 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
Volume 16, Number 19,
Issue of October 1, 1996
pp. 6175-6182
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Consequences of Trisomy 16 for Mouse Brain Development:
Corticogenesis in a Model of Down Syndrome
Tarik F. Haydar1,
Mary
E. Blue3, 4,
Mark E. Molliver4, 5,
Bruce K. Krueger1, and
Paul J. Yarowsky2
Departments of 1 Physiology and
2 Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, University of
Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201, 3 Neuroscience Laboratory, Kennedy-Krieger Research
Institute, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, and Departments of
4 Neurology and 5 Neuroscience, The Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
We have studied abnormalities in the tangential and radial
expansion of the cerebral cortex during fetal development in the
trisomy 16 (Ts16) mouse, a model for human trisomy 21 (Down syndrome).
Slowed tangential expansion of the neuroepithelium in Ts16 resulted in
a reduction of final telencephalic size and is predicted to decrease
the number of radial cortical units in the mature brain. In addition,
radial growth of the Ts16 cortex was delayed at the time of peak
cortical neurogenesis in normal mice, but by embryonic day 18 the
cortex reached normal thickness. Because mouse chromosome 16 shares
many genes with human chromosome 21, abnormalities in Ts16 brain
development may parallel abnormalities in trisomy 21.
Key words:
cerebral cortex;
development;
histogenesis;
Down
syndrome;
trisomy 16;
mental retardation
INTRODUCTION
Human trisomy 21 [Down syndrome (DS)], the most
common genetic form of mental retardation, occurs in ~1 of every 700 live births (Hook, 1978 ; Adams et al., 1981 ). The causes of mental
retardation in DS remain unknown, although certain neuroanatomical
changes have been found in individuals with Down syndrome. Although the
cerebral cortex in DS brains is of normal thickness after cortical
histogenesis has ended at 18 weeks of gestation, abnormal cortical
stratification is observed as early as midgestation or 22 weeks
in utero (Schmidt-Sidor et al., 1990 ). Postnatal
histopathology in DS includes anomalies in cellular differentiation
(Wisniewski et al., 1984 ; Golden and Hyman, 1994 ), hypocellular
neocortex (Crome and Stern, 1972 ; Ross et al., 1984 ; Wisniewski et al.,
1986 ; Wisniewski, 1990 ), and abnormal lamination of the cortex (Colon,
1972 ; Becker, 1991 ; Golden and Hyman, 1994 ). DS brains also exhibit
abnormal convolutions, namely, shallow primary sulci and absent or
missing secondary sulci (Davidoff, 1928 ; Crome and Stern, 1972 ),
consistent with a decrease in cortical surface area. In addition,
cellular proliferation rates are decreased in DS (Mittwoch, 1967 ; Segal
and McCoy, 1974 ). The relationship, if any, between early fetal DS
brain development and later postnatal abnormalities is not known.
Many studies have reported the time of onset and scope of the various
postnatal neurological symptoms seen in DS, but because of the scarcity
of early fetal brain tissue and the inevitable morphogenetic
differences between genetically unrelated individuals of the same
genotype, few studies have addressed early cortical development in
fetal DS and matched normal brains. An animal model of DS with abnormal
cortical development would provide the potential for controlled
experimental manipulation and investigation of DS, and could also
elucidate mechanisms of normal brain development.
Mouse chromosome 16 (MMU16) is partially syntenic with human chromosome
21 (HSA21) (Reeves et al., 1986 ; Holtzman and Epstein, 1992 ). Most of
distal HSA21, the region necessary for the DS phenotype, also is on
MMU16. Therefore, the trisomy 16 (Ts16) mouse may be a genetic model of
DS. In support of this idea, mice trisomic for MMU16 share many
phenotypic similarities with human trisomy 21 (Ts21) fetuses. Like Ts21
individuals, Ts16 mice exhibit growth retardation (Grausz et al., 1991 ;
Lacey-Casem and Oster-Granite, 1994 ), craniofacial and liver
abnormalities, immunological defects, and congenital heart defects
(Gearhart et al., 1986 ). In vivo and in vitro
studies (Sweeney et al., 1987 ; Kiss et al., 1989 ) have shown that Ts16
brains also exhibit a decrease in the numbers of basal forebrain
cholinergic neurons, deficits in choline uptake and acetylcholine
release, and decreased activity of choline acetyltransferase.
Additional studies have shown higher rates of cell death (Bambrick et
al., 1995 ) and altered electrophysiological properties (Galdzicki et
al., 1993 ) in cultured Ts16 neurons. Unfortunately, Ts16 animals do not
survive until birth and, therefore, must be studied during the
embryonic and fetal periods.
Histogenesis of the murine cerebral cortex occurs from embryonic day 10 (E10) to E17. It is during the first half of this period that the
proliferative neuroepithelium, or ventricular zone (VZ), expands
tangentially, producing increased surface area of the telencephalic
vesicle (Caviness et al., 1995 ). This expansion determines the number
of cells and ultimately the size of the mature brain. Subsequently, the
VZ gives rise to the successive cellular layers of the cerebral cortex
as postmitotic neurons migrate radially, outward toward the pia (Rakic,
1972 ) (for review, see McConnell, 1988 ; Volpe, 1995 ). As cells migrate,
they form two developmental compartments, the cortical plate (CP) and
intermediate zone (IZ), which later become the laminated cortical gray
matter and white matter. This relatively short developmental period
(which corresponds to gestational weeks 7-18 in the human)
(Marin-Padilla, 1988 ) is ideal for examining critical developmental
processes in the mouse and consequences of the genetic abnormalities in
Ts16 for these processes.
