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Volume 16, Number 21,
Issue of November 1, 1996
pp. 6896-6907
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Differential Survival of Cajal-Retzius Cells in Organotypic
Cultures of Hippocampus and Neocortex
José A. Del Río1, 2,
Bernd Heimrich2,
Hans Supèr1,
Víctor Borrell1,
Michael Frotscher2, and
Eduardo Soriano1
1 Department of Animal and Plant Cell Biology, Faculty
of Biology, University of Barcelona, 08028 Barcelona, Spain, and
2 Institute of Anatomy, University of Freiburg, D-79001
Freiburg, Germany
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Cajal-Retzius (CR) cells are transient, pioneer neurons of layer I
of the cortex that are believed to play essential roles in
corticogenesis, e.g., in neuronal migration and synaptogenesis. Here we
have used calretinin immunostaining to study the characteristics,
survival, and fate of CR cells in single organotypic slice cultures of
mouse neocortex and hippocampus deprived of their extrinsic afferents.
In neocortical explants, CR cells were observed after 1-3 d in
vitro (DIV), but they disappeared after 5-7 DIV, which is
similar to their time of degeneration in vivo. The
disappearance of CR cells in neocortical slices was prevented by
incubation with tetrodotoxin and the glutamate receptor antagonist
6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3,-dione but not by
2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid, suggesting that neuronal activity
and non-NMDA glutamate receptors may trigger CR cell death in the
neocortex.
In contrast to the situation in vivo, in which many
hippocampal CR cells disappear at approximately the third postnatal
week, CR cells survived in single hippocampal cultures after long
incubation times (31 DIV), with their morphology essentially unaltered.
In contrast, fewer CR cells were found when hippocampal slices were
cocultured with explants from the entorhinal cortex. Because CR cells
are transient synaptic targets for entorhinohippocampal afferents,
these findings suggest a role for entorhinal afferents in the
degeneration of CR cells in the hippocampus. In conclusion, this study
shows different survival properties of CR cells in organotypic slice
cultures of hippocampus and neocortex, and it suggests that different
mechanisms are involved in the regulation of the process of naturally
occurring CR cell death in the two cortical regions.
Key words:
Cajal-Retzius cells;
cortical development;
neuronal
death;
neuronal activity;
calretinin;
organotypic cultures;
mouse
INTRODUCTION
During the development of the mammalian cerebral
cortex, the earliest postmitotic neuroblasts form the primordial
plexiform layer or preplate. Subsequent neurons settle in the cortical
plate, which splits the preplate population into the marginal zone and
the subplate layer (Marín-Padilla, 1972 ; De Carlos and
O'Leary, 1992 ; Valverde et al., 1995b ). Subplate neurons play
important roles in the establishment and reshaping of cortical
connections, in particular of thalamocortical afferents (Shatz et al.,
1988 ; McConnell et al., 1989 ; Ghosh et al., 1990 ; Ghosh and Shatz,
1992 ; De Carlos and O'Leary, 1992 ; Allendoerfer and Shatz, 1994 ).
Later, most subplate cells disappear by cell death in kittens and
primates, whereas their loss is less dramatic in rodents, with many of
them contributing to the formation of layer VIb in the adult (Luskin
and Shatz, 1985 ; Valverde and Facal-Valverde, 1987 , 1988 ; Shatz et al.,
1988 ; Al-Ghoul and Miller, 1989 ; Valverde et al., 1989 , 1995a ; Kostovic
and Rakic, 1990 ; Bayer and Altman, 1990 , 1991 ; Woo et al., 1991 ). The
main representatives of the marginal zone-layer I are the
Cajal-Retzius (CR) cells. These early-generated neurons have a
characteristic subpial location, large perikarya with long horizontal
dendrites, and axonal arbors that remain restricted to layer I. During
postnatal development, most CR cells are likely to undergo cell death,
although some may remain in the adult or be transformed into
nonpyramidal neurons (Marín-Padilla, 1971 , 1984 , 1990 ; Bradford
et al., 1977 ; König et al., 1977 ; Rickmann et al., 1977 ;
König and Marty, 1981 ; Edmunds and Parnavelas, 1982 ;
Marín-Padilla and Marín-Padilla, 1982 ; Parnavelas and
Edmunds, 1983 ; Derer and Derer, 1990 , 1992 ; Huntley and Jones, 1990 ;
Del Río et al., 1995a ).
Although there are many studies on CR cells, their developmental
functions and the mechanisms regulating their disappearance are largely
unknown. Because of their strategic location in layer I, it has been
suggested that CR cells might play a role in neuronal migration
(Marín-Padilla, 1988 ; Del Río et al., 1995a ). This
notion is supported by recent data showing that the gene disrupted in
the reeler mutant mouse is expressed by CR cells and that
inhibition of its encoded protein perturbs the histotypic organization
in reaggregation cultures (D'Arcangelo et al., 1995 ; Hirotsune et al.,
1995 ; Ogawa et al., 1995 ). In addition, CR cells are also found in the
developing hippocampus, where they are transient synaptic targets for
ingrowing entorhinal afferents (Soriano et al., 1994 ; Supèr and
Soriano, 1994 ; Del Río et al., 1995b ).
