Previous Article | Next Article 
Volume 16, Number 10,
Issue of May 15, 1996
pp. 3219-3235
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
The Ganglionic Eminence May Be an Intermediate Target for
Corticofugal and Thalamocortical Axons
Christine Métin and
Pierre Godement
Institut Alfred Fessard, Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique UPR 2212, 91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
In the nervous system of many species, growing axons associate
transiently with cellular groupings along their path. Whether this
mechanism applies to the development of corticothalamic and
thalamocortical projections is unknown. Using carbocyanine dyes, we
studied the early growth of both corticofugal and thalamocortical
fibers in hamster embryos. At embryonic day 11.5 (E11.5), corticofugal
fibers invade the lateral ganglionic eminence (LGE), and
thalamocortical fibers invade the medial ganglionic eminence (MGE). At
this age, both sets of fibers are not yet in contact with each other.
At the same time, neurons in each subdivision of the GE grow toward the
cortex and thalamus. During the next 24 hr, corticofugal and
thalamocortical fibers remain within the confines of the GE, where they
course at different radial levels and bear large and complex growth
cones. In the LGE, corticofugal fibers are often found in close
association with cells that are likely to be neuronal. Starting on
E13.5, both early projections from the GE decrease, and corticothalamic
and thalamocortical fibers invade their definitive target regions. To
test whether the GE specifically orients the growth and trajectories of
cortical fibers even in the absence of the reciprocal thalamic
projection, we cocultured explants of cortex and GE from either hamster
or mouse embryos. These experiments showed that the GE, but not other
tested brain regions, is able specifically to orient the growth of
cortical axons. We therefore suggest that the GE may be an intermediate
target in the pathfinding of axons between the cortex and the
thalamus.
Key words:
development;
cortex;
dorsal thalamus;
basal
telencephalon;
early projections;
guidance;
axon
outgrowth
INTRODUCTION
Studies of axonal pathfinding in diverse species
show that growing axons use several types of guidance cues,
successively or in combination, to find the path toward their final
target. Such cues are believed to be distributed continuously in the
epithelia in which pioneer axons extend (Caudy and Bentley, 1986
;
Harris and Holt, 1990
; Cornel and Holt, 1992
) or to be present in a
more restricted manner among cells and in the extracellular matrix
along pathways (for review, see Dodd and Jessell, 1988
; Goodman and
Shatz, 1993
). On a cellular level, changes in the course of growing
axons, or sorting out among several types of fibers, are apparent in
spatially restricted regions, termed ``decision regions,'' and
intermediate targets such as the motoneuronal plexus (Tosney and
Landmesser, 1985
; Tosney, 1991
), the floor plate of the spinal cord
(Tessier-Lavigne et al., 1988
; Placzek et al., 1990
; Yaginuma et al.,
1993
) and hindbrain (Shirasaki et al., 1995
), and the optic chiasm
(Godement et al., 1987
, 1990
; Wizenmann et al., 1993
; Godement, 1994
;
Sretavan et al., 1994
; Marcus et al., 1995
). Such regions may secrete
or display cues that ingrowing fibers use for their guidance
(Felsenfeld et al., 1994
; Serafini et al., 1994
). In addition, several
studies implicate the role of early neurons in guiding the growth of
later-growing fibers or fibers originating from other areas (Ho and
Goodman, 1982
; Raper et al., 1983b
; Ghosh et al., 1990
; Wilson and
Easter, 1991
; Sretavan et al., 1994
). The earliest-projecting neurons
might rely solely on cues within the neuroepithelium for their
guidance, whereas later-projecting neurons could use a greater variety
of cellular and molecular cues.
Selective axonal guidance by earlier-generated neurons is also
implicated in the development of the long-distance pathways that
reciprocally connect thalamic nuclei and cortical areas. A set of
early-generated and transitory neurons in the cortex, the ``subplate
cells'' (Kostovic and Molliver, 1974
; Marin-Padilla, 1978
; Luskin and
Shatz, 1985
; Bayer and Altman, 1990
), could be involved in guiding
thalamic fibers toward and into their cortical target areas (De Carlos
and O'Leary, 1992
; Ghosh and Shatz, 1992
; Miller et al., 1993
; for
reviews, see O'Leary and Koester, 1993
; Allendoerfer and Shatz, 1994
;
Molnàr and Blakemore, 1995
). In carnivores, the axons of the
subplate cells project toward the thalamus and could constitute a
pioneer pathway that growing thalamic axons follow to reach the cortex
(McConnell et al., 1989
). Ablation of subplate neurons leads to a
failure of thalamic fibers to recognize their normal cortical target
areas (Ghosh et al., 1990
). Because efferent cortical and afferent
thalamic axons are segregated spatially in the intermediate zone of the
developing cortical wall of rodents (Blakemore and Molnàr, 1990
;
De Carlos and O'Leary, 1992
; Miller et al., 1993
), interactions
between both sets of fibers do not necessarily occur at this level in
all species.
Although much is known about the development of corticofugal and
thalamocortical fibers as they grow in the immediate vicinity of the
cortex, several characteristics of the pathfinding between the thalamus
and the cortex are little understood. In particular, how are the
earliest corticofugal fibers themselves guided toward the thalamus?
This question also applies to the guidance of the earliest thalamic
fibers toward the cortex. As in other projection systems, information
for the selective guidance of these fibers could be provided by cues
along the trajectory followed by these fibers in the neuroepithelium
and in defined regions. In fact, a putative intermediate target
recently has been identified along the path between the neocortex and
the dorsal thalamus in the rat. Cells from the reticular nucleus seem
to provide pioneer axons to the dorsal thalamus. They could guide
corticothalamic axons toward the thalamus and thalamocortical axons
outside of the dorsal thalamus (Mitrofanis and Guillery, 1993
).
In the present study, we used neuroanatomical tracing techniques to
study the time course of development and the trajectories of
thalamocortical projections in hamster embryos. Our aim was to identify
characteristic features of the growth of these fibers at various sites
between the thalamus and cortex. We also designed in vitro
experiments to study the growth of corticofugal axons in the basal
telencephalon in the absence of potential interactions with the
reciprocal thalamocortical axons. Our observations suggest that the
lateral and medial divisions of the embryonic ganglionic eminence (GE)
could fulfill several important roles for guiding cortical and probably
thalamic fibers in the early phase of progression to their respective
targets.
Abbreviations
| GE, |
ganglionic eminence
|
| LGE, |
lateral ganglionic eminence |
| MGE, |
medial
ganglionic eminence |
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Embryos
Embryonic day 11 (E11) to E13 hamster embryos were used in
tracing experiments, and E12-E13 mouse (C57BL/6J) embryos were used
when immunostaining was associated with tracing studies. Animals were
mated overnight in the laboratory. Mated mice were checked for the
presence of vaginal plugs the next morning. The first day of gestation
was termed embryonic day 0, and it was noted E0 until noon and was E0.5
thereafter. Gestation lasted 16 d in hamsters and 19 d in mice.
Pregnant females were killed by an intraperitoneal injection of
pentobarbital (hamster) or ether anesthesia and cervical dislocation
(mouse). The pups were removed immediately by cesarean surgery, and
their heads were immersed in cold fixative or culture medium, depending
on experiments.
Tracing experiments
Carbocyanines were used as tracers in formaldehyde-fixed brains
(Godement et al., 1987
).
Brain fixation. After dissection in cold fixative (4%
paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH
7.4, at 4°C) or cold culture medium (F12-DMEM with 8 mM D+glucose and 14 mM
NaHCO3, at 4°C) or in cold PBS (0.1 M at 4°C), brains and flattened telencephalic
vesicles were returned to the fixative for at least 4 d before dyes
were injected.
Labeling.
1,1
-Dioctadecyl-3,3,3
,3
-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate,
DiIC18(3) (D-282, Molecular Probes) (DiI) or
4-(4-dihexa- decylaminostyryl)-N-methylpyridinium
iodide, 4-Di-16-ASP (D-3883, Molecular Probes) (DiA) was used. The
signal/noise ratio is better with DiI, and therefore it was used more
often. Small crystals of dye were applied to the pial surface of the
embryonic neocortex or dorsal thalamus after the pia was removed, or
tips of glass micropipettes coated with DiI or DiA were used to impale
the tissue. When crystals were placed on the surface of the dorsal
diencephalon, a thin film of paraplast was inserted between the
diencephalon and the telencephalon to avoid diffusion of the dye. At
each embryonic stage, approximately 15 brains received cortical
injections (18 brains at E11.5, 16 at E12.5, 17 at E13.5), and 7 brains
received thalamic injections (6 brains at E11.5, 7 at E12.5 and E13.5).