In the present study, the morphological development of the cerebral
cortex in Ts16 was characterized by cross-sectional area, thickness,
and cell density measurements of the pallium and the developing
cortical layers from E13 to E18. Gross brain size was measured, and the
morphogenesis of cortical layers in trisomic mice was compared with
that from normal, euploid littermates. The data reveal two discrete
defects in Ts16 brain development. Slower neuroblast proliferation is
suggested as an explanation for both of these defects.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Ts16 fetuses were generated by mating males doubly heterozygous
for the appropriate Robertsonian chromosome translocation [Rb(6,16)24
LuB × Rb(16,17)7 BNRF1] to C57BL/6J female mice (The Jackson
Laboratories, Bar Harbor, ME) as described previously (Gropp et al.,
1974 ). Mating couples were paired at 5 P.M. and separated at 9 A.M. the
next morning. The day of separation was designated as E1. Pregnant dams
were killed by cervical dislocation, and fetuses were removed, chilled,
and decapitated immediately. Fetal heads were immersed in 4%
paraformaldehyde/PBS fixative overnight at 4°C, and corresponding
fetal livers were used for karyotype analysis to determine the genotype
of each fetus. The next day, the fetal heads were dehydrated through a
series of ascending ethanol concentrations and left in 100% butanol
overnight. The heads were cleared in xylene for 1 hr and then
infiltrated for 1.5 hr with paraffin at 60°C under vacuum and
paraffin-embedded. Although older trisomic fetuses ( E16) generally
display clear symptoms such as widespread edema and growth retardation,
fetal genotype was confirmed by karyotype analysis on corresponding
livers.
Karyotype analysis. Individual fetal livers were collected
in RPMI 1640 (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) and triturated at
37°C. Dissociated cells then were incubated in colchicine (0.005% in
PBS, 37°C) for 45 min, pelleted, and then resuspended in 75 mM KCl (37°C) for 30-45 min. Cells then were pelleted
and resuspended in Carnoy's fix (1:3, glacial acetic acid/methanol)
three times. This cell preparation was dropped onto slides and dried,
and the number and configuration of chromosomes were determined.
Chromosome spreads from euploid fetuses have 40 chromosomes, 2 of which
are in a single metacentric configuration because of the inheritance of
one Robertsonian translocation from the father. Trisomic fetuses have
41 chromosomes (2 metacentric pairs), indicating a triplication of
MMU16.
Tissue sectioning and histology. Coronal sections (5 µm)
from Ts16 and euploid littermate brains were collected on Superfrost
Plus slides (Fisher Scientific, Springfield, NJ) and air-dried.
Sections were deparaffinized with xylene for 15 min and then rehydrated
through a series of descending ethanol concentrations and washed in 0.1 M Tris. Sections were stained with 0.5% cresyl violet,
dehydrated, and coverslipped in Permount (Fisher).
Gross brain measurements. Fixed euploid and Ts16 brains were
removed from the calvarium and measured without paraffin processing.
Calipers calibrated to 0.05 mm (Mitutoyo) were used to make two
measurements: the maximum lateral span between the parietal poles and
the maximum rostral-caudal distance between the olfactory and
occipital poles of the cortex. Four Ts16/euploid littermate pairs were
analyzed for each age in this manner.
Cross-sectional area measurements. Cross-sectional areas of
the ventricular/subventricular zones (VZ/SVZ) and the subplate/cortical
plate (SP/CP) were determined using a Metamorph image analysis system
(Universal Imaging, West Chester, PA). Measurements were made in
matched Nissl-stained sagittal sections (5 µm thick) from five
euploid and Ts16 littermate pairs at E16. The contours of each measured
cortical area (see Fig. 1A) were
traced using a manually driven cursor. Areas were calculated from the
digitized data derived from a series of six sections per animal, the
level of which is shown in Figure 2. The data were
evaluated by a nested ANOVA to determine whether there were significant
differences between Ts16 and euploid cross-sectional cortical
areas.
Fig. 1.
Illustrations of the level of coronal section
analyzed and method of cross-sectional area analysis. A,
Cross-sectional area measurements were made of the VZ, CP, and pallium
in Nissl-stained parasagittal sections. The areas of the SP/CP and
VZ/SVZ (whited out) and the pallium
(between the arrows) were measured.
B, Coronal brain sections were taken at a point 200 µm
caudal to the interventricular foramen in a portion of the future
sensorimotor cortex where the hippocampus is found just dorsal to the
thalamus.
[View Larger Version of this Image (41K GIF file)]
Fig. 2.
Low-power photomicrographs of Nissl-stained
parasagittal sections from euploid (A) and Ts16
(B) brains. By E16, Ts16 brains clearly are smaller than
control brains in thickness and tangential extent of the cortex and
cortical layers. Scale bar, 200 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (69K GIF file)]
Measurements of cell density and thickness of cortical
layers. Total cell density measurements were made at the level of
the dorsal hippocampus (or future sensorimotor cortex, caudal aspect)
(see Figs. 1B, 3A-C for level of section)
from coronal sections taken from six littermate pairs each at E13, E14,
E16, and E18. All sections were matched, both within and between
groups, to be at a specific telencephalic level starting from 200 µm
caudal to the interventricular foramen and extending for 50 µm in the
caudal direction. All layers of the pallium, including the VZ/SVZ, IZ,
and SP/CP, were counted. Cell density was determined from 5-µm-thick
sections counted on a Leitz Ortholux microscope equipped with a square
reticle divided into 10 µm boxes in a 10 × 10 array. Cell
counts were made at a consistent position on the dorsal pallium, midway
between the medial and lateral borders of the lateral ventricle. The
cortical area in which cells were counted is demarcated by the
rectangle in Figure 3A. All cresyl
violet-stained nuclei were counted excluding endothelial cells, located
adjacent to blood vessels and identified by long and tapered fusiform
somata.