Organotypic slice cultures provide a useful model for addressing
developmental questions, because the cytoarchitectonics and intrinsic
connectivity are preserved to a large extent. Furthermore, organotypic
cultures are well suited for determining whether certain
characteristics and developmental events are determined intrinsically
(Frotscher et al., 1990 , 1995 ; Caeser and Schütz, 1992 ; Frotscher
and Heimrich, 1993 ; Gillies and Price, 1994 ; Rennie et al., 1994 ;
Tuttle et al., 1995 ). To gain more information on the developmental
roles of CR cells and on the mechanisms responsible for their
degeneration, we have studied here the morphological features, survival
properties, and fate of CR cells in single organotypic slice cultures
from the somatosensory cortex and hippocampus, deprived of their
extrinsic afferent inputs. We used calretinin immunostaining to label
CR cells, because in the mouse this calcium-binding protein is present
in CR cells throughout their life (Del Río et al., 1995a ). We
found that CR cells in neocortical cultures disappear with a temporal
sequence reminiscent of that found in vivo, whereas these
neurons persist in hippocampal slice cultures even after long
incubation times. Moreover, experiments with ion-channel antagonists
suggest that the degeneration of CR cells in the neocortex depends on
neuronal activity and non-NMDA glutamate receptors. In contrast, many
hippocampal CR cells disappear in entorhinohippocampal cocultures,
suggesting a role for entorhinal afferents in the degeneration of these
pioneer neurons.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Single organotypic slice cultures. Hippocampal and
neocortical slice cultures were prepared from day of birth (P0) or P1
mouse pups (NMRI; Charles River Wiga, Sulzfeld, Germany) essentially as
described (Caeser and Schütz, 1992 ; Frotscher and Heimrich,
1993 ). Animals were anesthetized by hypothermia, their brains were
aseptically removed, and the hippocampus and prospective parietal
cortex were dissected out under microscopic control. Tissue pieces were
cut into transverse slices (300-400 µm thick) using a McIlwain
tissue chopper, and they were maintained in Gey's balanced salt
solution supplemented with glucose (6.5 mg/ml) for 40 min at 4°C.
Then, selected slices were cultured using either the roller tube or the
membrane interphase techniques (Gäwhiler, 1981, 1984; Stoppini et
al., 1991 ). For the roller tube technique, hippocampal and neocortical
explants (n = 142) were placed onto coverslips and
embedded in a clot of heparinized chicken plasma (Cocalico Biologicals,
Reamstown, PA) coagulated with thrombin. Thereafter, coverslips were
placed into planar tubes containing 0.5 ml of culture medium composed
of 50% Eagle's basal medium, 25% HBSS, 25% heat-inactivated horse
serum, and 2 mM glutamine and glucose (6.5 mg/ml) and
incubated in a rotating drum at 36°C in dry air. Alternatively,
slices (n = 126) were placed on 30 mm sterile membranes
(Millicell-CM, Millipore, Bedford, MA) and transferred into six-well
tissue culture trays. Cultures were fed with 0.8 ml of culture medium
(50% minimal essential medium, 25% horse serum, 25% HBSS) containing
2 mM glutamine and 0.044% NaHCO3 adjusted to
pH 7.3. The membrane cultures were maintained in a humidified incubator
at 36°C in 5% CO2.
Immunocytochemical techniques. For light microscopy
analyses, cultures were fixed after several periods of incubation [1,
3, 5, 7, 10, 15, 21, and 31 d in vitro (DIV)] with 0.1 M phosphate-buffered 4% paraformaldehyde for 4 hr at
4°C. After several rinses in 0.1 M PBS, 40-µm-thick
horizontal sections were obtained with a vibratome. To enhance the
penetration of immunoreagents, free-floating sections were incubated in
a graded series of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) (5, 10, 20, and 40% in
0.1 M phosphate buffer for 10 min each). After they were
washed in PBS, sections were blocked with 10% normal goat serum and
incubated with a well characterized rabbit polyclonal antibody against
human recombinant calretinin (dilution 1:2000) (Schwaller et al., 1993 )
for 2 d at 4°C. Tissue-bound primary antibody was detected using
the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex (ABC) as indicated by the
manufacturer (Vector Labs, Burlingame, CA). Immunoreagents were diluted
in PBS containing 0.5% Triton X-100, 0.2% gelatin, and 5% preimmune
goat serum. After development with 0.03% diaminobenzidine (DAB) and
0.01% H2O2, sections were mounted onto
gelatinized slides, dehydrated in ethanol, and coverslipped with Eukit.
Cocultures of entorhinal cortex and hippocampus were processed
similarly (see below). Immunocytochemical controls, including omission
of the primary antibody or its substitution by normal rabbit serum,
prevented immunostaining. Additional sections were stained with cresyl
violet.
For electron microscopy, cultures were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde,
0.1% glutaraldehyde, and 15% saturated picric acid dissolved in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. Vibratome sections were
processed for the visualization of calretinin as described above,
except that the DMSO treatment and Triton X-100 were omitted. After the
immunoperoxidase reaction, sections were post-fixed with 2% osmium
tetroxide, stained with uranyl acetate, and flat-embedded in epon
(TAAB). After photodocumentation, selected cells were reembedded and
sectioned on a Reichert ultratome. Thin sections were mounted onto
Formvar-coated slot grids and examined in the electron microscope.
