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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 1998, 18(15):5746-5765
The Role of the First Postmitotic Cortical Cells in the
Development of Thalamocortical Innervation in the Reeler
Mouse
Zoltán
Molnár1,
Richard
Adams1,
André
M.
Goffinet2, and
Colin
Blakemore1
1 University Laboratory of Physiology, Oxford OX1 3PT,
United Kingdom, and 2 Faculté de Médecine,
Département de Physiologie Humaine, Facultés Universitaires
Notre-Dame de la Paix, 5000 Namur, Belgium
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ABSTRACT |
In the mutant mouse reeler, the tangential distribution
of thalamocortical fibers is essentially normal, even though neurons of
the cortical plate accumulate below the entire early-born preplate population (Caviness et al., 1988 ). This seems incompatible with the
hypothesis that cells of the subplate (the lower component of the
preplate in normal mammals) form an axonal scaffold that guides
thalamic fibers and act as temporary targets for them (Blakemore and
Molnár, 1990 , Shatz et al., 1990 ).
We used carbocyanine dyes to trace projections in wild-type and
reeler mice between embryonic day 13 and postnatal day 3. Preplate formation and early extension of corticofugal fibers to form a
topographic array are indistinguishable in the two phenotypes. So too
are the emergence of thalamic axons in topographic order through the
primitive internal capsule, their meeting with preplate axons, and
their distribution over the preplate scaffold. Distinctive differences
appear after the cortical plate begins to accumulate below the preplate
of reeler, causing the preplate axons to form oblique
fascicles, running through the cortical plate. Thalamic axons then pass
through the plate within the same fascicles and accumulate in the
"superplate" layer for ~2-3 d, before defasciculating and
plunging down to terminate deep in the cortical plate, creating the
curious "looping" pattern seen in the adult. Thus, thalamocortical innervation in reeler follows the same algorithm of
development but in relation to the misplaced population of early-born
neurons. Far from challenging the theory that preplate fibers guide
thalamic axons, reeler provides strong evidence for it.
Key words:
cortex; reeler; development; pioneer axons; preplate; "handshake hypothesis"; thalamus; mouse; subplate; axon
guidance; internal capsule
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INTRODUCTION |
There is evidence that the
distribution and subsequent behavior of thalamocortical axons in the
rat involve crucial interactions with early postmitotic cortical
neurons (see preceding paper; Molnár et al., 1998 ). These cells,
which form the primordial plexiform zone (Marin-Padilla, 1971 , 1988 ) or
preplate (Rickmann et al., 1977 ; Stewart and Pearlman, 1987 ), send out
pioneering axons (McConnell et al., 1989 ; De Carlos and O'Leary 1992 ;
Erzurumlu and Jhaveri 1992 ), forming a "scaffold" (McConnell et
al., 1989 ) that may act as a guidance structure for subsequent axonal
growth (Blakemore and Molnár, 1990 , Shatz et al., 1990 ). In
normal mammals, the preplate is split into marginal zone above and
subplate below, by the arrival, in between, of cells of the cortical
plate proper, which accumulate in an inside-out fashion (Marin-Padilla,
1971 ; König et al., 1977 ; Luskin and Shatz, 1985a ,b ). In the rat,
thalamic afferents and preplate efferents, mainly from the subplate,
meet in the basal telencephalon; they intermingle, and thalamic fibers grow over the preplate axons to their target area (Molnár et al.,
1998 ).
Subplate cells also seem to act as sites of transient termination of
thalamic fibers (Shatz et al., 1988 ), while they "wait" for the
cortex above to develop growth-permissive properties (Götz et
al., 1992 ; Molnár and Blakemore, 1995 ). In carnivores and primates this waiting period lasts for several weeks (Rakic, 1976 , 1977 ; Shatz and Luskin, 1986 ; Ghosh and Shatz, 1992 ). In rodents, some
thalamic fibers quickly penetrate a short distance into the cortical
plate (Catalano et al., 1991 , 1996 ; Kageyama and Robertson, 1993 ), but
many accumulate in the subplate for 2-3 d before growing up into the
plate (Molnár et al., 1998 ) and terminating mainly in layer 4, the principal target of thalamic innervation (Jones, 1985 ).
