cells also play a neuroprotective role. We show that the chemokine, fractalkine (FKN), is markedly up-regulated in neurons and neuropil in brain tissue from pediatric patients with HIV-1 encephalitis (HIVE) compared with those without HIVE, or that were HIV-1 seronegative. FKN receptors are expressed on both neurons and microglia in patients with HIVE. These receptors are localized to cytoplasmic structures which are characterized by a vesicular appearance in neurons which may be in cell-to-cell contact with MPs. FKN colocalizes with glutamate in these neurons. Similar findings are observed in brain tissue from an adult patient with HIVE. FKN is able to potently induce the migration of primary human monocytes across an endothelial cell/primary human fetal astrocyte trans-well bilayer, and is neuroprotective to cultured neurons when coadministered with either the HIV-1 neurotoxin platelet activating factor (PAF) or the regulatory HIV-1 gene product Tat. Thus focal inflammation in brain tissue with HIVE may up-regulate neuronal FKN levels, which in turn may be a neuroimmune modulator recruiting peripheral macrophages into the brain, and in a paracrine fashion protecting glutamatergic neurons.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The retino-tectal system has been successfully used as a convenient model system to study the molecular mechanisms of neuronal apoptosis and survival during development and in the lesioned adult CNS.