To allow comparison with the situation in vivo, several
series of brain sections from postnatal animals were processed for
calretinin immunostaining. After ether anesthesia, postnatal mice (P0,
P2, P3, P5, P8, P10, P15, and P21, as well as young adults; two each)
were perfused through the ascending aorta with 4% paraformaldehyde.
After overnight post-fixation, horizontal or coronal vibratome sections
(40 µm thick) were processed for the immunocytochemical detection of
calretinin, as described previously (Del Río et al.,
1995a ).
Tetrodotoxin (TTX) and glutamate receptor antagonist
treatments. After 2 DIV, neocortical slices (12-14 each) were
incubated with culture medium to which either TTX (10 2
µM; Sigma, Poole Dorset, UK) or the glutamate receptor
antagonists 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP-5) (40 µM; Research Biochemicals, Natick, MA) or
6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX) (10 µM;
Research Biochemicals) was added. Culture medium containing these
agents was changed every day. Control slices were cultured in parallel,
but TTX and glutamate receptor antagonists were omitted. After 8 DIV,
cultures were processed for the immunocytochemical visualization of
calretinin, as described above. The number of calretinin-positive CR
cells in layer I was counted in 250 µm horizontal stripes, using a
40× oil-immersion objective and a millimetric eyepiece. Six to eight
cultures were harvested for each treatment (6-10 samples each). Crude
cell counts were then corrected according to Abercrombie (1946) .
In situ labeling of DNA fragmentation. For the in
situ DNA nick-end labeling technique, cultures were fixed after 7, 10, and 15 DIV with phosphate-buffered 4% paraformaldehyde for 2 d at 4°C. Vibratome sections (30 µm thick) were mounted onto
poly-L-lysine-coated slides and dried overnight at 30°C.
Thereafter, sections were processed by the Terminal Transferase
(TdT)-mediated d-UTP nick-end labeling technique (TUNEL) as described
(Gravieli et al., 1992 ). Briefly, sections were sequentially incubated
with proteinase K (20 µM/ml) for 20 min at room
temperature and with TdT (0.3 Ehrlich units/µl) and biotinylated dUTP
in TdT buffer in a humidified chamber at 37°C for 90 min. After they
were washed, the sections were incubated with 2% bovine serum albumin
(1 hr) and the ABC complex (dilution 1:100; 2 hr). Peroxidase was
developed with 0.03% DAB, 0.2% nickel ammonium sulfate, and 0.01%
H2O2 (Hancock, 1982 ). Sections were
counterstained with hematoxylin, dehydrated, and coverslipped with
Eukit.
Entorhinohippocampal coculture experiments. Cocultures were
prepared from P0-P1 mice (n = 55). Single horizontal
sections containing both the entorhinal cortex and the hippocampus, or
alternatively, randomly pooled slices of hippocampus and entorhinal
cortex, were cultured as described (Frotscher and Heimrich, 1993 ; Li et
al., 1993 , 1994 ). Cocultures of two hippocampal slices were also
prepared (n = 34). Cocultures were fixed after 5-7,
10-15, and 17-21 DIV and processed for calretinin
immunocytochemistry. To assess the formation of entorhinohippocampal
connections, a crystal of biocytin was injected in some cocultures in
the entorhinal slice 24 hr before fixation (Frotscher and Heimrich,
1993 ). Biocytin anterograde labeling was visualized using the ABC
complex and a nickel-enhanced DAB reaction.
The number of calretinin-positive CR cells present in the stratum
lacunosum-moleculare/outer molecular layer of single hippocampal
cultures, as well as of entorhinohippocampal and double hippocampal
cocultures, was counted in 25,000 µm2 samples using a
40× oil-immersion objective and a millimetric eyepiece (five to seven
cultures at each stage, three to six samples per culture). Counts were
corrected according to Abercrombie (1946) .
RESULTS
Postnatal evolution of Cajal-Retzius cells
in vivo
At early postnatal stages (P0-P5), CR cells were packed densely
in layer I of the neocortex, where they were recognized by their
characteristic morphology (Fig. 1A,C).
CR cells displayed large, ovoid perikarya from which thick horizontal
dendrites with vertical extensions originated. Later (P8-P10) there
was a dramatic decrease in the number of CR cells, and very few
calretinin-positive cells were present in layer I at P21 (Fig.
1B) or in the adult neocortex. Shrunken,
immunoreactive perikarya with atrophic, swollen dendrites were observed
in layer I at P5-P10, corresponding to degenerating CR cells (Del
Río et al., 1995a ).
Fig. 1.
Postnatal evolution of calretinin immunostaining
in the developing neocortex and hippocampus. A, B,
Coronal sections of the neocortex at P2 (A) and P21
(B). Although at P2 (A) numerous
Cajal-Retzius cells (arrows) were present in layer I,
at P21 (B) calretinin-positive cells in this layer were
seen only rarely (arrows). In contrast, the number of
calretinin-positive nonpyramidal neurons in layers II-V increased
notably at P21. C, High-power photomicrograph showing
the typical monopolar morphology of Cajal-Retzius cells in layer I at
P2. D, E, Horizontal sections of the hippocampus at P5
(D) and P21 (E). At P5, Cajal-Retzius
cells (arrows) are abundant near the hippocampal
fissure, in the outer stratum lacunosum-moleculare
(SLM), and in the adjacent aspect of the dentate
molecular layer (ML). Immature granule cells in the
granule cell layer (GL) displayed weak calretinin
immunolabeling. At P21 (E), very few calretinin-positive
neurons could be seen near the hippocampal fissure
(HF). Detail shows densely packed Cajal-Retzius
cells around the hippocampal fissure (dashed line) at
P5. I-V, Cortical layers I-V; SR,
stratum radiatum; H, hilus; SP, stratum
pyramidale; CA3, hippocampal region CA3;
AD, area dentata. Scale bars: A, 100 µm; B, 150 µm, also pertains to E;
C, 50 µm, also pertains to F;
D, 150 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (140K GIF file)]
In the hippocampus, CR cells at P0-P5 were located in the stratum
lacunosum-moleculare of the hippocampus proper and in the outermost
portion of the dentate molecular layer, near the hippocampal fissure
(Fig. 1D). Hippocampal CR cells displayed a
morphology similar to that in the neocortex (Fig.