Reeler, an autosomal recessive mutation of mouse with
disorganized cerebral lamination (Caviness and Sidman, 1973 ; Caviness, 1976 , 1982 ; Caviness and Rakic, 1978 ; Goffinet, 1979 , 1984 , 1995 ; Rakic
and Caviness, 1995 ), provides a test bed for hypotheses about
thalamocortical development. The molecular basis of the reeler trait is being unraveled (Bar et al., 1995 ;
D'Arcangelo et al., 1995 ; Hoffarth et al., 1995 ; Ogawa et al., 1995 ),
and its effects on cortical cell migration, architectonics, and
connectivity are well known (Caviness et al., 1988 ). In
reeler, the preplate initially forms apparently normally
(Goffinet, 1979 ; 1980 ; Goffinet and Lyon, 1979 ; Pinto-Lord and
Caviness, 1979 ; Caviness, 1982 ), but neurons of the cortical plate fail
to divide the preplate into a marginal zone and subplate. Instead they
gather in a somewhat irregular, outside-in sequence, entirely below the
early-born cells, which are therefore left stranded above the plate
itself in what has been termed the "superplate" (Caviness, 1982 ).
Despite this aberrant location of the neurons that are hypothesized to guide them, thalamic axons reach appropriate cortical areas in reeler (Dräger, 1976 ; Steindler and Colwell, 1976 ;
Caviness and Frost, 1980 ; Simmons and Pearlman, 1982 ) and terminate
principally on neurons that correspond to layer 4 (Frost and Caviness,
1980 ). However, the trajectory of thalamic axons within the adult
cortex is highly abnormal, running up through the entire thickness of the cortex in obliquely oriented fascicles and looping down again into
presumptive layer 4 (Caviness, 1976 ).
We have studied the interactions between thalamic axons and precocious
cortical neurons in reeler and examined the way in which
normal regional and laminar targeting are achieved by thalamic fibers
despite the gross mislocation of their presumptive guidance cells.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
We used techniques similar to those used previously to study
normal development in the rat (Molnár and Blakemore 1990 , 1992 ), which are described in detail in the preceding paper (Molnár et
al., 1998 ). Carbocyanine dyes were used to trace axon pathways in fixed
brains of phenotypical wild-type and reeler mice of various gestational ages, from embryonic (E) day 13 to postnatal (P) day 3 (Table 1). We examined 12 litters (112 individuals altogether) from time-mated female mice. Pregnancies were
dated by inspection for the vaginal plug, and the day of the plug was
taken as E0. Forty-eight animals (five litters) were born from
heterozygous (rl/+) females that had been mated with homozygous (rl/rl)
males; and 49 individuals came from five litters for which both father and mother were heterozygous (rl/+). The first five litters thus contained ~50% reeler and 50% normal, whereas the latter
five litters consisted of ~25% reeler and 75% normal,
providing wild-type animals as controls at developmental stages exactly
matched with those of the reeler specimens. Two further
litters (15 pups) came from homozygous reeler parents (rl/rl) and
therefore were all reeler (Table 1).
Fetuses were removed by cesarean section under pentobarbital anesthesia
(100 mg/kg, i.p., to the pregnant female). Deep anesthesia was
maintained by immediate chilling on ice, and the fetus were perfused
with 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.1% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M
phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, delivered intracardially through a glass
micropipette under a dissecting microscope. Postnatal animals (at P1.5
and P3, counting the day of birth as P0) were anesthetized by chilling.