Fig. 3.
Low-power photomicrographs of Nissl-stained
coronal sections from euploid (left) and Ts16
(right) brains at the level of the dorsal hippocampus.
E13 brains (A) are indistinguishable in overall size and
in cortical thickness. By E16 (B), Ts16 brains are
clearly different from control brains in thickness of the pallium,
development of cortical layers, and overall size of the brain. By E18
(C), the decrease in thickness of the cortex and its
constituent layers has recovered in Ts16 and appears normal with
respect to controls. The box in A shows
the region of measurements of layer thickness and cell density given in
Figures 5 and 6. This boxed area also is shown at higher
magnification in Figure 4. th, Thalamus;
ic, internal capsule; star, lateral
ventricle. Scale bar, 100 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (81K GIF file)]
The reticle's grid was positioned such that the first row of 10 boxes
was aligned with the ventricular surface. The cells contained within
each successive bin of the entire reticle were counted beginning at the
ventricular surface (row 1) up to the pial surface. Cells were
considered to be within a certain row if they were contained by the
medial and dorsal lines of the row but not if they touched the lateral
or ventral lines. Endothelial cells were excluded from these
measurements. In cortices thicker than 100 µm, the superficial cells
were counted by repositioning the reticle such that the ventral border
of row 1 was aligned with the dorsal border of the previous row 10. Four alternating sections from each brain were counted in this manner,
and the data were analyzed by ANOVA to determine the significance of
differences between Ts16 and euploid cell counts. Measurements of the
thickness of each layer of the developing cortex were made in the same
region of each section as in the cell density measurements. These data
were analyzed by ANOVA to assess the significance of differences in the
thickness of cortical layers.
Although both the SP and the SVZ have been shown to be distinct
cortical layers (Angevine et al., 1970 ; Kostovic and Molliver, 1974 ),
the precise boundaries delineating these zones are difficult to
pinpoint. Therefore, measurements reported here combine these layers
with their functionally related neighbors. We use the term ``VZ/SVZ''
to identify the area encompassing these two proliferative zones as
extending from the surface of the lateral ventricle to the outermost
abventricular mitotic figure. After E13, SP/CP refers to the area
bounded by the large, pale SP cells and the border between the CP and
ML.
RESULTS
Gross abnormalities of Ts16 brain development
Throughout the period of cortical development that we examined,
the Ts16 brains were significantly smaller than those of euploid
littermates in both the medial-lateral and the rostral-caudal
dimensions (Table 1). An examination of Nissl-stained
sagittal sections also revealed significant abnormalities in Ts16 (Fig.
2). At E16, the Ts16 brain (B) is smaller than the euploid
brain (A) in both the rostral-caudal and the radial
dimensions. This decrease in rostral-caudal development is associated
with a reduction in the tangential extent of the entire palium
including the VZ/SVZ and SP/CP.
Table 1.
Gross brain measurements
(mm)
|
Euploid |
Ts16 |
%
Difference |
|
| E14 |
| R-C |
3.15 ± 0.08 |
2.83
± 0.12* |
11.2 |
| P-P |
3.28 ± 0.05 |
2.85
± 0.15* |
14.1 |
| E16 |
| R-C |
4.20 ± 0.13 |
3.63
± 0.24** |
14.6 |
| P-P |
4.63 ± 0.14 |
4.12
± 0.08* |
11.0 |
| E18 |
| R-C |
5.13 ± 0.15 |
4.22
± 0.10** |
18.7 |
| P-P |
5.68 ± 0.12 |
5.24
± 0.20** |
8.7 |
|
|
Mean values ± SEM for telencephalic dimensions in the
rostral-caudal (R-C) and parietal-parietal (P-P) axes of euploid
and Ts16 mice at E14, E16, and E18 (n = 4 pairs for all
ages). *p < 0.05; **p < 0.005.
|
|
Although the gross dimensions of the Ts16 cortex remained smaller
throughout development, examination of coronal sections revealed that
the decrease in radial thickness was limited to a 3-4 d period. At E13
(Fig. 3A), Ts16 and euploid brains appeared similar. By E14,
differences in the thickness of the cortex became evident (data not
shown), and by E16 (Fig. 3B), a marked size difference had
developed between the Ts16 and euploid cortices. The overall thickness
of the Ts16 pallium was diminished at E16, as were the individual
layers intervening between the VZ and the pial surface. The IZ and
SP/CP layers were significantly smaller at E14 and E16. By E18,
however, the thickness of the Ts16 cortex had increased considerably
and was not significantly different with respect to the radial
thickness of the pallium and its constituent cortical layers (Figs.
3C, 4C, 5D).
Fig. 4.
High-magnification photomicrographs of euploid
(left) and Ts16 (right) cortices taken
from the midpoint of the pallium, as shown in Figure 3A.
At E13 (A), euploid and Ts16 cortices appeared similar
in thickness of the VZ and PPL. At E16 (B), the size of
the SP/CP, IZ, and pallium was smaller in Ts16 than in euploid brains.
Moreover, the most dorsal cell-sparse region of the euploid IZ
(immediately subjacent to the SP) was absent from the Ts16 cortex. By
E18 (C), however, the thickness of all cortical layers
appeared normal in Ts16 brains. PPL, Preplate;
VZ/SVZ, ventricular zone/subventricular zone;
ML, marginal layer; SP, subplate; CP,
cortical plate; IZ, intermediate zone. Scale bar, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (68K GIF file)]
Fig. 5.