The brains were then returned to fixative and kept for 6 weeks at room
temperature before analysis or photoconversion.
Analysis of labeling. Whole brains were embedded in 3%
agarose, and serial sections were cut with a vibratome in the frontal
plane. The thickness of sections varied from 60 µm for the youngest
brains to 100 µm for the oldest. Sections were collected and kept in
fixative (4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate
buffer, pH 7.4, at 4°C). Before observation, they were rinsed and
mounted in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. Some
brains of the youngest embryos were dissected out, flattened, and
observed as whole-mounted. The telencephalic vesicles were flattened
after olfactory bulb and hippocampus were removed. The rest of the
brain was separated into two halves by cutting along the midline.
Flattened brains were mounted in glycerol/phosphate buffer (9 vol of
glycerol/1 vol of phosphate buffer). We used a Zeiss epifluorescence
microscope (Axioskop) for observations, camera lucida drawings,
and microphotographs. Drawings of serial sections were used to
reconstruct the trajectory of labeled fibers according to the location
of the injection site. Landmarks including the pineal gland, the
telodiencephalic sulcus, and the sulcus between the lateral ganglionic
eminence (LGE) and the medial ganglionic eminence (MGE) were used as
reference points for reconstruction.
Photoconversion of DiI labeling. Free-floating sections were
pretreated for 30 min in 1%
H2O2 in PBS. They were
preincubated for 10 min in 0.1 M Tris buffer at
pH 8.2, and then for 10 to 30 min in filtered ice-cold 0.15% DAB in
0.1 M Tris buffer, pH 8.2. Thereafter, sections
were transferred in a drop of fresh diaminobenzidine (DAB) solution
under a Zeiss epifluorescence microscope (Axioskop) equipped with a 100 W HBO lamp and illuminated through a 10× objective (Fluar 10×, NA
0.50) using a rhodamine filter set (Zeiss filter set 15). The DAB
solution was changed every 10 min; the photoconversion of DiI into a
yellow-brown DAB precipitate was obtained in 40-90 min. Sections were
then rinsed in PBS for several hours, and either processed as
free-floating for calbindin or Map2 immunostaining or mounted in
glycerol/phosphate (vol/vol) and viewed using Nomarski optics.
Immunohistochemistry
Immunostaining was performed on sections from mouse brain tissue
because of the specificity of available antibodies (anti-Map2 and
CaBP28K). Free-floating photoconverted sections and cryostat sections
were processed.
Cryostat sections were prepared from embryonic brains fixed by
immersion for 2-3 hr in ice-cold 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, and then
cryoprotected at 4°C overnight in 20% sucrose/0.1
M phosphate buffer at pH 7.4. The brains were
frozen in
50°C isopentane and serially cut on a cryostat at 15 µm
in the coronal plane.
Before immunostaining, sections were rinsed in 0.02 M PBS, pH 7.4, and preincubated for 1 hr in a
blocking solution (4% milk, 0.2% Triton X-100 in PBS). Thereafter
they were incubated in primary antisera overnight at room temperature.
The concentrations of primary antisera were 1:500 and 1:1000 for the
rabbit polyclonal anti-Map2 serum (serum B9; Brion et al., 1988
)
provided by Dr. J. P. Brion (Université Libre de Bruxelles,
Laboratoire d'Anatomie Pathologique et de Microscopie Electronique,
Bruxelles, Belgium) and 1:2000 and 1:3000 for the rabbit polyclonal
anti-calbindin-28 kDa serum (Dechesne and Thomasset, 1988
) provided by
Dr. M. Thomasset (Inserm U120, Hôpital Robert Debré, Paris,
France). Antisera were diluted in PBS containing 2% milk and 0.2%
Triton X-100. Sections were rinsed several times and processed for
avidin-biotin-peroxidase immunostaining. They were incubated for 1 hr
in 1:200 biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG (Vector Laboratories) in PBS
containing 2% milk and 0.2% Triton X-100. After three rinses in PBS,
they were incubated for 1 hr in avidin-biotin-horseradish peroxidase
complex (ABC kit, Vector Laboratories). The immunolabeling was revealed
using 0.05% DAB, 0.02% nickel ammonium sulfate, and 0.01%
H2O2 in 0.1 M Tris buffer at pH 7.2. Nickel intensifies and
colors gray the DAB precipitate. In photoconverted sections,
therefore, the gray immunopositive cells were easily distinguishable
from the DAB-photoconverted DiI labeling.
Cryostat sections were dehydrated in alcohol, cleared in xylene, and
coverslipped with permount. Double-labeled sections were mounted in
glycerol/phosphate and viewed using Nomarski optics.
Tissue culture
Explants of telencephalic vesicles were prepared from E13 mouse
or E12 hamster embryonic brains. Results obtained with mouse and
hamster embryos were identical and were analyzed together. Embryos were
dissected in cold culture medium (F12-DMEM, Gibco). The cortex and GE
were separated from the rest of the telencephalic vesicle, and the pia
was removed. They were kept attached together to prepare ``whole''
telencephalic vesicle explants (see Table 2, Fig. 10). For coculture
experiments, the embryonic neocortex, lateral ridge, and medial ridge
of the GE were transected. In half of the experiments, the ridges of
the GE were kept attached to the ventral structures of the basal
telencephalon; in the other half, the ridges were dissected from the
rest of the basal telencephalon with thin tungsten needles. These two
experimental conditions gave similar results and therefore were
analyzed together. Control cocultures were made by placing an explant
of neocortex next to an explant of neocortex, superior colliculus, or
brainstem (region of pons).
Table 2.
Cultures of whole telencephalic vesicles or cocultures of
cortex and GE
| Experimental
conditions |
Mouse |
Hamster |
|
| ``Whole'' telencephalic
vesicles |
DiI site
|
| (#1) |
Cortex |
12 |
11 |
|
GE |
8
|
|
| Neocortex/whole GE |
| (#2) |
4 |
3
|
|
| Neocortex/lateral GE |
| (#3) |
8
|
| (#4) |
8 |
3 |
| (#5) |
4 |
| LGE at the rostral or
caudal border of cortex |
12 |
4 |
|
| Neocortex/medial GE
|
| (#6) |
8 |
| (#7) |
8 |
|
| Controls
|
| Neocortex/neocortex (#8) |
4
|
| Neocortex/brainstem |
8 |
| Neocortex/superior
colliculus (#9) |
8 |
|
|
Number of cases analyzed in each experimental condition. Numbers
in parentheses correspond to configuration in Figure
10B.
|
|
Fig. 10.
Summary diagram showing the results of coculture
experiments. A, The telencephalic vesicle as viewed from the
ventricular side and regions used in the cocultures; B,
schemes of the cocultures showing the DiI injection sites (dark
spots) and the trajectories of labeled corticofugal fibers in the
cultures. Arrowheads indicate fibers that converge and end
in a subregion of the GE explants. 1: ``Whole''
telencephalic vesicle explant; 2: coculture between
neocortex and GE; 3-5: cocultures of neocortex and LGE in
three distinct relative orientations; 6-7: cocultures of
neocortex and MGE in two distinct relative orientations;
8-9: control cocultures between two explants of neocortex
(8) and between neocortex and superior colliculus
(9). C, Interpretative scheme of the culture and
coculture results. In whole telencephalic vesicle explants,
corticofugal fibers end among cells in the LGE or project toward a
subpart of the GE, indicated by stripes. Cells in the LGE
project toward the neocortex or toward the same area of the GE as
reached by the corticofugal fibers. This pattern closely resembles that
observed in vivo. In cocultures of neocortex with GE, LGE,
or MGE, corticofugal fibers also converge toward a subregion of the GE.
In all parts of the figure, the rostral (r) and caudal
(c), medial (m) and lateral (l) sides
are indicated by the small letters.