The brains were removed, and, after a few days of post-fixation in 4%
buffered paraformaldehyde, both hemispheres were used for axon tracing
with carbocyanine dyes. One or more tiny individual crystals (0.1-0.3
mm diameter) of dye were inserted, under an operating microscope, into
the diencephalon (after transsecting the brainstem rostral to the
colliculi) or the cerebral cortex, using a fine pair of forceps or a
fine stainless steel wire. The dyes used were 1,1'-dioctadecyl
3,3,3'3'-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate (DiI),
4-[4-(dihexadecylamino)stryryl]-N-methylpyridinium iodide
(DiA), 4-[4-(didecylamino)styryl]-N-methylpiridinium
iodide (DiASP)- and 3,3'-dipentyloxacarbocyanine iodide (DiO)
(Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR). Table 1, right column, gives a
summary of the sites of crystal placement.
All litters except the two from homozygous parents (Table 1) contained
both reeler (rl/rl) and wild-type genotypes (rl/+ or +/+).
Because it was impossible to distinguish between them on the basis of
the gross appearance of their brains, all members of each litter were
used for the same procedure, on the assumption that some of them were
reeler. The fact that mutant individuals could be identified
only after all the experimental procedures had been completed
guaranteed objectivity: the experiments were essentially performed
"blind."
In the mouse, as in the rat (Bayer and Altman, 1991 ), a spatiotemporal
wave of maturation sweeps across the hemisphere. Throughout forebrain
development in the mouse, anteroventral regions lead posterodorsal by
about 1 d in the state of maturation. Before E13.5, the extremely
immature cortex looked identical in all specimens; the preplate was
present, but the cortical plate itself had not yet begun to appear,
even in the most mature, rostrolateral segment of the hemisphere.
Because there were no obvious differences between individuals in the
appearance of the cerebral wall, none of the E13 embryos
(n = 6) could be classified by conventional
histological criteria (Goffinet, 1979 , 1980 ; Pinto-Lord and Caviness,
1979 ; Stanfield and Cowan, 1979 ; Derer and Nakanishi, 1983 ). At E13.5 (n = 24) discrimination was also often impossible,
although in eight individuals (five reeler and three
wild-type) we were able to distinguish the genotypes with confidence by
looking at the more mature, anterior and ventral regions of the
hemisphere, where the first signs of the cortical plate itself could be
detected (Fig. 1B,E).
In these individuals we were therefore able to examine the organization
of corticofugal and corticopetal projections of the occipital cortex in
identified reeler and wild-type specimens before the
distinguishing characteristics of the cortex itself had begun to appear
in that region.

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Figure 1.
Coronal sections through the entire thickness of
the cerebral wall (pial surface up), stained with
bisbenzimide, to show the appearance of the cell layers at E13.5 in a
wild-type mouse (A, B) and a reeler mouse
(D, E) and at E15 in a wild-type mouse (C)
and a reeler mouse (F). The age-matched
pairs are from the same litter. A, In the less mature
occipital cortex of the E13.5 wild-type specimen, no cells of the
cortical plate have yet arrived, and only the loosely packed cells of
the preplate (pp) are seen at the outer edge of the
cerebral wall. B, In the most mature, rostrolateral part of
the hemisphere of the wild-type animal, the first immature neurons of
the emerging cortical plate (cp) have just started to arrive
and have interposed themselves between the thin, cell-sparse marginal
zone (mz) above and the subplate (sp) below.