1F). In both the neocortex and the hippocampus, some
nonpyramidal neurons in different layers displayed calretinin
immunolabeling (Fig. 1A,B,D,E); in addition, immature
granule cells in the dentate gyrus exhibited weak immunoreactivity
during the postnatal period (Fig. 1D). The
disappearance of calretinin-positive CR cells in the hippocampus
occurred later than in the neocortex. Thus, although CR cells were
still abundant at P10, substantial numbers were observed at P15; at
P21, in contrast, the number of CR cells was markedly decreased (Fig.
2). At this stage and in adult mice, very few
immunoreactive cells could be observed in the molecular layer of the
dentate gyrus or in the stratum lacunosum-moleculare (Figs.
1E, 2C). As in the neocortex, the
remaining immunoreactive neurons displayed a morphology characteristic
of nonpyramidal neurons.
Fig. 2.
Evolution of Cajal-Retzius cells identified by
calretinin immunolabeling in the late postnatal hippocampus. Although
CR cells (arrows) are still abundant at P10
(A) in the stratum lacunosum-moleculare
(SLM) and outer molecular layer
(ML), substantial numbers of cells are observed at P15
(B) and fewer CR cells are present at P21
(C). Abbreviations as in Figure 1. Scale bar
(shown in A): 100 µm, also pertains to
B and C.
[View Larger Version of this Image (105K GIF file)]
Evolution of CR cells in organotypic cultures
In organotypic slice cultures, CR cells were identified at 1-3
DIV in both the hippocampus and neocortex on the basis of their
distinctive shape and location as shown by calretinin immunostaining
(Fig. 3). At longer incubation times, the evolution and
fate of CR cells were different in cultures taken from these two
cortical regions. No significant differences were observed in CR cell
morphology or evolution when explants were cultured using the roller
tube technique or the interphase membrane method.
Fig. 3.
Evolution of Cajal-Retzius cells in organotypic
slice cultures of the neocortex (A-C) and
hippocampus (D-F) as shown by calretinin
immunostaining. A, B, Cajal-Retzius cells
(arrows) were seen in layer I in organotypic slices
cultured for 2 DIV (A) but were virtually absent after
long incubation times (B). Notice the increased
immunolabeling of nonpyramidal neurons at 21 DIV. C,
High magnification illustrating the morphological features of
Cajal-Retzius cells after 2 DIV. D, E, Calretinin
immunostaining in single organotypic slice cultures of hippocampus
after 5 (D) and 17 (E) DIV. After both
incubation times, Cajal-Retzius cells (arrows) were
abundant in the molecular layer of the fascia dentata and in the
stratum lacunosum-moleculare of the hippocampus proper. Weak
immunolabeling was also seen in the granule cells and in the mossy
fiber zone in CA3 region. F, High-magnification
photomicrograph showing Cajal-Retzius cells in the stratum
lacunosum-moleculare and in the dentate molecular layer of the
hippocampus after 5 DIV. Abbreviations as in Figure 1. Scale bars:
A, 150 µm; B, 200 µm;
C, 50 µm, also pertains to F;
D, 200 µm, also pertains to E.
[View Larger Version of this Image (139K GIF file)]
Neocortical cultures
Soon after explantation (1-3 DIV), CR cells displayed a
morphology reminiscent of that in vivo (Fig.
3A,C). On occasion, layer I expanded radially two to three
times its thickness, and CR cells tended to appear loosely arranged
(Fig. 3C). The number of CR cells in layer I declined
dramatically at 5-7 DIV, and hardly any calretinin-positive cells with
the distinctive morphological features of CR cells were observed in
layer I beyond 10 DIV (Fig. 3B). The few immunoreactive
neurons found in this layer after long incubation times (15-21 DIV)
resembled the nonpyramidal cells described in the adult layer I
in vivo. In addition, there were many other
calretinin-immunoreactive nonpyramidal cells throughout the different
layers in neocortical slice cultures (Fig. 3B).
Coincident with the decline in CR cells, we observed many
calretinin-positive cells in layer I at 5-7 DIV displaying shrunken,
atrophic cell bodies and swollen dendrites (Fig.