Thickness of the VZ/SVZ (A), IZ
(B), SP/CP (C), and pallium
(D) in Ts16 (filled circles) and
euploid (open squares) cortices. Data represent
mean ± SEM (n = 6). Error bars are shown when
larger than dimensions of symbols. In all areas examined, there were no
differences at E13 (the IZ was not present in Ts16 or euploid brains at
E13). However, abnormalities in thickness of the SP/CP, pallium, and IZ
were apparent at E14 and were marked by E16. The Ts16 VZ/SVZ exhibited
a slight increase at E14. By E18, all cortical layers were of normal
thickness. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.001.
[View Larger Version of this Image (23K GIF file)]
At higher magnification, the appearance of the VZ and establishment of
the superficial preplate (PPL) were similar in euploid and trisomic
brains at E13 (Fig. 4A). The thickness
and cellular composition of these layers also appeared to be similar.
At E14 and E16, the Ts16 pallium was markedly smaller than normal in
the radial dimension. Within the pallium, the thickness of the SP/CP
and the IZ compartments was severely reduced at E14 (data not shown)
and E16 (Fig. 4B). In contrast, the Ts16 cortex was
normal with respect to the thickness of the pallium and each of the
cortical layers 2 d later at E18. It is important to note that
although the overall thickness of the Ts16 pallium was diminished at
E14 and E16, the cellular density of each cortical layer was similar in
Ts16 and euploid brains throughout development (see below).
Thickness measurements
To determine the extent to which each layer in a radial unit of
the cortex is reduced in Ts16, measurements of the thickness of the
cortical layers were made at the level of the future sensorimotor
cortex (Fig. 5A-D). The thickness of
cortical layers in Ts16 was not different from normal brains at E13. In
normal brains, the thickness of the VZ/SVZ declined after E13 (Fig.
5A). The Ts16 VZ/SVZ also declined in thickness throughout
the period studied, although between E13 and E14 there was a transient
increase in VZ thickness of ~15%.
Between E14 and E16 the thickness of the IZ (Fig. 5B), the
SP/CP (Fig. 5C), and the pallium (Fig. 5D) was
reduced significantly in Ts16 brains. The SP/CP, IZ, and overall
pallium were reduced in thickness by 36, 75, and 23% at E14 and by 35, 17, and 20% at E16, respectively. The thickness of cortical layers in
Ts16 fetuses was not markedly abnormal at E18, the SP/CP, IZ, and
pallium being reduced only by 4, 0.3, and 2%, respectively.
Cross-sectional area measurements
The cross-sectional area of each cortical layer in the sagittal
plane also was different in trisomic and euploid littermates (Table
2). At E16, cross-sectional area was reduced by 12%
(p < 0.05) in the VZ, 48%
(p < 0.0005) in the CP, and 31%
(p < 0.00005) in the pallium of Ts16 fetuses.
Table 2.
Cross-sectional area
(mm2)
|
Euploid |
Ts16 |
%
Difference |
|
| VZ |
0.32 ± 0.08 |
0.28
± 0.08* |
12 |
| CP |
0.34 ± 0.09 |
0.18
± 0.01** |
48 |
| Pallium |
1.26 ± 0.06 |
0.87
± 0.02*** |
31 |
|
|
Mean values ± SEM of the VZ, CP, and entire pallium in fetal
control and Ts16 mice (n = 5, each group) in parasagittal
sections at E16. *p < 0.005; **p < 0.0001;
***p < 0.00001.
|
|
Cellular density measurements
To determine whether alterations in cell packing density
accompanied the reduction in laminar thickness in Ts16 mice, cell
density measurements were made throughout the pallium at the level of
the future sensorimotor cortex (Fig. 6). At each of the
three ages examined, euploid and Ts16 brains had similar mean cell
densities within corresponding cortical layers.
Fig. 6.
Density plots across Ts16 (filled
circles) and euploid (open squares) cortices.
Data represent mean ± SEM (n = 6). At E13
(A), the plots overlap throughout the cortex. At E14
(B), Ts16 and euploid cell density plots overlap up to
the IZ (see brackets underneath plot), but the Ts16 plot
deviates from euploid through the IZ and SP/CP because the Ts16 cortex
is smaller. At E16 (C), the density plots overlap
through the Ts16 IZ. Relative cell densities of the VZ/SVZ, IZ, and
SP/CP are not different between Ts16 and euploid at any age.
[View Larger Version of this Image (32K GIF file)]
At E13, the cell density plots of Ts16 and euploid brains overlapped
along the entire radial extent of the cortex (Fig.
6A). At E14, the density plots overlapped from the
ventricular surface out to 100 µm into the pallium, beyond which the
Ts16 plot diverged as a result of the thinner trisomic cortex (Fig.
6B). Although individual cortical layers were
abnormally thin in Ts16 brains at E16 (except the VZ/SVZ), the cell
densities of euploid and Ts16 cortices were similar within each layer
(Fig. 6C). In addition, we found normal cell densities in
corresponding Ts16 and euploid cortical layers at E18 (data not shown).
DISCUSSION
Our study of cerebral cortical development in Ts16 brains has
revealed two separate abnormalities. (1) The initial tangential
expansion of the proliferative zones, before the beginning of the
radial growth of cortical layers, is abnormal in Ts16. This early
defect results in persistent size deficits in Ts16 telencephalic
dimensions and in the cross-sectional area of each pallial zone. (2)
The subsequent radial expansion of the Ts16 pallium from E13 to E16 is
delayed. This delay results in decreases in thickness of the IZ and CP
between E14 and E16. By E18, however, all cortical compartments had
attained the same thickness in both groups.