Below the nascent intermediate zone (iz) are the generative
cells of the subventricular zone (svz) and ventricular zone
(vz). D, The cerebral wall of the occipital
cortex in the reeler at E13.5 also has only the preplate
layer above the subventricular zone. With these techniques it is
indistinguishable from the same area of the cortex in the wild-type
animal (compare with A). E, In the same E13.5
reeler specimen, the characteristic aberrant appearance of
the cortex is already recognizable here in the most mature
rostrolateral segment of the hemisphere. The first cells of the
cortical plate are beginning to accumulate, loosely packed, in an
outside-in sequence, below the original preplate, which now
forms what Caviness (1982) has termed the "superplate"
(s'p). No clear border is apparent between superplate and
cortical plate at this early stage. Eight of the 24 brains examined at
E13.5 could be reliably distinguished in this way, from the appearance
of the rostrolateral cortex; in those specimens, the development of
thalamocortical and corticofugal projections toward and away from the
occipital cortex could be studied in animals of identified phenotype
before that region of cortex took on differentiated features. C,
F, In these examples at E15, the two phenotypes can be clearly
distinguished, even in the occipital cortex. In the normal animal
(C) the cell-dense layer of the cortical plate
(CP), already some 200 µm thick, is sandwiched between two
cell-sparse zones: the marginal zone (MZ) above and the
subplate (SP) below. In the reeler
(F) there is no separate marginal zone, and the
entire original preplate now forms the superplate (s'p),
with the loose, obliquely striated cortical plate below. These
cell-sparse stripes continue into the intermediate zone
(IZ). By this stage every individual can easily be
classified as reeler or wild type, even from sections of
occipital cortex. In the reeler (F) the
superplate and cortical plate have similar cell density with no
distinct boundary between them. The absence of a clear marginal zone
and the less demarcated cortical plate, with its oblique cell-sparse
striations, are reliable indicators of the reeler phenotype.
SVZ, Subventricular zone; VZ, ventricular zone.
Each pair of micrographs (A, D; B, E; C,
F) was taken at the same magnification. Scale bars, 200 µm.
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The development of embryos within the same horn of the uterus can vary
somewhat according to the number and location of the embryos. For
embryos from small litters or from close to the distal end of the
uterine horn, development is usually somewhat more advanced. This
explains why it was possible to detect differences in some but not all
brains from the same E13.5 litters.
In stages older than E13.5 the phenotypes could be readily
distinguished after bisbenzimide counterstaining, even in sections of
the relatively immature occipital cortex. In the normal mouse (rl/+ and
+/+) a thin, cell-dense cortical plate is visible, sandwiched between
two cell-sparse layers the marginal zone above and the subplate below.
In the reeler (rl/rl), there is less obvious variation in
cell density; in particular there is no distinct boundary at the bottom
of the cortical plate (see Results and Fig. 1 for more details).
From E14 onward, when the phenotype could always been identified, 21 individuals (58%) were reeler (rl/rl), and 15 (42%) were normal (rl/+) in the litters from heterozygous females mated with homozygous males. And of 31 pups from heterozygous fathers and mothers,
8 (26%) were reeler and 23 (74%) were normal (rl/+ or +/+), close to theoretical expectation. All 15 specimens from the two
litters with homozygous parents were confirmed to be reeler. Table 1 lists the numbers, gestational ages, genotypic backgrounds and,
where identifiable, the phenotype of the mice in this study, as well as
the locations of the dye placements.
After insertion of dye crystals, the brains were stored in PBS, with
0.1% Na azide to prevent contamination, at room temperature, or at
37°C to facilitate the diffusion of dye along axons. Dye diffusion
required different incubation periods depending on the age of the
specimen and the temperature (Table
2).
At the end of incubation, the brains were embedded in 4% agar (made up
in 0.9% saline) and cut by vibratome. Generally we used horizontal and
coronal sectioning, but occasionally we cut stereotaxically vertical
sections at an angle of 45° to the coronal plane (see Figs. 6, 7) so
that most of the pathway from the internal capsule to the cortex, in
the middle of the hemisphere, could be followed within a single
section. The sections, 75-200 µm thick, were counterstained with
bisbenzimide (Riedel-De Haèn AG, Seelze-Hannover, Germany; 2.5 µg/ml in PBS) or acridine orange (10 µg/ml in PBS) for 10 min, and
coverslipped in Hydromount (National Diagnostics) or
glycerol-phenylenediamine solution (0.1%
p-phenylenediamine, 10% PBS, and 90% glycerol, made up and
stored according to the method of Johnson et al., 1982).