[View Larger Version of this Image (32K GIF file)]
Explants were transferred in a drop of medium onto nonpretreated
microporous membranes in Millicell inserts CM (Millipore Corporation)
and flattened with their ventricular side turned up. In cocultures
between cortical explants and LGE or MGE explants, the two explants
were placed side by side, either in their normal in vivo
orientations or in different orientations (see Fig. 10, Table 2). Four
to six explants or cocultures were placed in each Millicell insert
before they were transferred in dishes containing the culture medium
(F12-DMEM with 15 mM Hepes buffer, 14 mM NaHCO3, 33 mM glucose, 20 U/ml penicillin/streptomycin, and
10% heat-inactivated neonatal bovine serum). Tissues were cultured at
the interface air/medium for 4-5 d at 37°C in 5%
CO2. After fixation in 4% paraformaldehyde in
0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.2, DiI crystals were
inserted into the cortical wall to trace corticofugal fibers. Labeling
was analyzed 4-6 weeks later.
RESULTS
Growth of corticofugal fibers
To study the trajectories of corticofugal axons as well as
possible interactions with cells along the way, we injected
carbocyanine dyes in the cortex of fixed brains and combined dye
tracing with immunohistochemistry. Injections of DiI or DiA were made
at several sites in the cortex of E11.5-E13.5 hamster embryos.
E11.5
At this age, the cortical wall consists of the preplate
above the thick germinative epithelium (Fig. 1). Pioneer
cortical axons labeled from the lateral-most injection sites have left
the embryonic neocortex, and their tips are observed within the LGE. At
the frontier between the cortex and the LGE, the cortical axons have
made a 90° turn and shifted from a dorsoventral to a lateromedian
trajectory (Fig. 2). These cortical fibers distribute
within the mantle region of the LGE, where they end with large and
complex growth cones. No labeled fibers were observed in the
ventricular neuroepithelium of the GE. The longest axons were
~800-900 µm long.
Fig. 1.
The main subdivisions of the forebrain on frontal,
uncounterstained sections from an E11.5 hamster brain. The lateral and
medial ridges of the GE are individualized clearly rostrally
(section 1) and fuse caudally (section 2).
Postmitotic cells are born in the ventricular zone (vz) and
migrate in the preplate (pp) at the pial side of the
cortical wall (cx) and in the mantle region (mtl)
of the GE. Asterisks indicate the ventricular angle.
pi, Pineal gland; dt, dorsal thalamus;
ge, ganglionic eminence; lge, lateral ganglionic
eminence; mge, medial ganglionic eminence; v,
ventricle. Scale bar, 1000 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (119K GIF file)]
Fig. 2.
Labeling in the basal telencephalon of an E11.5
hamster brain injected with DiI in the lateral cortical wall
(cx) and DiA in the dorsal thalamus. A, B, The
same frontal section is shown viewed through filter sets for DiI
(A) or DiA (B). Dotted lines indicate
the outlines of the section. A, DiI-labeled corticofugal
axons leave the embryonic neocortex at the ventricular angle and turn
into the mantle of the LGE. Within the LGE, fibers bear complex growth
cones (thin arrows) and are mixed with labeled cell bodies
(large arrow). The star indicates the ventricular
angle. B, Axons and cell bodies (large arrow)
labeled with DiA are located in the mantle region of the MGE, close to
the junction with the diencephalon. The arrowheads point to
two thalamic growth cones, and thin arrows point to
corticofugal fibers faintly visible through the DiA filter.
C, High-magnification view of corticofugal fibers and of a
cell (arrow) in the mantle of the LGE. Scale bars: A,
B, 200 µm; C, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (66K GIF file)]
Within the LGE, cortical fibers ran near or among sparsely distributed
but strongly labeled cells, with very complex morphologies (Fig.
2A,C). Therefore, the LGE projects axons into the cortical
wall at this early stage of development. Injections of DiI directly
into the LGE confirm this point. After such injections, labeled LGE
fibers were seen to project into the cortical wall, often for long
distances.
E12.5
The entire tangential extent of the neocortex has now projected
axons that have extended beyond the lateral border of the cortical wall
and into the basal telencephalon (Table 1). At the
ventricular angle of the telencephalic vesicle, cortical fibers had
crossed the intermediate zone of the cerebral wall and entered the LGE.
They were observed in the whole dorsoventral and lateromedial extent of
the mantle region of the LGE, they were defasciculated (Fig.
3A), and most of them ended with wide and
foliate growth cones. As at E11.5, the growth cones in the LGE were
often bifurcated and large, giving them a more complex appearance than
growth cones in the intermediate zone of the cortical wall (compare
Fig. 5, F and D, right). Only a small
proportion of the fibers extended in the dorsal part of the MGE; most
remained confined within the LGE. No fibers were observed in the dorsal
diencephalon at this age. In the LGE, retrogradely labeled cells were
again observed, in higher numbers than at E11.5 (Fig. 3A,C).
They were much less numerous in caudal than in rostral regions of the
GE. Labeled cells were also observed occasionally in the intermediate
zone of the cortical wall, mixed with the corticofugal fibers (Fig.
3B). They generally had large and elongated cell bodies,
oriented parallel to the fibers.
Table 1.
Furthest extent of fibers after cortical or thalamic
injections in hamster embryos
|
E11.5
|
E12.5
|
E13.5
|
| Neocortex |
GE |
Thalamus |
Neocortex |
GE |
Thalamus |
Neocortex |
GE |
Thalamus
|
|
| Cortical injections
|
| n |
12 |
6 |
0 |
2 |
13 |
0 |
1 |
11 |
3
|
| % |
67 |
33 |
0 |
13 |
87 |
0 |
7 |
73 |
20
|
| Thalamic injections
|
| n |
0 |
5 |
3 |
1 |
5 |
0 |
7 |
0 |
0
|
| % |
0 |
62 |
38 |
17 |
83 |
0 |
100 |
0 |
0 |
|
|
For each age, the table indicates the number (n) and
percentage (%) of embryos in which the distal-most site reached by the
fibers was the neocortex, GE, or thalamus. Although corticofugal fibers
reach the GE in 1 case out of 3 at E11.5, none are observed in the
thalamus 1 d later, and the great majority are terminating instead in
the GE. They reach the thalamus only 2 d after they are observed in the
GE for the first time. At E11.5 and E12.5, the most advanced
thalamocortical fibers are found mainly in the GE, and very few are
found in the cortex. At E13.5, projections into the cortex are observed
in all experimental cases analyzed.
|
|
Fig. 3.
Labeling in the telencephalon of E12.5 embryos
after DiI injections in the cortical wall (cx).
A, Cortical fibers end with complex growth cones in the
lateral part of the GE. A very small number of fibers extend in the
medial part of the GE. Dotted lines indicate the outlines of
the section, and the star indicates the ventricular angle.
B, C, Retrogradely labeled cells observed in the mantle of
the GE, near the front of growth of efferent cortical fibers. The focus
was changed between the two plates, and arrows show the same
cell. Scale bars: A, 200 µm; B, C, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (81K GIF file)]
Fig. 5.
Combined Map2 and CaBP28K immunostaining
together with photoconverted DiI-labeled corticofugal fibers in E13.5
mouse brains. A, In the cortical wall, MAP-2 positive
neurons (brown) are distributed in the cortical plate and in
the lower half of the intermediate zone (iz). A narrow and
dense stripe containing strongly positive neurons is seen at the
lateral border of the LGE (lge; arrowheads). In
the rest of the LGE, positive cells are less dense and more weakly
stained. B, Double-labeled section showing photoconverted
DiI-labeled corticofugal axons (brown) and Map2-positive
cells (gray) in the GE (ge). C,
Cortical fibers (brown) run among CaBP28K-positive cells
(dark blue) in the lower part of the iz, at the ventricular
angle and in the mantle zone of the LGE. White marker points
to the CaBP28K-positive cell shown in D. D, Two
high-magnification views of a CaBP28K-positive cell with two growth
cones closely apposed to the same process. E,
High-magnification view of a retrogradely labeled cell at the lateral
border of the LGE. F, Two cortical fibers (black
arrowheads) are shown closely apposed to a CaBP28K-positive cell
body in the LGE. Growth cones in the vicinity exhibit very complex
morphologies. Scale bars: A, 100 µm; D, 50 µm; C, E, F, 10 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (70K GIF file)]
E13.5
At this age, large numbers of labeled cortical fibers were
observed beyond the embryonic striatum that differentiated in the LGE
(Fig. 4A), and the most advanced had already
reached the dorsal thalamus (Table 1). In the cortical wall, most
fibers ran in a widespread stream within the intermediate zone, and a
thin fascicle of efferent fibers ran within the subplate. The stream of
corticofugal axons enlarged as it reached the lateral part of the
embryonic striatum and then condensed again to form the internal
capsule in the medial part of the basal telencephalon. Labeled cell
bodies were still observed in the embryonic striatum, but their density
strongly decreased compared with E12.5.