4A), suggestive of neuronal
degeneration (Valverde and Facal-Valverde, 1987 ; Wahle and Meyer,
1987 ). At the electron microscope, these small perikarya showed dense
heterochromatin granules and a disrupted fine structure of cytoplasmic
organelles (Fig. 4B) similar to that described for
degenerating CR cells in vivo (Del Río et al.,
1995a ). Examination of Nissl-stained sections from slice cultures
revealed the virtual disappearance of large horizontal neurons in layer
I at 10-15 DIV (Fig. 4E,F), suggesting than
CR cells disappear from layer I rather than cease calretinin
expression. To ascertain the degeneration of CR cells, organotypic
slice cultures were processed for the detection of DNA fragmentation. A
large number of TUNEL-positive nuclei were found in layer I after 5-7
DIV, whereas the remaining cortical layers were largely devoid of
positive nuclei (Fig. 4C), indicating massive cell
degeneration in layer I at these stages. In contrast, there was a
virtual absence of TUNEL-positive nuclei in layer I at 10-15 DIV (Fig.
4D). Taken together, these data indicate that CR
cells disappear in organotypic slice cultures of postnatal neocortex,
most likely by cell degeneration, following a time schedule reminiscent
of that in vivo.
Fig. 4.
Degeneration of Cajal-Retzius cells in
organotypic slice cultures of neocortex. A, B,
Correlated light (A) and electron microscopy
(B) of a presumedly degenerating Cajal-Retzius cell
after 6 DIV. A, At the light microscope, a
calretinin-positive Cajal-Retzius cell displays shrunken cell body
(arrow) and a swollen dendrite (small
arrows). B, Electron micrograph of the
perikaryon of the cell in A, showing disrupted fine
structure of cytoplasmic organelles and chromatin condensation in the
nucleus (N). C, D, Distribution of
TUNEL-positive cells. In neocortical cultures, most TUNEL-positive
cells (arrows) are present in layer I after 7 DIV
(C), whereas TUNEL-positive cells are absent from this
layer at 15 DIV (D). E, F, Distribution
of Nissl-stained cell bodies in layer I of organotypic neocortical
cultures. At short incubation times (E), some neurons in
layer I display large perikarya and shapes typical of CR cells
(arrows), whereas at longer incubation times
(F) these large perikarya have disappeared from
layer I. As in vivo, some pyknotic cells could also be
noted at 3 DIV in layers II and III (E).
G, Distribution of TUNEL-positive cells in hippocampal
cultures. These cells are found in the stratum lacunosum-moleculare
only very exceptionally, whereas some labeled neurons were observed in
the granule cell layer (arrows). C, D,
and G are from sections counterstained with hematoxylin.
Abbreviations as in Figure 1. Scale bars: A, 25 µm;
B, 1 µm; C, 100 µm, also pertains to
D and G; E, 50 µm, also
pertains to F.
[View Larger Version of this Image (153K GIF file)]
To investigate the role of neuronal activity in the disappearance of CR
cells, cortical explants were cultured with the Na+ channel
blocker TTX or with the NMDA and non-NMDA glutamate receptor
antagonists AP-5 and CNQX, respectively (Fig. 5).
Although AP-5 treatments did not significantly alter the number of CR
cells, the survival of CR cells in layer I was increased sixfold by
incubation with TTX and fourfold by incubation with CNQX. These results
suggest that the disappearance of CR cells depends on neuronal activity
mediated through non-NMDA-type glutamate receptors.
Fig. 5.
The number of Cajal-Retzius cells present in
layer I (number of cells per 250 µm horizontal stripe) in organotypic
slice cultures of neocortex cultured for 10 DIV, after chronic
treatment with TTX, AP5, or CNQX, as well
as in control slices (mean ± SEM). Significant differences
(**p 0.01; ANOVA, Scheffe's test) compared with
controls were found after TTX and CNQX treatments.
[View Larger Version of this Image (11K GIF file)]
Hippocampal cultures
CR cells were found in hippocampal slice cultures after all
incubation times (1-31 DIV), with their morphological features and
distribution remaining essentially unaltered (Figs. 3D-F,
7C). As in vivo, CR cells were located in the
stratum lacunosum-moleculare of the hippocampus proper and in the outer
molecular layer of the dentate gyrus, displaying typical monopolar
shapes with a single, thick dendrite originating from one side of the
perikaryon (Figs. 3F, 7C). No significant
differences were observed in CR cell numbers between short and long
incubation times (Figs. 3D,E, 7C). The survival
of CR cells in hippocampal slice cultures was supported by electron
microscopy. Immunoreactive CR cells displayed large, healthy perikarya
with numerous cytoplasmic organelles and a nucleus rich in euchromatin
granules (Fig. 6A). Morphologically
mature axon terminals established symmetric and asymmetric synaptic
contacts on both the cell body and dendrites of CR cells (Fig.
6B). In addition, calretinin-immunoreactive boutons,
presumably originating from CR cells, were seen in the stratum
lacunosum-moleculare to form asymmetric synaptic contacts with either
immunopositive or unlabeled postsynaptic processes (Fig.
6C). The persistence of CR cells in vitro was
also substantiated by experiments showing virtual absence of DNA
fragmentation in the stratum lacunosum-moleculare/outer molecular layer
in hippocampal slice cultures at 7-15 DIV (Fig. 4G). In
contrast, occasional TUNEL-positive cells were observed in these
cultures in the granular and pyramidal layers and in the stratum oriens
(Fig. 4G). These findings suggest that most CR cells survive
in single organotypic hippocampal cultures, in contrast to the
situation in vivo.
Fig. 7.