Each series of sections was examined in a conventional fluorescence
microscope. Double- or triple-exposure color micrographs were taken
under epifluorescent illumination, using different filters to reveal
the various dyes. The counterstaining with bisbenzimide showed major
anatomical features, such as the pial surface of the cortex, the bottom
of layer 1 (in normal phenotypes), and the gray matter-white matter
boundary. Many sections, selected in conventional fluorescence
microscopy, were subsequently examined and imaged in a laser-scanning
confocal microscope (CLSM-Fluovert; Leica, Heidelberg, Germany).
High-resolution reconstructions of fiber pathways and back-labeled
cells were generated from fine optical sections (up to 64 successive
sections). These three-dimensional data sets were presented as extended
focus projections or as stereo-pairs with ±7° disparity (see Fig.
3E).
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RESULTS |
The genesis of the cortex in normal mice is essentially similar to
that in rats (for references, see Molnár et al., 1998 ), except
that each step occurs about 1-2 d earlier in the mouse, whose total
gestation lasts 19-20 d, compared with 21-22 d in the rat. Thus, for
the occipital cortex of the normal mouse, the first postmitotic neurons
are born in the ventricular zone at E12 and migrate to the outer edge
of the cerebral wall by E13 to form the preplate. The birth of neurons
of the cortical plate proper starts at about E13, and the first of them
complete their migration at ~E13.5-E14 (Sidman et al., 1959 ;
Angevine and Sidman, 1961 ; Caviness, 1982 ).
The appearance of the material from wild-type (rl/+ or +/+) mice in the
present study conformed at every stage to the previous descriptions of
corticogenesis in normal mice. Moreover, we saw no difference between
wild-type and reeler (rl/rl) until after the time of the
arrival of the first neurons of the cortical plate, at E13.5-E14
(Goffinet, 1979 , 1980 ; Pinto-Lord and Caviness, 1979 ; Stanfield and
Cowan, 1979 ; Derer and Nakanishi, 1983 ).
Rapid Golgi, neurofilament immunohistochemical, and monoaminergic
histofluorescence techniques have already been used to investigate some
aspects of the development of the afferent connections in reeler (Caviness and Korde 1981 , Yamamoto et al., 1986 ).
Caviness et al. (1988) and Yuasa et al. (1994) described the targeting of the first generated cells in the subplate of normal mice and the
superplate in reeler. However, the timing of outgrowth of early corticofugal axons and their relationship to thalamocortical projections have not been previously examined. The capacity of carbocyanine dyes to label axons and cells in fixed tissue, through passive anterograde and retrograde diffusion (Godement et al., 1987 ),
provides a means of exploring the entire process of development of
connections. Our description is based on 224 experiments, involving approximately equal numbers of wild-type and reeler
specimens (Table 1).
E13-E13.5: before the formation of the cortical plate
We examined three litters at this gestational stage (total
n = 30: 12 individuals at E13.5 from rl/+ mothers and
rl/rl fathers; 6 at E13 and 12 at E13.5 from rl/+ mothers and fathers).
In eight of the E13.5 specimens (five reeler and three
wild-type) we were able to discriminate between the phenotypes from the
appearance of the most mature region of cortex in the ventral-anterior
segment of the hemisphere (Fig. 1B,E), although the
occipital cortex of even these individuals was still indistinguishable
(Fig. 1A,D). The other specimens in this age group
could not be reliably classified by any histological criteria in
bisbenzimide-stained sections of cortex or thalamus. However, each
litter presumably consisted of ~50% wild-type and 50%
reeler (for rl/+ × rl/rl matings) or 75% wild-type and
25% reeler (for rl/+ × rl/+). (Proportions close to these
theoretical expectations were indeed seen in the older litters, in
which the two genotypes could easily be recognized from the appearance
of the cortex.) Fortunately, identification of phenotype was, in a
sense, irrelevant, because we saw no obvious differences in the
patterns of corticofugal and thalamofugal projections between
individuals at this early stage (even for the eight definitely identified individuals, which we examined with particular care; Fig.
