Related Content
Search Google Scholar for:
|
|
Science 12 January 1990: Vol. 247. no. 4939, pp. 217 - 220 DOI: 10.1126/science.2294603
|
|
Articles
Science, Vol 247, Issue 4939, 217-220
Copyright © 1990 by American Association for the Advancement of Science
Target control of collateral extension and directional axon growth in the mammalian brain
CD Heffner,
AG Lumsden,
and
DD O'Leary
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110.
Individual neurons in the brain send their axons over considerable distances to multiple targets, but the mechanisms governing this process are unresolved. An amenable system for studying axon outgrowth, branching, and target selection is the mammalian corticopontine projection. This major connection develops from parent corticospinal axons that have already grown past the pons, by a delayed interstitial budding of collateral branches that then grow directly into their target, the basilar pons. When cocultured with explants of developing cortex in three-dimensional collagen matrices, the basilar pons elicits the formation and directional growth of cortical axon collaterals across the intervening matrix. This effect appears to be target-specific and selectively influences neurons in the appropriate cortical layer. These in vitro findings provide evidence that the basilar pons becomes innervated by controlling at a distance the budding and directed ingrowth of cortical axon collaterals through the release of a diffusible, chemotropic molecule.
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
- SDF1/CXCR4 signalling regulates two distinct processes of precerebellar neuronal migration and its depletion leads to abnormal pontine nuclei formation.
- Y. Zhu, T. Matsumoto, S. Mikami, T. Nagasawa, and F. Murakami (2009)
Development
136, 1919-1928
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- EphB3: an endogenous mediator of adult axonal plasticity and regrowth after CNS injury..
- X. Liu, E. Hawkes, T. Ishimaru, T. Tran, and D. W. Sretavan (2006)
J. Neurosci.
26, 3087-3101
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Central and Peripheral Axon Branches from One Neuron Are Guided Differentially by Semaphorin3D and Transient Axonal Glycoprotein-1.
- Y. Liu and M. C. Halloran (2005)
J. Neurosci.
25, 10556-10563
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Semaphorin 3A Elicits Stage-Dependent Collapse, Turning, and Branching in Xenopus Retinal Growth Cones.
- D. S. Campbell, A. G. Regan, J. S. Lopez, D. Tannahill, W. A. Harris, and C. E. Holt (2001)
J. Neurosci.
21, 8538-8547
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Compensatory Sprouting and Impulse Rerouting after Unilateral Pyramidal Tract Lesion in Neonatal Rats.
- W. J. Z'Graggen, K. Fouad, O. Raineteau, G. A. S. Metz, M. E. Schwab, and G. L. Kartje (2000)
J. Neurosci.
20, 6561-6569
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Development of Specific Connectivity Between Premotor Neurons and Motoneurons in the Brain Stem and Spinal Cord.
- J. C. Glover (2000)
Physiol Rev
80, 615-647
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Corticocortical Associative Neurons Expressing Latexin: Specific Cortical Connectivity Formed In Vivo and In Vitro.
- Y. Arimatsu, M. Ishida, M. Sato, and M. Kojima (1999)
Cereb Cortex
9, 569-576
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Different Contributions of Microtubule Dynamics and Transport to the Growth of Axons and Collateral Sprouts.
- G. Gallo and P. C. Letourneau (1999)
J. Neurosci.
19, 3860-3873
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Morphogenesis of Callosal Arbors in the Parietal Cortex of Hamsters.
- C. Hedin-Pereira, R. Lent, and S. Jhaveri (1999)
Cereb Cortex
9, 50-64
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Interstitial Branches Develop from Active Regions of the Axon Demarcated by the Primary Growth Cone during Pausing Behaviors.
- G. Szebenyi, J. L. Callaway, E. W. Dent, and K. Kalil (1998)
J. Neurosci.
18, 7930-7940
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Localized Sources of Neurotrophins Initiate Axon Collateral Sprouting.
- G. Gallo and P. C. Letourneau (1998)
J. Neurosci.
18, 5403-5414
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Semaphorins act as attractive and repulsive guidance signals during the development of cortical projections.
- D Bagnard, M Lohrum, D Uziel, A. Puschel, and J Bolz (1998)
Development
125, 5043-5053
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Directed Growth of Early Cortical Axons Is Influenced by a Chemoattractant Released from an Intermediate Target.
- L. J. Richards, S. E. Koester, R. Tuttle, and D. D. M. O'Leary (1997)
J. Neurosci.
17, 2445-2458
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Spatially Restricted Increase in Polysialic Acid Enhances Corticospinal Axon Branching Related to Target Recognition and Innervation.
- M. M. Daston, M. Bastmeyer, U. Rutishauser, and D. D. M. O'Leary (1996)
J. Neurosci.
16, 5488-5497
| Abstract »
| Full Text »
| PDF »
- Modulation of chemotropism in the developing spinal cord by substance P.
- C De Felipe, R. Pinnock, and S. Hunt (1995)
Science
267, 899-902
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Lamina-specific cues guide outgrowth and arborization of retinal axons in the optic tectum.
- M Yamagata and J. Sanes (1995)
Development
121, 189-200
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Rhombomere rotation reveals that multiple mechanisms contribute to the segmental pattern of hindbrain neural crest migration.
- J Sechrist, T Scherson, and M Bronner-Fraser (1994)
Development
120, 1777-1790
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Topographic specificity of corticospinal connections formed in explant coculture.
- R. Kuang, M Merline, and K Kalil (1994)
Development
120, 1937-1947
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- The predictive brain: temporal coincidence and temporal order in synaptic learning mechanisms..
- P R Montague and T J Sejnowski (1994)
Learn. Mem.
1, 1-33
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Chemorepulsion of axons in the developing mammalian central nervous system.
- A Pini (1993)
Science
261, 95-98
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Repair and Replacement to Restore Sight: Report From the Panel on Ganglion Cell/Connectivity.
- C. J. Shatz, D. D. M. O'Leary, and Panel on Ganglion Cell/Connectivity (1993)
Arch Ophthalmol
111, 472-477
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Ventral spinal cord inhibition of neurite outgrowth from embryonic rat dorsal root ganglia.
- M Fitzgerald, G. Kwiat, J Middleton, and A Pini (1993)
Development
117, 1377-1384
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Cell interactions control the direction of outgrowth, branching and fasciculation of the HSN axons of Caenorhabditis elegans.
- G Garriga, C Desai, and H. Horvitz (1993)
Development
117, 1071-1087
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Axon guidance by gradients of a target-derived component.
- H Baier and F Bonhoeffer (1992)
Science
255, 472-475
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Second Messengers Underlying Cell-contact-dependent Axonal Growth Stimulated by Transfected N-CAM, N-cadherin, or L1.
- F.S. Walsh and P. Doherty (1992)
Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol
57, 431-440
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Guidance of Developing Axons by Diffusible Chemoattractants.
- M. Placzek, M. Tessier-Lavigne, T. Yamada, J. Dodd, and T.M. Jessell (1990)
Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol
55, 279-289
| Abstract »
| PDF »
- Target Selection by Cortical Axons: Alternative Mechanisms to Establish Axonal Connections in the Developing Brain.
- D.D.M. O'Leary, A.R. Bicknese, J.A. De Carlos, C.D. Heffner, S.E. Koester, L.J. Kutka, and T. Terashima (1990)
Cold Spring Harb Symp Quant Biol
55, 453-468
| Abstract »
| PDF »
|
|