Although radial development of cortical layers and overall
telencephalic size was abnormal in Ts16, these brains were normal in
several important ways. Ts16 and control brains were indistinguishable
morphologically in coronal sections up to E13, a stage in development
at which the preplate, the first postmitotic layer of neurons, already
has formed (Fig. 4A). Our results also demonstrate
that none of the layers of the fetal pallium was absent in Ts16.
Moreover, even during the period of delayed development (from E13 to
E18), the decreased thickness of the Ts16 cortex was not accompanied by
a decrease in relative density at any point within the pallium. This
result, which is in agreement with findings from human DS brains
(Golden and Hyman, 1994 ), suggests that cellular density within the
developing cortex is a crucial and conserved factor. Our results also
suggest that the well described rostral-caudal and lateral-medial
spatiotemporal gradients in cortical development (Smart and Smart,
1982 ) are preserved in Ts16 fetuses; the size of pallial zones in
rostral and lateral portions of the cortex were larger and more
advanced developmentally than in caudal and medial areas (see Figs. 2,
3), and morphometry of Ts16 cellular layers at the more rostral level
of the interventricular foramen revealed increased radial thickness of
the SP/CP and IZ compared to the caudal level of the dorsal hippocampus
(data not shown).
Possible mechanisms for the developmental abnormalities
in Ts16
Several theories have been proposed to explain the developmental
mechanisms of formation of the mammalian cerebral cortex. One such
theory stems from lineage tracing results (Sanes et al., 1986 ; Price et
al., 1987 ; Kornack and Rakic, 1995 ; Rakic, 1995 ) that indicate that
some, if not all, cortical cells in discrete architectonic regions of
the cortex arise from the proliferative pools directly underlying the
developing CP. This ``radial unit hypothesis'' (Rakic, 1988 ) states
that each segment of clonally related proliferative cells gives rise to
a precisely ordered and defined ontogenetic population of postmitotic
neurons in the overlying cortex (the ``radial unit'') and thus forms
a radial ``column,'' a basic functional unit of the cortex
(Mountcastle, 1957 ; Rakic, 1982 ).
The number of these radial units in the cortex is thought to be
specified during the period of rapid symmetrical proliferation early in
development when neuronal progenitor cell division is followed by the
reentry of both daughter cells back into the cell cycle. This period of
symmetrical division results in an exponential tangential expansion of
the VZs and of the telencephalic wall. Hence, this early epoch of cell
division produces an increase in the population of proliferative
neuroepithelial cells, thereby increasing the potential number of
resulting radial units.
The early proliferative period then is followed by a second epoch of
division as one or both daughter cells become postmitotic after each
cell cycle and migrate outward to form the superficial cortical layers
(Takahashi et al., 1994 ; Kornack and Rakic, 1995 ). Therefore, the
switch from tangential VZ expansion to radial layer formation has to
occur sufficiently late in fetal development to ensure the generation
of the correct number of radial cortical units required for normal
histogenesis, synaptogenesis, and patterning of projections.
One explanation for the reductions in cross-sectional area in Ts16 is a
reduction in the rate of the early symmetrical neuroblast proliferation
that might lead to decreased numbers of cells and produce fewer radial
units during this period. In addition, the end of the initial phase of
exponential growth is delineated temporally by the onset of the second
proliferative epoch. A decreased pool of precursors at this stage would
be depleted further during the ensuing radial expansion of the cortex.
This radial cortical growth results in the commitment of daughter cells
to fates outside the proliferative zones. Therefore, the effects of
decreased early tangential cortical expansion would be a lasting
reduction in the numbers of radial units and, consequently, in cortical
surface area.
In contrast to tangential expansion, radial expansion of the cortex may
not be strictly limited to a fixed time period. Rather, radial
expansion of the cortex may be dependent only on the remaining
proliferative capacity of the neuroblasts in the VZ. Therefore, a delay
in radial expansion of the cortex caused only by slower neuroblast
proliferation would be expected to be ameliorated with time. Our
observation that the Ts16 pallium thickness ``catches up'' with
normal brains is consistent with this idea. Thus, slower neuroblast
proliferation could explain both the reduction in cortical area in Ts16
and the delayed development of the IZ and SP/CP within each radial
unit.
Slower neuroblast proliferation, if found, could be explained by
several different effects of an extra chromosome in Ts16 cells. First,
the simple burden of the added genetic material could alter the rates
of the DNA synthetic and/or mitotic phases of the cell cycle. Second, a
recent report in cortical slice cultures (LoTurco et al., 1995 )
suggests that glutamate may regulate the duration of the DNA synthetic
phase of the cell cycle in the fetal germinal zones. Overexpression of
the AMPA/kainate ionotropic glutamate receptor subunit GluR5, which is
among the genes of the DS obligate region on MMU16, could therefore
affect proliferation in the fetal Ts16 cortex.
Defects in any of several processes of cortical neurogenesis such as
programmed cell death and migration might possibly account for the
disorders of radial cortical development seen in Ts16. Several reports
have shown that apoptotic death occurs in the normal cortex near or
after birth in rodents (Ferrer et al., 1990 ; Spreafico et al.,
1995 ). Moreover, a recent report suggests that more cortical cells may
be dying during gestation as well (Blaschke et al., 1996 ). The 35%
decrease in the CP, therefore, could be the result of higher rates of
neuronal death in the Ts16 cortex. In preliminary experiments at E14
and E16, however, we found no evidence of apoptosis (pyknotic or
terminal dUTP nick end-labeled nuclei) at any position within Ts16 or
euploid cortices (data not shown). These results indicate that rates of
cell death in the Ts16 cerebral cortex are not higher than in the
euploid cortex.