2). Thus, the description below applies
to both reeler and normal mouse.

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Figure 2.
Origin of the first descending projection
from the cortex, revealed by anterograde (A) and
retrograde (B-D) labeling. A, Montage of
confocal micrographs of a coronal section of the dorsolateral aspect of
the hemisphere of an E13.5 mouse embryo. The boundary of the lateral
ventricle is demarcated with an interrupted line. This
individual was of reeler phenotype, judging from the
appearance of the more mature, rostrolateral segment of the hemisphere
(Fig. 1), although here in the occipital cortex, only the first
postmitotic cells of the preplate (PP) are present above the
subventricular and ventricular zones (SVZ, VZ). A small
crystal of DiI had been inserted into the preplate, on the convexity of
the cortex (large arrow). The thickness of this thin optical
section was 2 µm, and it avoided the plane of the brightest part of
the crystal placement, thus allowing the visualization of radial glia
and spindle-shaped cells in the ventricular and subventricular zone.
Labeled axons stream out of the preplate, forming a fairly tight bundle
in the intermediate zone, with the most advanced of them (from more
lateral parts of the labeled area of cortex) splaying out a little as
they enter the anlage of the corpus striatum (ST). At
this point the growth cones are particularly large and florid in
morphology; one is indicated with a small arrow. Axons from
more dorsal parts of the labeled area lie deeper in the intermediate
zone and have grown less far. All 12 individuals treated in this way at
this age (2 definitely identified as reeler, 2 as wild type)
were remarkably similar in the appearance of both the cerebral wall and
the early descending projection. Scale bar, 100 µm. B,
Confocal microscopic reconstruction of a similar region of the
posterior cortex in another E13.5 animal of reeler
phenotype. A small DiI crystal had been implanted in the lateral aspect
of the primitive internal capsule to back-label the descending
projection (in the absence of ascending thalamic fibers) and to reveal
the morphology of the cells of origin in the preplate.
Three-dimensional confocal microscopic reconstructions were made and,
32 2-µm-thick optical sections were superimposed to generate this
image. The boundary of the lateral ventricle above the striatal anlage
is indicated by interrupted lines. Note the back-labeled
cells distributed through the full depth of the preplate and the highly
ordered arrangement of their axons, those from more dorsal cortex
running deep to those from more lateral areas. No cells of the true
cortical plate have completed their migration at this stage. Again the
appearance was very similar in the 12 members of this E13.5 litter
(including one identified wild type and three definite
reeler). Scale bar, 150 µm. C, D, High-power
views from the segments indicated by outline boxes in
B, showing cells and individual fibers at higher resolution.
Note the parallel axons in C. Scale bars, 30 µm.
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Ordered outgrowth of preplate axons
For all the E13.5 embryos, we placed a carbocyanine dye crystal in
the cortex of one hemisphere (and in the 12 animals from heterozygous
fathers we also implanted a crystal in the thalamus of the same
hemisphere; see below). At this early stage the germinal ventricular
zone consists of spindle-shaped neuroblasts, which generate cells
destined for the cortex. The earliest born population of polymorphous
daughter cells have already reached the outer edge of the cerebral wall
to form the preplate, but the cortical plate itself has not begun to
appear anywhere except in the most anterolateral segment of the
hemisphere of some individuals.
The crystal placements in the occipital cortex revealed that many
preplate neurons have already extended axonal processes, which run
obliquely within the preplate layer, and into the intermediate zone. In
Figure 2A, a distinct bundle of axons, with growth
cones at their tips, extends downward toward the primitive internal capsule in an E13.5 reeler embryo (identified from the
appearance of the anterolateral cortex). The pioneer fibers at the
leading front of this bundle diverge somewhat as they enter the anlage of the corpus striatum (also see Fig. 3 below). Some of the growth cones are particularly large and have florid morphology.