Fig. 4.
Labeling in the telencephalon of E13.5 embryos
after dye injections in the cortical wall and in the dorsal thalamus.
A, B, Labeling is shown in the basal telencephalon of an
E13.5 embryo injected with DiI in the lateral neocortex and with DiA in
the dorsal thalamus. A, DiI-labeled corticofugal axons form
a thin fascicle in the subplate and a deep broader bundle in the
intermediate zone (iz). In the basal telencephalon, they
spread out in the dorsoventral direction and then condense to form the
internal capsule (ic). B, DiA-labeled thalamic
axons form a thick bundle in the basal telencephalon and reach the
upper part of the intermediate zone in the cortical wall. C,
Retrogradely labeled cells in the lateral cortex, from an injection
site in the dorsal thalamus. The cells are distributed within the whole
radial extent of the cortical plate (cp), and most of them
are elongated radially and have a dendritic tree oriented toward the
surface of the cortex. One of them (vertical arrow) is
located at the basis of the cp, where the subplate begins to
differentiate at this stage. The star indicates the
ventricular angle, and the small and large
arrowheads point to the same blood vessels in A and
B. Dotted lines indicate the outlines of
sections. ic, Internal capsule; th, thalamus;
vz, ventricular zone; iz, intermediate zone.
Scale bars: A, 200 µm; C, 100 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (80K GIF file)]
Cellular environment of the growing cortical axons at the
ventricular angle and into the LGE
We studied the cellular environment of corticofugal axons in the
LGE and at the ventricular angle when these fibers still navigate into
the LGE and are closely associated to sparse, retrogradely labeled cell
bodies. Because few antibodies are available that react well with
antigens in hamsters, immunohistochemistry was performed in E13 mouse
embryos, a developmental stage that corresponds to the beginning of E12
in hamster embryos.
We used an antibody that recognizes a juvenile form of the neuronal
marker Map2 in mouse embryos (Brion et al., 1988
). On frontal sections
from E13 mouse brains, cells strongly stained for Map2 were found in
the lower half of the intermediate zone (Fig.
5A). They showed a tangential arrangement,
although they occasionally sent a few oblique or radial processes
toward the ventricular zone or the overlying cortical plate. At the
ventricular angle, they coursed around the fold of the neuroepithelium.
This ``stream'' of tangential cells ended or changed its arrangement
at the lateral border of the GE, where a narrow dorsoventral band
contained a high density of Map2-positive cells (Fig. 5A).
Elsewhere in the mantle zone of the GE, stained cells were few and
sparsely distributed throughout the whole lateromedian extent. As seen
in photoconverted DiI-labeled sections, the trajectory of the cortical
axons at the ventricular angle matches the distribution of
Map2-positive neurons. In the LGE, the dye-labeled cortical fibers and
cells were distributed among differentiating neurons in the mantle
zone, which weakly expressed Map2 (Fig. 5B).
Cells strongly expressing CaBP28K and bearing processes oriented in
several directions were also observed among growing corticofugal fibers
at the ventricular angle and in the mantle zone of the LGE (Fig.
5C). Near the front of growth of the cortical axons, we
frequently observed DiI-labeled fibers closely apposed to CaBP28K
positive cell bodies (Fig. 5D,F), some of which had neuronal
morphologies (Fig. 5D). These immunostained cells were never
DiI-labeled.
Growth of thalamocortical fibers
At the same time that corticofugal fibers grow, first toward the
GE, then into the thalamus, thalamocortical fibers pioneer the
reciprocal pathway and invade the cortex.
E11.5
Injections in the dorsal thalamus labeled a large fascicle of
fibers that coursed toward the telodiencephalic sulcus, but only a few
fibers had reached the MGE at this time (Fig. 2B). Double
injections of DiI in the cortical wall and of DiA in the thalamus
showed that the pioneer cortical and thalamic fibers (labeled from
injections in the parietal cortex and the ventral part of the dorsal
thalamus, respectively) had just met one another in the MGE, close to
the telodiencephalic sulcus (Fig. 2; compare Figs. 7 and 8). Labeled
cell bodies were always found in small groups near the tips of thalamic
fibers in the mantle zone of the MGE (Fig. 2B).
Fig. 7.
Summary diagram of the course followed by
corticofugal fibers between E11.5 and E13.5 in hamsters. The results of
injections performed on 13 flattened whole-mounted E11.5 telencephalic
vesicles are summarized on the right. At E11.5, cortical axons labeled
from the lateral-most sites enter the basal telencephalon
(Telenceph.). Retrogradely labeled cells are associated with
efferent fibers in the LGE. At E12.5, most fibers accumulate in the
LGE. Cells are retrogradely labeled in the LGE (regions labeled with
small white circles). At E13.5, fibers labeled from caudal
cortical regions, but not from rostral regions, enter the diencephalon
(Dienceph.). Thalamic cells are retrogradely labeled
(regions with small dark circles) from caudal cortical
areas. The left side shows trajectories in the horizontal
plane, as viewed from the dorsal aspect. The right side
shows trajectories in the vertical plane, as viewed from the lateral
aspect of the brain. The GE is indicated in gray; rostral is
to the right. Injection sites shown on the lateral views are
the open circles.
[View Larger Version of this Image (30K GIF file)]
Fig. 8.
A, B, Culture of an entire
telencephalic vesicle; C, D, coculture of neocortex
(cx) and GE (ge). Explants are viewed from
their ventricular side after 4 d of growth. Rostral is left,
dorsal is up. Injection sites of DiI are visible as
dark spots in transmitted light (A, C), and an
optically less dense area (white arrow) is visible in both
cases in the GE, below the LGE (lge). In both cultures, most
dye-labeled corticofugal axons (B, D) enter the LGE and some
of them converge toward a small site below the LGE, which corresponds
to the more transparent areas visible in A and C.
Scale bar, 1000 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (114K GIF file)]
E12.5
Fibers labeled from the dorsal thalamus reached the embryonic
striatum, where they seemed to be less scattered than the cortical
fibers (Fig. 6). Their growth cones accumulated at the
border between the embryonic striatum and the lateral cortical wall.
Double-labeling experiments confirmed that both cortical and thalamic
fibers were present in the lateral part of the GE. In the medial part
of the GE, cortical fibers ran dorsal to the thalamic fibers.
Fig. 6.
Frontal sections from the basal telencephalon of
an E12.5 hamster embryo injected with DiI into the dorsal thalamus
(dt). A, Low-magnification view of thalamic axons
in the internal capsule (ic). The cortical wall
(cx) received an injection of DiA, faintly visible though
this filter. Thalamic axons end with growth cones close to the lateral
border of the GE (ge). A cell (large arrow)
observed near thalamic axons in the ic is shown at high-magnification
in C. B, A more caudal section containing the
center of the injection site. The DiI crystal appears as a dark
rectangle. et, Epithalamus. Scale bars: A,
B, 200 µm; C, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (125K GIF file)]
As in E11.5 embryos, dye injections in the dorsal thalamus labeled a
few cells in the MGE, below and within the internal capsule (Fig.
6A,C).
E13.5
At this age, thalamic fibers were distributed widely within a
large anteroposterior domain of the cortical wall. Fibers traversed the
intermediate zone of the lateral part of the cortical wall and reached
the upper half of the intermediate zone and the subplate, but did not
yet enter the cortical plate (Fig. 4B).
Topographical organtion of the early corticofugal projection in the
telencephalic vesicle
At E11.5, the trajectories of corticofugal axons in the
telencephalic vesicle, as reconstructed from frontal sections or
analyzed on flattened vesicles (Fig. 7), were oriented
coarsely dorsoventrally, orthogonal to the rostrocaudal axis of the
telencephalic vesicle; however, cortical fibers arising from the
caudal-most sites made a rostral turn soon after entering the LGE. One
day later, at E12.5, most cortical axons still ended in the lateral
part of the basal telencephalon. The most advanced reached the MGE, and
in the last part of their trajectory were deflected into the
rostrocaudal plane to converge toward the telodiencephalic sulcus. At
E13.5, cortical fibers labeled from the presumptive parietal cortex
entered the dorsal thalamus. Thalamic injections, in contrast,
retrogradely labeled cortical plate and subplate cells within a small
lateral area of the presumptive parietal neocortex (Fig.