Abnormal neuronal migration might also explain reduced numbers of cells
in the CP. However, if proliferation rates were normal, delayed or
failed migration in Ts16 would be expected to give rise to the
substantial overpopulation and enlargement of one or more laminae. Our
analysis has not detected definitive evidence of defective migration,
although the transient increase in VZ thickness at E14 (Fig.
5A) could reflect a slower departure of postmitotic neurons
from the VZ at that time. A transient build-up of cells in this region
might reflect abnormalities in the molecular mechanisms of neuronal
migration. Conversely, this might also be attributable to an
inability of the existing migrational substrates to support the
relative increase in the production of cells during this period which
expands the SP/CP to normal levels by E18.
Potential repercussions of abnormal development in Ts16 brains
Several different and possibly interrelated processes of
development may be affected by the abnormalities in tangential and
radial cortical expansion we have found in the Ts16 mouse. The results
presented in Tables 1 and 2 indicate that these mice have smaller
brains at all fetal ages studied. A reduction in cell numbers and
telencephalic size of the Ts16 cortex would be expected to result from
slower tangential growth and could have long-term consequences.
Although the cortex may reach normal thickness in any given area, a
reduction in the total number of radial columns is likely to produce a
decrease in cortical-cortical association connections. Integrative
cortical function is crucially dependent on association connections,
and a decrease in these cortical-cortical connections can be predicted
to impair higher level cognitive function.
The delays in radial development of the SP/CP may have adverse effects
on the time course or extent of afferent projections through the IZ to
the CP. For example, projections from the ventral posterior thalamus
establish a pattern of afferentation immediately before invading the
somatosensory cortex (Erzurumlu and Jhaveri, 1990 ; Schlaggar and
O'Leary, 1991 ), indicating that the cells of the CP or SP may play an
early role in the organization of these afferents. In addition, SP
cells have been shown to pioneer efferent axon pathways into the
thalamus before CP axons (Bicknese et al., 1994 ; DeCarlos and O'Leary,
1994 ; McConnell et al., 1994 ). The absence of CP or SP neurons at
critical times may adversely affect the formation of synapses and axon
pathways.
There are indications that axonal projections may be abnormal in Ts16.
The decreased thickness of the IZ between E14 and E16 (Fig.
5B) may result from a reduction in the number of axons
arising from CP, SP, or thalamic neurons because this zone contains
projections to and from the cortex. Although the analysis presented
here was based on Nissl staining and was limited in that primarily cell
somata were stained, this stain did allow several different
observations of this relatively acellular compartment. Our results
showed that the deepest level of the IZ, that cellular portion that
also contains laterally emanating efferent projections that create a
striated pattern above the VZ/SVZ, appears normal with respect to
thickness and cellular composition at E16 (Figs. 4B).
In contrast, the Ts16 IZ immediately subjacent to the SP (the
relatively sparse area seen in the E16 control brain in Fig.
4B) was absent. This area of the IZ, called the
external sagittal stratum, normally contains a fiber bundle that
originates from the thalamus (Caviness and Frost, 1980 ). The absence of
this area may be evidence for missing or retarded afferent projections
in Ts16 at a time when corticothalamic and thalamocortical connections
are normally made. Therefore, although these brains appear normal by
E18 in terms of radial thickness of the different developmental
compartments, the delay in their formation may alter the timing and
number of afferent and efferent synaptic contacts.
Late prenatal and postnatal brain abnormalities in DS have been studied
rather extensively. It has been found that although neonatal DS brains
are reduced in total volume and surface area, the radial size and
lamination of the cortex is normal at birth. The decrease in cortical
volume and surface area in DS may be analogous to the decrease in
volume and cross-sectional area of the Ts16 mouse pallium described
here. Moreover, the thickness of the Ts16 pallium is normal late in
gestation and therefore also parallels DS development. Our results
indicate that the normal appearance of the Ts16 cortex late in
gestation is preceded by a significant delay in the formation of
pallial zones. Studies have not been done early enough to ascertain
whether the same delay occurs in DS but, like the overall decrease in
the number of cortical units, a temporal disturbance in layer formation
could adversely affect later cortical development in DS and potentially
contribute to cognitive deficits such as mental retardation.
FOOTNOTES
Received April 26, 1996; revised July 1, 1996; accepted July 7, 1996.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants AG10686
(B.K.K.), NS29167 (M.E.B.), HD20461 (M.E.B.), P01-HD19920 (M.E.M.),
NS15199 (M.E.M.), the Strategic Research Fund, Zeneca Pharmaceuticals
(B.K.K.), and the Special Research Initiative Fund, University of
Maryland (P.J.Y.). T.F.H. was supported by National Institutes of
Health Training Grant T32GM08181. We thank Jordan M. Denner at the
Baltimore VA Medical Center Medical Media Service for his help on the
figures, and we thank Dat Chu, Thu Pham, and McRae Williams for their
efforts in karyotyping.
Correspondence should be addressed to Tarik F. Haydar, Department of
Physiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 655 West
Baltimore Street, Baltimore, MD 21201.
REFERENCES
-
Adams MM,
Erickson JD,
Layde PM,
Oakley GP
(1981)
Down's
syndrome: recent trends in the United States.
J Am Med Assoc
246:758-760 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Angevine JB Jr,
Bodian D,
Coulombre AJ,
Edds MV Jr,
Hamburger V,
Jacobson M,
Lyser KM,
Prestige MC,
Sidman RL,
Varon S,
Weiss PA
(1970)
Embryonic vertebrate central nervous system:
revised terminology.
Anat Rec
166:257-262.
[Medline]
-
Bambrick LL,
Yarowsky PJ,
Krueger BK
(1995)
Glutamate as a
hippocampal neuron survival factor: an inherited defect in the trisomy
16 mouse.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
92:9692-9696 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Becker LE
(1991)
Synaptic dysgenesis.