Reduction of hippocampal Cajal-Retzius cells in
entorhinohippocampal cocultures. A, Low-power
photomicrograph illustrating a typical entorhinohippocampal coculture
after 7 DIV, in which entorhinal afferents to the hippocampus have been
traced with biocytin. Section counterstained with hematoxylin. The
injection site in the entorhinal cortex (EC) is marked
by an asterisk. Anterogradely labeled entorhinal fibers
(arrows) were seen in the stratum lacunosum-moleculare
and in the dentate molecular layer. B, C, Distribution
of Cajal-Retzius cells in an entorhinohippocampal coculture
(B) and in a single hippocampal culture
(C) after 21 DIV. A marked reduction in the number of
Cajal-Retzius cells was observed after coculturing the hippocampus and
the entorhinal cortex (B), whereas Cajal-Retzius cells
(arrows) are abundant in single hippocampal slices
(C). Abbreviations as in Figure 1. Scale bars:
A, 100 µm; B, 200 µm, also pertains
to C.
[View Larger Version of this Image (157K GIF file)]
Fig. 6.
Fine structure of Cajal-Retzius cells in single
hippocampal slice cultures, as shown by calretinin immunolabeling.
A, Electron micrograph of the perikaryon of a
Cajal-Retzius cell in the stratum lacunosum-moleculare after 5 DIV,
showing a nucleus rich in euchromatin, a prominent nucleolus, and a
cytoplasm rich in organelles such as the Golgi complex
(asterisks). B, An immunopositive
dendrite (D) close to the hippocampal fissure receives
an asymmetric synaptic contact (arrows) from an
unlabeled axon terminal (AT) after 15 DIV.
C, Electron micrograph illustrating an immunoreactive
axon terminal (AT) in the stratum
lacunosum-moleculare in asymmetric synaptic contact
(arrow) with an unlabeled dendritic spine
(S) at 15 DIV. Scale bars: A, 1 µm;
B, 0.4 µm, also pertains to C.
[View Larger Version of this Image (233K GIF file)]
During normal development, CR cells in the hippocampus are transient
synaptic targets for developing entorhinal axons (Supèr and
Soriano, 1994 ; Del Río et al., 1995b ). We and others have found
recently that the entorhinohippocampal connection can be reestablished
in vitro with a high degree of specificity (Frotscher and
Heimrich, 1993 ; Li et al., 1993 ; also see Fig.
7A) and that in entorhinohippocampal
cocultures CR cells are also synaptic targets for ingrowing entorhinal
axons (Del Río et al., 1995b ). To ascertain whether these
afferent fibers could influence CR cell survival, we cocultured slices
of the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus and counted CR cells by
calretinin immunostaining. After 10-21 DIV, most CR cells had
disappeared from entorhinohippocampal cocultures (Figs. 7B,
8), with CR cell numbers being reduced by fourfold after 17-21 DIV, as
compared with single hippocampal cultures (Figs. 7C, 8). In
contrast, no significant differences were observed in double
hippocampal cocultures (Fig. 8), where commissural
connections are established (Frotscher and Heimrich, 1993 ; Frotscher et
al., 1995 ).
Fig. 8.
Number of Cajal-Retzius cells present in the
stratum lacunosum-moleculare/molecular layer (number of cells per
25,000 µm2 sample) in single organotypic hippocampal
cultures (H), double hippocampal cocultures
(H-H), and entorhinohippocampal cocultures
(E-H) after 5-7 DIV (black bars),
10-15 DIV (hatched bars), and 17-21 DIV (open
bars) (mean ± SEM). Significant differences compared with
short incubation times (5-7 DIV) are found in entorhinohippocampal
cocultures (**p 0.01; ANOVA, Scheffe's
test).
[View Larger Version of this Image (37K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
In the present study, we have used calretinin immunostaining to
label CR cells. This protein is present in the population of murine CR
cells throughout their lives (Soriano et al., 1994 ; Del Río et
al., 1995a ; Liu et al., 1996 ), from embryonic day 11 (E11) (E. Soriano,
J. A. Del Río, and S. Alcantara, unpublished observations)
until many of them disappear at postnatal ages (Del Río et al.,
1995a ). Furthermore, calretinin expression is retained in CR cells in
dissociated cultures (P. Derer, personal communication) and in
organotypic slice cultures (Marty et al., 1996 ; present results),
indicating that this protein is constitutively expressed in CR cells.
Thus, calretinin antibodies seem to be excellent intrinsic cell markers
for murine CR cells. The main results of the present study can be
summarized as follows. (1) CR cells disappear, most likely by cell
degeneration, in organotypic slice cultures of neocortex with a timing
similar to that in vivo; (2) the disappearance of CR cells
in neocortical slices is prevented by blockers of neuronal activity and
by non-NMDA glutamate receptor antagonists; and (3) even after long
incubation times, CR cells survive in single hippocampal cultures,
whereas many of them disappear in entorhinohippocampal cocultures.