4C). Fibers labeled from other cortical areas had already
reached the internal capsule but not the dorsal diencephalon. At E13.5,
and in a few E12.5 embryos, cortical injections also labeled axons
whose trajectories in the basal telencephalon diverged from those
described above and illustrated in Figure 7. We did not study the
trajectories of these fibers.
In summary, the dye-labeling shows that the corticofugal and
thalamocortical axons grow out at the same time and simultaneously
reach the GE. Rather than interacting with each other, both sets of
fibers seem to interact with substrate in the LGE and MGE. At same
time, the LGE sends reciprocal projections toward the cortex, and the
MGE sends them toward the thalamus. After a waiting period of ~24 hr,
the cortical and thalamic projections leave the GE to reach their final
targets, and the efferent projections from the GE decrease.
Coculture experiment with the cortex and GE
The anatomical observations suggested that cortical and thalamic
fibers use the GE as an intermediate target. To test whether the GE
could specifically orient the growth of at least the corticofugal
axons, we conducted coculture experiments. First, we examined the
development of pathways within large explants comprising most of the
telencephalic vesicle (cortex + GE). We then made several types of
cocultures, in which a cortical explant was placed next to an explant
of the entire GE or of only the LGE or MGE, as well as control
cocultures in which the cortical explant was placed next to a
collicular, brainstem, or cortical explant (Table 2).
After 4-5 d in vitro, the cultures were fixed, and fibers
originating in the cortical explant were traced using DiI.
Growth of fibers within explants of the entire
telencephalic vesicle
We assessed whether cortical-GE projections developed when the
cortical wall and GE were kept attached together and cultured on a
Millicell filter. After 4-5 d in culture, the telencephalic vesicle
explants underwent some enlargement and distortions. The two ridges of
the GE became less apparent, but the cortex was still thinner than the
GE and clearly distinguishable from the adjacent LGE (Fig.
8A). Injections of DiI in the cortex labeled
cortical axons, most of which ended in the LGE. The majority followed
rather straight trajectories oriented toward the center of the GE, and
a small proportion of them reached a small area located below the LGE
in the center of the GE and grew around or within it (Fig.
8B). After 4 d in vitro, the pattern of cortical
fibers was remarkably similar to that observed in vivo
between E11.5 and E13.5 (see Fig. 7): (1) They followed dorsoventral
trajectories up to the LGE, where a large number of them
accumulated, and (2) those that left the LGE converged toward
a restricted region of the MGE. In a few experiments in which the
telencephalic vesicle explants were kept attached to the thalamus, a
higher number of corticofugal fibers reached the center of the MGE and
pursued their course toward the thalamus (data not shown). Dye
injections in the cortex labeled sparse cell bodies in the LGE
intermingled with cortical axons, suggesting that LGE-cortical
projections developed in these explants.
Close examination of the explants under both light (transmitted) and
epifluorescent illumination showed that the region of the GE toward
which corticofugal fibers were seen to converge was distinct from the
surrounding tissue in that it appeared as a restricted and clear area
under transmitted light (Fig. 8A). Small DiI injections in
this area retrogradely labeled cells in the cortex as well as a
restricted, rostrocaudally elongated group of cells in the lateral part
of the LGE. Thus, large numbers of fibers arising from both the cortex
and the LGE converged toward a subregion located in the center of the
MGE. Cortical axons arising from caudal aspects of the cortex ran
ventrally to the labeled cells in the LGE, whereas axons arising from
other cortical regions ran across them.
Development of fibers in cocultures of cortex and GE
When a cortical explant was placed next to an explant comprising
the entire GE, and both were oriented as in situ,
corticofugal axons crossed the frontier and followed trajectories
similar to those observed in the explants of ``whole'' telencephalic
vesicles (Fig. 8).
When a cortical explant was placed next to an explant comprising the
lateral subdivision of the GE (cortex + LGE cocultures), both explants
reproducing the normal relative orientations of both structures,
cortical axons formed fascicles that extended far into the LGE explant.
In the median zone of the LGE explant, we always observed a small area
reached by several fascicles arising from any rostrocaudal level. Among
cocultures, a varying proportion of fibers labeled from the cortical
explant (half of them in some cases) stopped in this region, which
appeared as a clear spot under transmitted light (Fig.
9A,B). A few fibers entered and remained
within this area where they defasciculated and formed a ball (Fig.
9C). Some fascicles were observed to be deflected just
before reaching this area. Fascicles that did not end there extended in
the rest of the LGE explant. They never exhibited a defasciculated
aspect.
Fig. 9.
Cocultures of neocortex with LGE (A, B, C,
F), MGE (D, E, G), neocortex (H), and brain
stem (I). The explants were from E13 mouse embryos. The
injection sites of DiI in the cortex are visible under fluorescent
illumination. A-C, Cortex/LGE coculture with the LGE
(lge) explant placed at the lateral border of the cortex
(cx). B, Labeled corticofugal fibers are shown
that converge toward a restricted area within the LGE
(arrow), which appears clear under light microscopy
(A). Many fibers seem to have stopped there (C),
and some fibers make a clear turn to reach this area. D, E,
Neocortex/MGE coculture: the MGE (mge) explant is placed at
the lateral border of the neocortex. E, Labeled corticofugal
axons are shown that converge toward a small area at the lateral border
of the MGE explant (arrow), which appears clear under light
microscopy (D). F, Cortex/LGE coculture with the
median border of the LGE explant placed at the median border of the
cortex. Fascicles of axons labeled from the cortical explant either
largely extend in the LGE explant or turn and end in a small area of
the LGE explant (arrow) close to the frontier. G,
Cortex/MGE coculture with the MGE explant placed at the median border
of the cortex. The fascicles of cortical axons converge toward the
lateral border of the MGE explant. H, I, In these cocultures
the corticofugal axons form small fascicles that course throughout the
adjacent explant. b. st., Brainstem. A-I,
Dotted lines show the frontiers between each explant. Scale
bars: A, D, F, H, I, 1000 µm; B, E, F, 500 µm; G, 380 µm; C, 250 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (129K GIF file)]
When both explants were placed in a manner that was different from
their normal in vivo orientation (for instance, with the LGE
explant facing the median side of the cortical explant; see Figs.
9F, 10), some fascicles of cortical axons again converged
toward a small area at the median border of the explant where they
remained, whereas other fascicles extended largely into the LGE
explant, independently from its lateromedian orientation. When we
placed LGE explants caudally or rostrally to cortical explants (Table
2), we observed that some cortical axons running close to the frontier
with the LGE left the fascicles, grew into the LGE explant, and again
ended in a restricted area of the LGE.
Because a restricted area at the median border of the LGE was
able to orient the growth of a varying proportion of cortical axons in
neocortex/LGE cocultures, whereas almost all corticofugal axons
converged toward the center of the GE in neocortex/GE cocultures, we
made cocultures of neocortex and MGE explants. When the normal relative
orientation of both structures was respected, with the lateral aspect
of the MGE facing the median aspect of the cortical explant (Fig.
9D,E), cortical axons stopped within the lateral border of
the MGE explant, close to the frontier with the neocortex, and formed a
large stump in some cases. As in cultures of whole telencephalic
vesicle explants and in neocortex/GE or LGE cocultures, the region in
which cortical fibers seemed to have stopped appeared as a small clear
area under transmitted light (Fig. 9D). When the normal
relative orientation of both explants was disrupted, with the MGE
explant adjacent to the median aspect of the cortical explant (Figs.
9G, 10), cortical axons then coursed across the MGE, but
virtually all of them converged toward a small region located along its
lateral border.
Development of fibers in cocultures of cortex and colliculus,
brainstem, or cortex
To assess whether only the GE or, alternatively, other regions of
the CNS were able to orient the growth of cortical fibers in
cocultures, we made cocultures between cortical and collicular,
brainstem, or cortical explants. In cocultures of cortex and
colliculus, cortical axons did not grow at all into the collicular
explant, suggesting that the collicular explant was not permissive for
the growth of corticofugal fibers (Fig. 10). Some
fibers were seen to grow at the interface between each explant, and
they did not seem to stop at any particular level. In cocultures of
cortex and brainstem or cortex, small fascicles of cortical axons
crossed the frontier and extended into the adjacent explant (Fig.