Can J Neurol Sci
18:170-180 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Bicknese AR,
Sheppard AM,
O'Leary DDM,
Pearlman AL
(1994)
Thalamocortical axons extend along a chondroitin
sulfate proteoglycan-enriched pathway coincident with the neocortical
subplate and distinct from the efferent path.
J Neurosci
14:3500-3510 .
[Abstract]
-
Blaschke AJ,
Staley K,
Chun J
(1996)
Widespread programmed
cell death in proliferative and postmitotic regions of the fetal
cerebral cortex.
Development
122:1165-1174 .
[Abstract]
-
Caviness VS Jr,
Frost DO
(1980)
Tangential organization of
thalamic projections to the neocortex in the mouse.
J Comp Neurol
194:335-367 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Caviness VS Jr,
Takahashi T,
Nowakowski RS
(1995)
Numbers,
time and neocortical neurogenesis: a general developmental and
evolutionary model.
Trends Neurosci
18:379-388 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Colon EJ
(1972)
The structure of the cerebral cortex in
Down's syndrome: a quantitative analysis.
Neuropadiatrie
3:362-376.
[Web of Science]
-
Crome L,
Stern J
(1972)
Down syndrome. Pathology of mental
retardation (Crome L, Stern J, eds), pp 200-224.
.
-
Davidoff LM
(1928)
The brain in mongolian idiocy.
Arch Neurol Psychiatry
20:1229-1257.[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
DeCarlos JA,
O'Leary DDM
(1994)
Growth and targeting of
subplate axons and establishment of major cortical pathways.
J Neurosci
12:1194-1211.
[Abstract]
-
Erzurumlu RS,
Jhaveri S
(1990)
Thalamic axons confer a
blueprint of the sensory periphery onto the developing rat
somatosensory cortex.
Dev Brain Res
56:229-234 .
[Medline]
-
Ferrer I,
Soriano JA,
Del Rio T,
Alcantara S,
Fonseca M
(1990)
Naturally occurring cell death in the cerebral
cortex of the rat and removal of dead cells by transitory phagocytes.
Neuroscience
39:451-458 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Galdzicki Z,
Coan E,
Rapaport SI
(1993)
Cultured hippocampal
neurons from trisomy 16 mouse, a model for Down's syndrome, have an
abnormal action potential due to a reduced inward sodium current.
Brain Res
604:69-78 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Gearhart JD,
Davisson MT,
Oster-Granite ML
(1986)
Autosomal
aneuploidy in mice: generation and developmental consequences.
Brain Res Bull
16:789-801 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Golden JA,
Hyman BT
(1994)
Development of the superior
temporal neocortex is anomalous in trisomy 21.
J Neuropathol Exp Neurol
53:513-520 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Grausz H,
Richtsmeier JT,
Oster-Granite ML
(1991)
Morphogenesis of the brain and craniofacial complex
in trisomy 16 mice.
In: The morphogenesis of Down syndrome
(Epstein, CJ,
eds)
, p. 168. New York: Wiley-Liss.
-
Gropp A,
Giers D,
Kolbus U
(1974)
Trisomy in the fetal
backcross progeny of male and female metacentric heterozygotes in the
mouse.
Cytogenet Cell Genet
13:511-535 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Holtzman DM,
Epstein CJ
(1992)
The molecular genetics of Down
syndrome.
In: Molecular genetic medicine,
(Friedmann, T,
eds)
, Vol 2, p. 105. San Diego: Academic.
-
Hook EB
(1978)
Down syndrome: its frequency in human
populations and some factors pertinent to variations in rates.
In: Trisomy 21 (Down syndrome): research perspectives
(de la Cruz, FF,
Gerald, PS,
eds)
, p. 3. Baltimore: University Park.
-
Kiss J,
Schlumpf M,
Balazs R
(1989)
Selective retardation of
the development of the basal forebrain cholinergic and pontine
catecholaminergic nuclei in the brain of trisomy 16 mouse, an animal
model of Down's syndrome.
Dev Brain Res
50:251-264 .
-
Kornack DR,
Rakic P
(1995)
Radial and horizontal deployment
of clonally related cells in the primate neocortex: relationship to
distinct mitotic lineages.
Neuron
15:311-321 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
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.
-
Lacey-Casem ML,
Oster-Granite ML
(1994)
The neuropathology of
the trisomy 16 mouse.
Crit Rev Neurobiol
8:293-322 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
LoTurco JJ,
Owens DF,
Heath MJS,
Davis MBE,
Kriegstein AR
(1995)
GABA and glutamate depolarize cortical progenitor
cells and inhibit DNA synthesis.
Neuron
15:1287-1298.
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Marin-Padilla M
(1988)
Early ontogenesis of the human
cerebral cortex.
In: Cerebral cortex,
(Peters, A,
Jones, EG,
eds)
, Vol 7, p. 1. New York: Plenum.
-
McConnell SK
(1988)
Development and decision making in the
mammalian cerebral cortex.
Brain Res Rev
13:1-23.
-
McConnell SK,
Ghosh A,
Shatz CJ
(1994)
Subplate pioneers and
the formation of descending connections from cerebral cortex.
J Neurosci
14:1892-1907 .
[Abstract]
-
Mittwoch U
(1967)
DNA synthesis in cells grown in tissue
culture from patients with mongolism.
Ciba Foundation Study Group
25:51-61.
-
Mountcastle VB
(1957)
Modality and topographic properties of
single neurons of cat's somatic sensory cortex.
J Neurophysiol
20:408-434.
