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Nervous system

About: Nervous system is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 16729 publications have been published within this topic receiving 847181 citations.


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TL;DR: A historical perspective of work to identify microglia function in the healthy CNS is given and exciting new work in the field that has identified roles for these cells in CNS development, maintenance, and plasticity is highlighted.
Abstract: The nervous system comprises a remarkably diverse and complex network of different cell types, which must communicate with one another with speed, reliability, and precision. Thus, the developmental patterning and maintenance of these cell populations and their connections with one another pose a rather formidable task. Emerging data implicate microglia, the resident myeloid-derived cells of the central nervous system (CNS), in the spatial patterning and synaptic wiring throughout the healthy, developing, and adult CNS. Importantly, new tools to specifically manipulate microglia function have revealed that these cellular functions translate, on a systems level, to effects on overall behavior. In this review, we give a historical perspective of work to identify microglia function in the healthy CNS and highlight exciting new work in the field that has identified roles for these cells in CNS development, maintenance, and plasticity.

264 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
21 Sep 1984-Science
TL;DR: Transplantation of brain tissue provides a powerful approach for studying mechanisms of synaptic plasticity, and understanding the response of the central nervous system to injury can be used to optimize transplant survival and integration with the host brain.
Abstract: The nervous system of mammals retains throughout the animals' life-span the ability to modify the number, nature, and level of activity of its synapses. Synaptic plasticity is most evident after injury to the nervous system, and the cellular and molecular mechanisms that make it possible are beginning to be understood. Transplantation of brain tissue provides a powerful approach for studying mechanisms of synaptic plasticity. In turn, understanding the response of the central nervous system to injury can be used to optimize transplant survival and integration with the host brain.

264 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A map of the system of serotonin-immunoreactive cell bodies, fibers, and nerve endings is constructed, and a dense plexus of nerve endings showing serotonin-like immunoreactivity surrounds each of the thoracic second roots in the vicinity of groups of peripheral neurosecretory neurons.
Abstract: Serotonin exerts a wide range of physiological actions on many different lobster tissues. To begin the examination of the role of serotonin in lobsters at a cellular level, we have used immunohistochemical methods to search for presumptive serotonergic neurons, their central and peripheral projections, and their terminal fields of arborization. Whole mount preparations of the ventral nerve cord and various peripheral nerve structures have been used for these studies. With these tissues, more than 100 cell bodies have been found that show serotonin-like immunoreactivity. Although a few of the cell bodies are located peripherally (near the pericardial organs, a well known crustacean neurohemal organ), the vast majority are located in central ganglia. Every ganglion in the ventral nerve cord contains at least one immunoreactive cell body. The projections of many of the neurons have been traced, and we have constructed a map of the system of serotonin-immunoreactive cell bodies, fibers, and nerve endings. In addition, a dense plexus of nerve endings showing serotonin-like immunoreactivity surrounds each of the thoracic second roots in the vicinity of groups of peripheral neurosecretory neurons. These peripheral nerve plexuses originate from central neurons of the ventral nerve cord. In some cases we have been able to trace processes from particular central cell bodies directly to the peripheral nerve root plexuses; in other cases we have traced ganglionic neuropil regions to these peripheral endings.

263 citations

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.

263 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023247
2022510
2021371
2020409
2019375
2018357