9H,I). Thus, these explants were growth-permissive
for cortical fibers. In contrast to the GE explants, however, cortical
and brainstem explants were not able to orient in any particular way
the trajectories of cortical fibers. The cortical fibers did not change
their orientation after crossing the frontier, neighboring fascicles
often diverged in the explants, and neither isolated fibers nor fiber
fascicles converged toward any particular region of the brainstem or
cortical explants.
DISCUSSION
In this study, we describe the growth pattern of the earliest
fibers that comprise the thalamocortical and corticothalamic
projections. The development of these pathways follows a characteristic
sequence, which is summarized in Figure 11. Our main
findings are that (1) both thalamic and cortical fibers seem to pause
within the GE for some time during their progression to their
respective targets; (2) neurons in the mantle region of the lateral and
medial subdivisions of the GE send early and transitory projections
toward the cortex and the thalamus, respectively, at stages when
thalamic and cortical fibers are growing toward or into the GE; and (3)
cocultures of cortical and MGE or LGE explants show a directed growth
of cortical fibers toward the GE. We also observed a reorganization in
the trajectories, a defasciculated growth of thalamic and cortical
fibers in the GE region, and a close apposition between cortical growth
cones and certain cells with complex morphologies in the GE. Taken
together, our findings suggest that the mantle region of the GE is a
prominent way-station in the pathway between thalamus and cortex and
may serve as an intermediate target for cortical and probably thalamic
fibers.
Fig. 11.
Early steps in the development of the projections
between thalamus (TH) and cortex (CX) and their
relationships with the early efferent projections from the basal
telencephalon. 1, Cortical axons from preplate cells
(gray) begin to enter the LGE, and axons from dorsal
thalamic cells (black) begin to enter the MGE. Reciprocally,
cells in the LGE (open circle) send a projection to the
cortex, and cells in the MGE (open circle) send a projection
to the dorsal thalamus. 2, Thalamic and cortical fibers
distribute within the GE, but do not enter the cortical wall or the
dorsal diencephalon, respectively. The projections between the LGE and
the embryonic neocortex show a rostrocaudal differentiation.
3, Thalamic and cortical fibers have reached their target
region. The efferent projections from the GE to the cortex and the
thalamus become reshaped or reduced.
[View Larger Version of this Image (12K GIF file)]
Growth of thalamic and cortical fibers toward the GE
The first fibers that exit the embryonic neocortex originate from
preplate cells in the lateral-most aspect of the cortical wall. These
cells are the closest to the exit point from the neocortex and may be
generated earliest in view of the lateromedian gradient of maturation
of the cortical wall in mammals (Angevine and Sidman,
1961
; Berry and Rogers, 1965
; Shimada and Langman, 1970
; Brückner
et al., 1976
; Crossland and Uchwacht, 1982
; Luskin and Shatz, 1985
;
Marin-Padilla, 1988
; Rakic, 1988
; Jackson et al., 1989
). As shown by
retrograde labeling experiments (data not shown), axons from these
preplate cells are also the first to reach the GE. Unlike those in
ferrets (McConnell et al., 1989
), they apparently do not reach the
dorsal thalamus much before the later-outgrowing axons from the
cortical plate cells do. Injections of DiI in the thalamus in all cases
resulted in labeling of both preplate and cortical plate cells.
A surprising observation is that the cortical fibers
accumulate for 1 d (between E11.5 and E12.5) within the LGE before
pursuing their growth through the telodiencephalic sulcus. During this
time, thalamic fibers extend into the MGE, and a few of them reach the
LGE. These observations imply that both pioneer cortical and thalamic
fibers grow independently from each other but converge in the GE:
specifically, from cortex to LGE and from thalamus to MGE.
Retrogradely labeled cells among extending fibers
In the intermediate zone of the cortical wall and around the
ventricular angle, efferent cortical fibers labeled with DiI are
intermingled with cells that are also labeled. Labeled cells are also
found in the LGE, although only for a short period (E11.5-E12.5).
These cells either could be labeled transcellularly (Godement et al.,
1987
) or could send a process within or toward the cortical wall. It is
unlikely that they would be labeled transcellularly, because (1)
careful examination of their morphologies shows that in all cases they
indeed sent a process toward and (as could sometimes be
observed in a single section) into the injection site; (2) we never
observed labeled radial glial cells far from the injection site,
although cortical fibers grow within a lattice of radial glial
processes that cover the whole extent of the cortical wall (Rakic,
1972
, 1988
; Gadisseux et al., 1989
) and GE (Liu and Graybiel, 1992
; our
unpublished observations), indicating that transcellular labeling was
absent or kept minimal in our material; (3) cells (both in the cortical
wall and GE) can be labeled similarly after in vivo
injections of DiI and WGA-HRP; and (4) our immunohistochemical data
indicate that Map2-positive neuronal cells (as well as
calbindin-positive cells) are found in these regions, with shapes and
distributions closely fitting those of the DiI-labeled cells. In
the cortical wall, these cells extend long processes toward the
cortical plate, and they obviously could be labeled retrogradely by our
injections. Many of these Map2-positive neurons also express GABA
(Cobas et al., 1991
; Delrio et al., 1992
; our unpublished
observations).
Early efferent projections from the GE
A novel finding in this study is that cells of the LGE project
axons to the cortical wall at stages when cortical cells extend an axon
to the GE and likewise that cells of the MGE send an early projection
to the dorsal thalamus when thalamic cells extend an axon through the
telodiencephalic sulcus. Because the striatum does not project back
onto the neocortex after birth and in the adult (Iñiguez et al.,
1990
; Gerfen, 1992
), this early corticopetal projection should be
present only transiently. In the LGE, the retrogradely labeled cells
were colocalized with juvenile neurons and calbindin-positive cells. We
could not detect double-labeled cells, probably because the
photo-oxidation process strongly reduced the immunoreactivity of cells.
In the rat, Liu and Graybiel (1992)
described an early and transient
population of calbindin-positive cells in the developing striatum that
are closely related to a pattern of calbindin-immunoreactive fibers
between the LGE and the neocortex, and it is likely that these
projections are the same as those we have observed by DiI-labeling.
The projection from the MGE to the thalamus arises in a region
containing a dense population of neurons. Studies performed at later
stages in rats have identified a population of neurons in the internal
capsule that are transient and send projections to the dorsal thalamus
(Mitrofanis and Baker, 1993
; Mitrofanis, 1994
). The cells engaged in
the early projection that we have observed could be equivalent to the
perireticular cells observed in rats. In hamsters, they both develop
and send projections to the thalamus very early (i.e., E11.5),
coincidental with the growth of pioneer dorsal thalamic fibers.
Thus, as they enter the basal telencephalon (GE), cortical and thalamic
projections can interact with two early efferent projections arising
from LGE and MGE cells that are located close to the limit between the
two compartments they will join. These two output projections,
apparently far-reaching, might well play symmetrical roles during
development by participating in the guidance of the first cortical and
thalamic fibers as they exit their domain of origin, e.g., by processes
of fiber-fiber fasciculation. It is noteworthy that the LGE-cortical
projection is transient, vanishing at E13.5; its potential role in the
guidance of cortical fibers would then be restricted to the earliest
(pioneer) fibers that leave the cortical wall, most of which project
down to thalamus or mesencephalic targets. In addition, axocellular
interactions could occur between the growing cortical (and maybe
thalamic) axons and cells distributed along their pathway. At the
ventricular angle, we frequently observed associations between growth
cones of cortical axons and cells expressing CaBP28K that are
distributed in the intermediate zone, some of which display neuronal
morphologies.
The early cortical and thalamic projections to the GE, which match the
two reverse projection systems from LGE to cortex and from MGE to
thalamus, define two early ``neopallial-LGE'' and ``thalamic-MGE''
domains. It is interesting to note that each domain also coincides with
the domains of expression of several developmental genes. Indeed, Gbx2,
a gene that encodes a homeodomain protein, is expressed in the MGE and
the dorsal thalamus (Bulfone et al., 1993b
), and Otx1 and Otx2 are
expressed in the cortical wall and the LGE (Simeone et al., 1993
). A
first step in the development of the reciprocal thalamocortical
connections may therefore be the establishment of reciprocal
projections within each domain, i.e., between cortex and LGE and
thalamus and MGE.