Intrinsic determination of Cajal-Retzius cell fate in
the neocortex
The fate of CR cells has been controversial: cell dilution,
neuronal death, or transformation into nonpyramidal neurons have been
proposed (for review, see Marín-Padilla, 1984 , 1988 ). At least
in the murine neocortex, dilution at postnatal stages cannot account
for the marked decrease in the number of CR cells (Del Río et
al., 1995a ). Some studies propose that CR cells may be GABAergic
(Chronwall and Wolff, 1980 ); however, data from different cortical
areas and in different animal species have shown that as defined by
their characteristic morphology and subpial location, CR cells are
non-GABAergic (Huntley and Jones, 1990 ; Derer and Derer, 1992 ; Soriano
et al., 1994 ; Del Río et al., 1995a ; Verney and Derer, 1995 ;
Berger and Alvarez, 1996 ). This suggests that most GABA-positive
neurons in layer I belong to a population of nonpyramidal neurons other
than CR cells (Marín-Padilla, 1984 ). The possibility that CR
cells might remain in the adult transformed into nonpyramidal GABAergic
neurons (Parnavelas and Edmunds, 1983 ) also seems unlikely, because the
GABA-positive cells of the adult layer I are born throughout the entire
period of cortical neurogenesis (Fairén et al., 1986 ), long after
the early generation of CR cells (König et al., 1977 ; Raedler and
Raedler, 1978 ; Bayer and Altman, 1990 , 1991 ; Valverde et al., 1995b ).
The most likely fate of CR cells is cell degeneration, because (1) fate
analyses using [3H]thymidine or 5 -bromodeoxyuridine
(BrdU) show that most early-generated neurons of layer I are not
present in late postnatal or adult cortex (Luskin and Shatz, 1985 ; Wood
et al., 1992 ; Del Río et al., 1995a ); (2) at the stages of
disappearance, CR neurons display a morphology and fine structure
typical of dying neurons (Derer and Derer, 1990 ; Del Río et
al., 1995a ); and (3) at postnatal stages we observed pyknotic nuclei in
layer I that show BrdU immunostaining after pulses given at the
earliest stages of neurogenesis, demonstrating that at least some
early-generated neurons in layer I disappear by cell death (Del
Río et al., 1995a ). Thus, although a few CR cells might remain
in the adult (Liu et al., 1996 ), most CR cells probably disappear by
cell death.
In the murine neocortex, CR cells disappear during the beginning
of the second postnatal week (Derer and Derer, 1990 ; Wood et al., 1992 ;
Del Río et al., 1995a ). The present study shows that CR cells
in organotypic neocortical cultures taken from P0-P1 mouse pups
disappear at 5-7 DIV, which closely corresponds to the sequence of
disappearance in vivo. Furthermore, the observation of
calretinin-immunoreactive, degenerating CR neurons and of
TUNEL-positive dying cells in layer I at the time of CR cell loss
indicates that CR cells degenerate in neocortical slices as they do
in vivo. This suggests that the factors triggering cell
degeneration in normal development are retained in organotypic slices
and are intrinsic to the cortex. The mechanisms that may be involved in
naturally occurring cell death during development include (1)
excitotoxic effects caused by afferents resulting in neuronal
hyperexcitability (Choi, 1988 ; Oppenheim, 1991 ) and (2) competition for
target-derived factors such as growth factors (Davies, 1988 , 1994 ;
Silos-Santiago et al., 1995 ). The present data showing that TTX and
CNQX treatments decrease CR cell degeneration suggest a role for
neuronal activity and non-NMDA-type glutamate receptors in the
degeneration of CR cells in vitro. Furthermore, the early
expression of AMPA/kainate glutamate receptors in layer I during
development (H. Supèr, J. A. Del Río, A. Martínez, and E. Soriano, unpublished observations) suggests
that these receptors are also involved in the degeneration of CR cells
in normal corticogenesis.
CR cells form morphologically mature synaptic contacts beginning at
early developmental stages (Rickmann et al., 1977 ; Derer and Derer,
1990 ; Del Río et al., 1995a ). Cortical afferents terminating in
layer I, including thalamic axons and fibers from catecholaminergic and
serotoninergic cell groups, are absent in organotypic cultures. Layer I
also receives vertical connections from deep layers, especially from
the subplate layer VIb (Divac et al., 1987 ; Valverde et al., 1989 ;
Allendoerfer and Shatz, 1994 ). Because subplate cells survive in
organotypic neocortical cultures (Bolz et al., 1992 ; Götz and
Bolz, 1992 ), these vertical axons connecting the subplate to layer I
are likely to be found in cultures and may be involved in the
degeneration of CR cells. This notion is also supported by studies
in vitro showing that CR cells survive in dissociated
cultures taken from layer I (Derer and Derer, 1992 ) and in horizontal
slice cultures cut through layer I (E. Soriano, R. M. Alvarado-Mallart,
N. Dumesnil, J. A. Del Río, and C. Sotelo, unpublished
observations), two conditions in which CR cells are cultured without
connection to the subplate. These findings suggest that the factors
determining the degeneration of CR cells in vitro are
related to the maintenance of a laminated organotypic organization and
to the preservation of the afferent connections arising from the
subplate layer VIb.
A recent study reports that CR cells express the trkB gene, the
receptor for both brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and
neurotrophin 4 (NT4) (Pearlman et al., 1995 ). Expression of NT4 mRNA in
the cortex is maximal at prenatal stages and declines thereafter
(Timmusk et al., 1993 ). In contrast, levels of BDNF mRNA expression are
low at prenatal stages and increase during postnatal development to
maximal expression in adults (Friedman et al., 1991 ; Timmusk et al.,
1994 ). Such a pattern of expression seems to argue against a function
for this neurotrophic factor in sustaining CR cells. In addition, CR
cells persist in the hippocampus of BDNF null-mutant mice, which also
argues against this neurotrophin as a survival factor for CR cells
(Marty et al., 1996 ). Additional analyses are needed to ascertain
whether neurotrophins or other growth factors are involved in the
regulation of CR cell survival and function.