[Free Full Text]
-
Price J,
Turner D,
Cepko C
(1987)
Lineage analysis in the
vertebrate nervous system by retrovirus-mediated gene transfer.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
84:156-160 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Rakic P
(1972)
Mode of cell migration to the superficial
layers of the fetal monkey neocortex.
J Comp Neurol
145:61-84 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Rakic P
(1982)
Early developmental events: cell lineages,
acquisition of neuronal positions, and areal and laminar development.
Neurosci Res Prog Bull
20:439-451 .
[Medline]
-
Rakic P
(1988)
Specification of cerebral cortical areas.
Science
241:170-176 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Rakic P
(1995)
Radial versus tangential migration of neuronal
clones in the developing cerebral cortex.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
92:11323-11327 .
[Free Full Text]
-
Reeves RH,
Gearhart JD,
Littlefield JW
(1986)
Genetic basis
for a mouse model of Down syndrome.
Brain Res Bull
16:803-814 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Ross MH,
Galaburda AM,
Kemper TL
(1984)
Down's syndrome: is
there a decreased population of neurons?
Neurology
34:909-916 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Sanes JR,
Rubenstein JCR,
Nicolas J-F
(1986)
Use of a
recombinant retrovirus to study post-implantation cell lineage in mouse
embryos.
EMBO J
5:3133-3142 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Schlaggar BL,
O'Leary DDM
(1991)
Potential of visual cortex
to develop an array of functional units unique to somatosensory cortex.
Science
252:1556-1560 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Schmidt-Sidor B,
Wisniewski KE,
Shepard TH,
Sersen EA
(1990)
Brain growth in Down syndrome subjects 15 to 22 weeks of gestational age and birth to 60 months.
Clin Neuropathol
9:181-190 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Segal DJ,
McCoy E
(1974)
Studies on Down's syndrome in
tissue culture: growth rates and protein counts of fibroblast cultures.
J Cell Physiol
83:85-90 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Smart IHM,
Smart M
(1982)
Growth patterns in the lateral wall
of the mouse telencephalon. I. Autoradiographic studies of the
histogenesis of the isocortex and adjacent areas.
J Anat
134:273-298.
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Spreafico R,
Frassoni C,
Arcelli P,
Selvaggio M,
De Biasi S
(1995)
In situ labeling of apoptotic cell death in the
cerebral cortex and thalamus of rats during development.
J Comp Neurol
363:281-295 .
[Web of Science][Medline]
-
Sweeney JE,
Hohmann CF,
Oster-Granite ML,
Coyle JT
(1987)
Neurogenesis of the basal forebrain in normal and
trisomy 16 mice: an animal model for developmental disorders in Down
syndrome.
Neuroscience
31:413-425.
-
Takahashi T,
Nowakowski RS,
Caviness VS Jr
(1994)
Mode of
cell proliferation in the developing mouse neocortex.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
91:375-379 .
[Abstract/Free Full Text]
-
Volpe JJ
(1995)
Neuronal proliferation, migration,
organization, and myelination.
In: Neurology of the newborn,
(Volpe, JJ,
eds)
, 3rd Ed
, p. 43. Philadelphia: Saunders.
-
Wisniewski KE
(1990)
Down syndrome children often have brain
with maturation delay, retardation of growth and cortical dysgenesis.
Am J Med Genet
7:274-281.
-
Wisniewski KE,
Laure-Kamionowska M,
Wisniewski HM
(1984)
Evidence of arrest of neurogenesis and
synaptogenesis in brains of patients with Down's syndrome.
N Engl J Med
18:1187-1188.
-
Wisniewski KE,
Laure-Kamionowska M,
Connell F,
Wen GY
(1986)
Neuronal density and synaptogenesis in the
postnatal stage of brain maturation in Down syndrome.
In: Neurobiology of Down syndrome
(Epstein, CJ,
eds)
, p. 29. New York: Raven.
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
K. Ishihara, K. Amano, E. Takaki, A. Shimohata, H. Sago, C. J. Epstein, and K. Yamakawa
Enlarged Brain Ventricles and Impaired Neurogenesis in the Ts1Cje and Ts2Cje Mouse Models of Down Syndrome
Cereb Cortex,
August 26, 2009;
(2009)
bhp176v1.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
L. Chakrabarti, Z. Galdzicki, and T. F. Haydar
Defects in Embryonic Neurogenesis and Initial Synapse Formation in the Forebrain of the Ts65Dn Mouse Model of Down Syndrome
J. Neurosci.,
October 24, 2007;
27(43):
11483 - 11495.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
T. Tarui, T. Takahashi, R.S. Nowakowski, N.L. Hayes, P.G. Bhide, and V.S. Caviness
Overexpression of p27Kip1, Probability of Cell Cycle Exit, and Laminar Destination of Neocortical Neurons
Cereb Cortex,
September 1, 2005;
15(9):
1343 - 1355.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
M. Dierssen, R. Benavides-Piccione, C. Martinez-Cue, X. Estivill, J. Florez, G.N. Elston, and J. DeFelipe
Alterations of Neocortical Pyramidal Cell Phenotype in the Ts65Dn Mouse Model of Down Syndrome: Effects of Environmental Enrichment
Cereb Cortex,
July 1, 2003;
13(7):
758 - 764.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
W. E. Kaufmann and H. W. Moser
Dendritic Anomalies in Disorders Associated with Mental Retardation
Cereb Cortex,
October 1, 2000;
10(10):
981 - 991.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
T. F. Haydar, R. S. Nowakowski, P. J. Yarowsky, and B. K. Krueger
Role of Founder Cell Deficit and Delayed Neuronogenesis in Microencephaly of the Trisomy 16 Mouse
J. Neurosci.,
June 1, 2000;
20(11):
4156 - 4164.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|

|