Growth of fibers within the GE
As cortical and thalamic fibers both enter the mantle region of
the LGE and MGE, they shift their directions of growth, become
defasciculated, and bear complex growth cones. Furthermore, during the
time in which cortical fibers accumulate in the LGE, some of their
growth cones are observed to be closely apposed to well differentiated,
calbindin-positive cells, which raises the possibility that they
interact with these cells. Calbindin-positive cells were observed both
close to the proliferative neuroepithelium and in the mantle region of
the GE, which at these ages contains postmitotic cells, in particular
neurons (Menezes and Luskin, 1994
; Porteus et al., 1994
). In view of
their large size and complex morphologies, it is likely that these
cells are neurons. They are clearly different from the radial glia that
are RC2-positive (Fishell et al., 1995
; our unpublished
observations).
Taken together, our results suggest that the mantle zones of both LGE
and MGE constitute a decision region for cortical and thalamic fibers.
In addition to the specific reorientation of growing corticofugal
fibers within the GE, apparent pausing of the fibers in this region,
the occurrence of complex growth cones and the axocellular contacts
suggest a role of LGE and MGE as intermediate targets for these fibers,
because these features are hallmarks of growing axons within
intermediate targets (Tosney and Landmesser, 1985
; Caudy and Bentley,
1986
; Bovolenta and Mason, 1987
; Godement et al., 1990
; Sretavan, 1993
;
Godement et al., 1994
; Marcus et al., 1995
).
This conclusion is also supported by the results of coculture
experiments in which we tested whether the GE alone could orient
specifically the growth and trajectories of corticofugal fibers. In
control cocultures (cortical-collicular, -brainstem, or -cortical
cocultures), cortical fibers were never observed to follow oriented
trajectories within the adjacent explant. In cocultures of cortex with
GE, an oriented growth of cortical fibers occurs toward the GE, more
precisely toward a region in the medial ridge of the GE, in several
types of explant cocultures, either intact cortical-GE explants or
cortical-LGE and -MGE cocultures. Contact interactions between cortical
fibers and cells in the GE may be involved in orienting the growth of
cortical fibers in the GE. LGE-derived axons were seen to converge
toward the same area as cortical fibers in the GE. Alternatively,
diffusible cues in the GE might orient the growth of cortical fibers
within this structure. Our observations suggest that both types of
mechanisms could be used, but additional experiments are needed to
determine their relative contribution to the pathfinding of cortical
fibers.
Previous studies about the development of thalamocortical projections
implicated the subplate (Allendoerfer and Shatz, 1994
), an intermediate
target located within the cortical wall. In the present study, we
define the GE, another intermediate target implicated at a very early
stage in the development of thalamocortical projections. In contrast to
the subplate, the GE is a structure embryologically independent from
the cortical wall as well from the dorsal thalamus (Lammers et al.,
1980
; Sidman and Rakic, 1982
). Its location on the path between
thalamus and cortex is well suited to guide the navigation of the first
thalamic and cortical fibers along their trajectory. To our knowledge,
the GE constitutes the first example of an intermediate target
described in the basal telencephalon.
FOOTNOTES
Received Nov. 21, 1995; revised Feb. 15, 1996; accepted Feb. 22, 1996.
This work was supported by Institut National de la Santé et de la
Recherche Médicale Grant CRE 910809 to C.M. and Centre National
de la Recherche Scientifique Grant A.T.I.P.E.3 91N60/1057 to P.G. We
thank Drs. Y. v. Boxberg and C. A. Mason for critically reading this
manuscript, and Dr. J. M. Deniau for helpful comments on basal
telencephalon organization. We are grateful to Drs. J.-P. Brion and M. Thomasset for their generous gifts of antibodies. G. Ghilini provided
expert assistance with immunocytochemistry, and J.P. Bouillot with
photography.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Christine Métin,
Institut Alfred Fessard, CNRS Bat 33, 1, Avenue de la Terrasse, 91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
REFERENCES
-
Allendoerfer KL,
Shatz CJ
(1994)
The subplate, a
transient neocortical structure: its role in the development of
connections between thalamus and cortex.
Annu Rev Neurosci
17:185-218 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Angevine JB,
Sidman RL
(1961)
Autoradiographic study of cell
migration during histogenesis of cerebral cortex in the mouse.
Nature
192:766-768.
[Medline]
-
Bayer SA,
Altman J
(1990)
Development of layer I and the
subplate in the rat neocortex.
Exp Neurol
107:48-62 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Berry M,
Rogers AW
(1965)
The migration of neuroblasts in the
developing cerebral cortex.
J Anat
99:691-709 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Blakemore C, Molnàr Z (1990) Factors involved in the
establishment of specific interconnections between thalamus and
cerebral cortex. In: The brain (Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on
Quantitative Biology, ed), pp 491-504. Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory.
-
Bovolenta P,
Mason CA
(1987)
Growth cone morphology varies
with position in the developing mouse visual pathway from retina to
first targets.
J Neurosci
7:1447-1460 .
[Abstract]
-
Brion J-P,
Guilleminot J,
Couchie D,
Flament-Durand J,
Nunez J
(1988)
Both adult and juvenile tau microtubule-associated
proteins are axon specific in the developing and adult rat cerebellum.
Neuroscience
25:139-146 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Brückner G,
Mares V,
Biesold D
(1976)
Neurogenesis in
the visual system of the rat: an autoradiographic investigation.
J Comp Neurol
166:245-256 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Bulfone A,
Puelles L,
Porteus MH,
Frohman MA,
Martin GR,
Rubenstein JLR
(1993b)
Spatially restricted expression of Dlx-1,
Dlx-2(Tes-1), Gbx-2, and Wnt-3 in the embryonic day 12.5 mouse
forebrain defines potential transverse and longitudinal segmental
boundaries.
J Neurosci
13:3155-3172 .
[Abstract]
-
Caudy M,
Bentley D
(1986)
Pioneer growth cone steering along
a series of neuronal and non-neuronal cues of different affinities.
J Neurosci
6:1781-1795 .
[Abstract]
-
Cobas A,
Fairen A,
Alvarezbolado G,
Sanchez MP
(1991)
Prenatal development of the intrinsic neurons of
the rat neocortex: a comparative study of the distribution of
GABA-immunoreactive cells and the GABAA receptor.
Neuroscience
40:375-397 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Cornel E,
Holt CE
(1992)
Precocious pathfinding: retinal
axons can navigate in an axonless brain.
Neuron
9:1001-1011 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Crossland WJ,
Uchwacht CJ
(1982)
Neurogenesis in the central
visual pathway of the golden hamster.
Dev Brain Res
5:99-103.
-
De Carlos JA,
O'Leary DDM
(1992)
Growth and targeting of
subplate axons and establishment of major cortical pathways.
J Neurosci
12:1194-1211 .
[Abstract]
-
Dechesne CJ,
Thomasset M
(1988)
Calbindin (CaBP28 kDa)
appearance and distribution during development of the mouse inner ear.
Dev Brain Res
40:233-242.
-
Delrio JA,
Soriano E,
Ferrer I
(1992)
Development of
GABA-immunoreactivity in the neocortex of the mouse.
J Comp Neurol
326:501-526.
[ISI][Medline]
-
Dodd J,
Jessell TM
(1988)
Axon guidance and the patterning of
neuronal projections in vertebrates.
Science
242:692-699 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Felsenfeld DP,
Hynes MA,
Skoter KM,
Furley AJ,
Jessell TM
(1994)
TAG-1 can mediate homophilic binding, but neurite
outgrowth on TAG-1 requires an L1-like molecule and
1 integrins.
Neuron
12:675-690 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Fishell G,
Blazeski R,
Godement P,
Rivas R,
Wang LC,
Mason CA
(1995)
Optical microscopy 3: tracking fluorescently
labeled neurons in developing brain.
FASEB J
9:324-334 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Gadisseux J-F,
Evrard P,
Misson J-P,
Caviness VS
(1989)
Dynamic structure of the radial glial fiber system
of the developing murine cerebral wall: an immunocytochemical analysis.
Dev Brain Res
50:55-67 .
[Medline]
-
Gerfen CR
(1992)
The neostriatal mosaic: multiple levels of
compartmental organzation.
Trends Neurosci
15:133-139 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Ghosh A,
Shatz CJ
(1992)
Pathfinding and target selection by
developing geniculocortical axons.
J Neurosci
12:39-55 .