Degeneration of CR cells in
entorhinohippocampal cocultures
Here we show that CR cells survive in single hippocampal slice
cultures, even after long incubation times, in contrast to the
situation in vivo. This suggests that the factors
determining the death of CR cells in vivo are absent in
single organotypic hippocampal slices and are probably extrinsic to the
hippocampus itself. In contrast to the neocortex, the subplate is
poorly developed in the hippocampus (Nowakowski and Rakic, 1979 ;
Kostovic et al., 1989 ; Soriano et al., 1994 ). The intrinsic connections
of the developing hippocampus are largely unknown; however, ascending
connections from the subplate to the marginal zone in this region, if
present at all, might be less abundant than in the neocortex, which
might explain why CR cells survive better in single hippocampal
cultures than in neocortical slices.
In contrast, when hippocampal slices are cocultured with the entorhinal
cortex, a large number of CR cells disappear, as in vivo.
This process seems to be caused specifically by the entorhinal cortex,
because CR cells do not disappear in double hippocampal cocultures. In
entorhinohippocampal cocultures, entorhinal axons reach the target
hippocampus by 3-4 DIV (Li et al., 1994 ; Del Río et al.,
1995b ), and as in vivo, CR cells in hippocampal organotypic
cultures are transient synaptic targets for developing entorhinal axons
(Supèr and Soriano, 1994 ; Del Río et al., 1995b ), which
may suggest a role for these fibers in the degeneration of CR cells. A
recent study reports a 40% decrease in the number of CR cells in
single hippocampal slices taken from 8-d-old rats (Marty et al., 1996 ).
Such a decrease suggests that some CR cells may be committed to cell
death at this explantation time, which is long after entorhinal fibers
have reached the hippocampus (Supèr and Soriano, 1994 ). A major
role of afferent fibers in naturally occurring cell death has been
shown in other systems, such as the isthmo-optic and cochlear nuclei of
the chick (Oppenheim, 1991 ). Moreover, entorhinal afferents influence
the development and maturation of other hippocampal cell types (Mattson
et al., 1988 ; Frotscher et al., 1995 ).
Functions of CR cells and the maintenance of organotypic
organization in cortical slices
Recent studies have shown that reelin, the gene
disrupted in the reeler mutation, is expressed by CR cells
(D'Arcangelo et al., 1995 ; Hirotsune et al., 1995 ; Ogawa et al.,
1995 ). Because reeler mice show abnormal migration and
positioning in many brain regions, including neocortex and hippocampus
(Caviness, 1973 , 1982 ), the above studies suggested a role for CR cells
in migration. In addition, we have recently seen that ablation of CR
cells in newborn mice results in both abnormal migration and disruption
of the radial glia scaffold (H. Supèr, J. A. Del Río, A. Martinez, and E. Soriano, unpublished observations) that subserves
neuronal migration (Rakic, 1972 ), indicating that CR cells play a role
in migration by regulating and sustaining the radial glia scaffold.
Neuronal migration proceeds normally in organotypic cultures of
neocortex shortly after explantation (1-3 DIV), whereas abnormal
migration and positioning is observed after longer incubation times
(Bolz et al., 1992 ; Götz and Bolz, 1992 ; Gillies and Price,
1994 ). This time sequence is coincident with the loss of CR cells in
neocortical cultures reported here, which suggests that the survival of
CR cells is essential for preserving neuronal migration in organotypic
slices and more generally for preserving the histotypic, layered
organization of neocortical slice cultures.
In the hippocampus, CR cells may also be involved in migration, because
reeler mutant mice show severe malpositioning of hippocampal
neurons (Caviness, 1973 ). In hippocampal slice cultures, the radial
glia scaffold is preserved to a large extent, even after long
incubation times (Del Río et al., 1991). Thus, the characteristic
histotypic organization of hippocampal slice cultures may rely on the
survival of CR cells in this region in vitro, which may
guarantee the preservation of radial glia and the completion of
migratory processes.
In conclusion, the present study has shown that CR cells have different
fates and survival properties in the neocortex and hippocampus,
suggesting that the mechanisms involved in their degeneration are
different in these two cortical regions. Furthermore, the survival of
CR cells in hippocampal slice cultures may allow the development of
approaches aimed at characterizing the role of these neurons in the
formation and regeneration of hippocampal connections in
vitro.
FOOTNOTES
Received March 18, 1996; revised Aug. 1, 1996; accepted Aug. 12, 1996.
This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB 505, Leibniz Program), the Spanish Ministry
of Education (SAF94-743), the Spanish Ministry of Health (FIS93-369),
and the Catalonian Government (QR95/564). J.A.D.-R. was supported by a
short-term fellowship from the Catalonian Government (BE94-3/634). We
thank C. Hofmann and Albert Martínez for technical assistance,
and Robin Rycroft for linguistic advice.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Eduardo Soriano, Department
of Animal and Plant Cell Biology, Faculty of Biology, University of
Barcelona, Avenue Diagonal 645, 08028 Barcelona,
Spain.
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