[Abstract]
-
Ghosh A,
Antonini A,
McConnell SK,
Shatz CJ
(1990)
Requirement for subplate neurons in the formation
of thalamocortical connections.
Nature
347:179-181 .
[Medline]
-
Godement P
(1994)
Axonal pathfinding at the optic chiasm and
at decision regions: control of growth cone motility, guidance, and
cellular contacts.
Semin Dev Biol
5:381-389.
-
Godement P,
Salaün J,
Mason CA
(1990)
Retinal axon
pathfinding in the optic chiasm: divergence of crossed and uncrossed
fibers.
Neuron
5:173-186 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Godement P,
Vanselow J,
Thanos S,
Bonhoeffer F
(1987)
A study
in developing visual systems with a new method of staining neurones and
their processes in fixed tissue.
Development
101:697-713 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Godement P,
Wang LC,
Mason CA
(1994)
Retinal axon divergence
in the optic chiasm: dynamics of growth cone behavior at the midline.
J Neurosci
14:7024-7039 .
[Abstract]
-
Goodman CS, Shatz CJ (1993) Developmental mechanisms that
generate precise patterns of neuronal connectivity. Cell 72/Neuron
10[Suppl]:77-98.
-
Harris WA,
Holt CE
(1990)
Early events in the embryogenesis
of the vertebrate visual system.
Annu Rev Neurosci
13:155-169 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Ho RK,
Goodman CS
(1982)
Peripheral pathways are pioneered by
an array of central and peripheral neurones in grasshopper embryos.
Nature
297:404-406 .
[Medline]
-
Iñiguez C,
De Juan J,
Al-Majdalawi A,
Gayoso MJ
(1990)
Postnatal development of striatal connections in
the rat: a transport study with wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish
peroxidase.
Dev Brain Res
57:43-53 .
[Medline]
-
Jackson CA,
Peduzzi JD,
Hickey TL
(1989)
Visual cortex
development in ferret. I. Genesis and migration of visual cortical
neurons.
J Neurosci
9:1242-1253 .
[Abstract]
-
Kostovic I,
Molliver ME
(1974)
A new interpretation of the
laminar development of cerebral cortex: synaptogenesis in different
layers of neopallium in the human fetus.
Anat Rec
178:395.
-
Lammers GJ,
Gribnau AAM,
ten Donkelaar HJ
(1980)
Neurogenesis
in the basal forebrain in the chinese hamster (Cricetulus
griseus).
Anat Embryol
158:193-211 .
[Medline]
-
Liu F-C,
Graybiel AM
(1992)
Transient calbindin-D28K-positive
systems in the telencephalon: ganglionic eminence, developing striatum
and cerebral cortex.
J Neurosci
12:674-690 .
[Abstract]
-
Luskin MB,
Shatz CJ
(1985)
Neurogenesis of the cat's primary
visual cortex.
J Comp Neurol
242:611-631 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Marcus RC,
Blazeski R,
Godement P,
Mason CA
(1995)
Retinal
axon divergence in the optic chiasm: uncrossed axons diverge from
crossed axons within a midline glial specialzation.
J Neurosci
15:3716-3729 .
[Abstract]
-
Marin-Padilla M
(1978)
Dual origin of the mammalian neocortex
and evaluation of the cortical plate.
Anat Embryol
152:109-126 .
[Medline]
-
Marin-Padilla M
(1988)
Early ontogenesis of the human
cerebral cortex.
In: Development and maturation of cerebral cortex
(Peters, A,
Jones, EG,
eds)
, p. 1. New York: Plenum.
-
McConnell SK,
Ghosh A,
Shatz CJ
(1989)
Subplate neurons
pioneer the first axon pathway from the cerebral cortex.
Science
245:978-982 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Menezes JRL,
Luskin MB
(1994)
Expression of neuron-specific
tubulin defines a novel population in the proliferative layers of the
developing telencephalon.
J Neurosci
14:5399-5416.
[Abstract]
-
Miller B,
Chou L,
Finlay BL
(1993)
The early development of
thalamocortical and corticothalamic projections.
J Comp Neurol
335:16-41 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Mitrofanis J
(1994)
Development of the thalamic reticular
nucleus in ferrets with special reference to the perigeniculate and
perireticular cell groups.
Eur J Neurosci
6:253-263 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Mitrofanis J,
Baker GE
(1993)
Development of the thalamic
reticular and perireticular nuclei in rats and their relationship to
the course of growing corticofugal and corticopetal axons.
J Comp Neurol
338:575-587 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Mitrofanis J,
Guillery RW
(1993)
New views of the thalamic
reticular nucleus in the adult and the developing brain.
Trends Neurosci
16:240-245 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Molnàr Z,
Blakemore C
(1995)
How do thalamic axons find
their way to the cortex?
Trends Neurosci
18:389-397 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
O'Leary DDM,
Koester SE
(1993)
Development of projection
neuron types, axon pathways and patterned connections of the mammalian
cortex.
Neuron
10:991-1006.
[ISI][Medline]
-
Placzek M, Tessier-Lavigne M, Yamada Y, Dodd J, Jessell
TM (1990) Guidance of developing axons by diffusible
chemoattractants. In: The brain (Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on
Quantitative Biology, ed), pp 279-289. Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory.
-
Porteus MH,
Bulfone A,
Liu JK,
Puelles L,
Lo LC,
Rubenstein JL
(1994)
DLX-2, MASH-1, and MAP-2 expression and
bromodeoxyuridine incorporation define molecularly distinct cell
populations in the embryonic mouse forebrain.
J Neurosci
14:6370-6383 .
[Abstract]
-
Rakic P
(1972)
Mode of cell migration to the superficial
layers of fetal monkey neocortex.
J Comp Neurol
145:61-84 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Rakic P
(1988)
Specification of cerebral cortical areas.
Science
241:170-176 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Raper JA,
Bastiani M,
Goodman CS
(1983b)
Pathfinding by
neuronal growth cones in grasshopper embryos. II. Selective
fasciculation onto specific axonal pathways.
J Neurosci
3:31-41 .
[Abstract]
-
Serafini T,
Kennedy TE,
Galko MJ,
Mirzayan C,
Jessell TM,
Tessier-Lavigne M
(1994)
The netrins define a family of axon
outgrowth-promoting proteins homologous to C. elegans UNC-6.
Cell
78:409-424 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Shimada M,
Langman J
(1970)
Cell proliferation, migration and
differentiation in the cerebral cortex of the golden hamster.
J Comp Neurol
139:227-224 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Shirasaki R,
Tamada A,
Katsumata R,
Murakami F
(1995)
Guidance of cerebellofugal axons in the rat embryo:
directed growth towards the floor plate and subsequent elongation along
the longitudinal axis.
Neuron
14:961-972 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Sidman RL,
Rakic P
(1982)
Development of the human central
nervous system.
In: Histology and histopathology of the nervous system
(Adams, WH,
Adams, RD,
eds)
, p. 3. Illinois: C.C. Thomas.
-
Simeone A,
Acampora D,
Mallamaci A,
Stornaiuolo A,
Dapice MR,
Nigro V,
Boncinelli E
(1993)
A vertebrate gene related to
orthodenticle contains a homeodomain of the bicoid class and demarcates
anterior neuroectoderm in the gastrulating mouse embryo.
EMBO J
12:2735-2747 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Sretavan DW
(1993)
Pathfinding at the mammalian optic chiasm.
Curr Opin Neurobiol
3:45-52 .
[Medline]
-
Sretavan DW,
Feng L,
Pure E,
Reichardt LF
(1994)
Embryonic
neurons of the developing optic chiasm express L1 and CD44, cell
surface molecules with opposing effects on retinal axon growth.
Neuron
12:957-975 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Tessier-Lavigne M,
Placzek M,
Lumsden AGS,
Dodd J,
Jessell TM
(1988)
Chemotropic guidance of developing axons in the
mammalian central nervous system.
Nature
336:775-778 .
[Medline]
-
Tosney KW
(1991)
Cells and cell-interactions that guide motor
axons in the developing chick embryo.
BioEssays
13:17-23 .
[ISI][Medline]
-
Tosney KW,
Landmesser LT
(1985)
Growth cone morphology and
trajectory in the lumbosacral region of the chick embryo.
J Neurosci
5:2345-2358 .
[Abstract]
-
Wilson SW,
Easter SSJ
(1991)
A pioneering growth cone in the
embryonic zebrafish brain.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
88:2293-2296 .
[Abs