Cells of origin of the early corticofugal projection
In one hemisphere of all the animals of the E13 and E13.5 litters
from heterozygous fathers (n = 6 and 12, respectively), we placed a small DiI crystal into the primitive internal capsule, to
back-label the source of these early corticofugal fibers. These experiments demonstrated that the projections did indeed originate from
typical preplate cells. Figure 2, B-D, illustrates these back-labeled cells in an identified reeler specimen,
although their appearance was indistinguishable at this stage in
definite wild-type embryos. To resolve individual fiber ordering and to document the morphology of these cells, we examined these specimens by
laser-scanning confocal microscopy (in addition to fluorescence microscopy). In both wild-type and reeler specimens, the
back-labeled cells were typical polymorphous, polygonal preplate
cells (Fig. 2B-D), distinctly different in
morphology from the spindle-shaped cells of the ventricular and
subventricular zones visible in Figure 2A. The
preplate cells have extensive dendritic arbors, and their overall
appearance is more mature than that of cells in the ventricular and
subventricular zones.
Outgrowth of thalamic axons and their "handshake" with
the corticofugal array
In all 30 individuals studied at E13-13.5, we placed a crystal of
dye in the dorsolateral aspect of the diencephalon (posterior dorsal
thalamus) in one-half of the brain. (In the other hemisphere, either
the internal capsule or the cortex was implanted with dye; Table 1.)
These experiments revealed afferent axons from the thalamus, with
growth cones at their tips, approaching the primitive internal capsule
at E13 and just passing through it at E13.5.
For the litter of 12 E13.5 embryos from heterozygous fathers, in
the hemisphere that received a crystal in the thalamus, we also placed
a crystal of a different carbocyanine dye in the approximately corresponding position in the occipital cortex to provide a
comparison of the state of corticofugal and corticopetal
outgrowths. These double-labeling experiments show that the advancing
wave fronts of the two sets of axons approach each other beneath and
within the anlage of the corpus striatum at approximately E13.5 (Fig. 3). In the least mature examples, the two
sets of axons are still a short distance apart; in some cases they are
just making contact beneath the lateral ganglionic eminence (Fig.
3A,B); and in the most mature specimens of this age, the
fiber systems have already extensively intermingled in the intermediate
zone (Fig. 3C,D). High-power, thin optical sections from
confocal microscopy, as well as three-dimensional data sets and
stereoscopic images (Fig. 3E), showed both descending and
ascending axons forming ordered arrays, sharing the same extracellular
compartment and in intimate contact with each other. As in the normal
rat (Molnár et al., 1998 ), the degree of overlap of the two
arrays of labeled fibers varied from animal to animal, presumably
reflecting the exact placement of the two dye crystals. But in all
cases in which the axons had reached or passed each other, at least
some part of the thalamic array was in close association with the
labeled part of the corticofugal array within the intermediate zone.
This pattern of approximately synchronized outgrowth and meeting of
early corticofugal and corticopetal projections was observed in every
member of this E13.5 litter, including the three identified as
reeler and the one definite wild type.

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Figure 3.
The earliest corticofugal and thalamic projections
meet and intermingle near the lateral margin of the striatal anlage. A
small crystal of DiI (red) was placed in the convexity of
the posterior cortex, and one of DiO (green) was
placed in the dorsal thalamus of the same hemisphere in each member of
a litter of E13.5 mice (12 individuals, 1 definitely identified as wild
type, 3 as reeler). Fibers labeled with each dye were imaged
in three dimensions by confocal microscopy. A, B, In this
case, the early corticofugal axons (red) fan out from the
intermediate zone and diverge somewhat as they sweep into the striatal
anlage (compare with Fig. 2A). No back-labeled cell
bodies are seen in the ganglionic eminence, implying that neurons in
that region have not sent axons to the occipital cortex. The bundle of
thalamic fibers (green), whose more medial portion,
within the primitive internal capsule and diencephalon, is not visible
in this section, have just reached the same region. (The
green staining at the pial surface on the lateral side is
an artifact.) The phenotype of this particular individual could
not be judged with confidence, even from the most mature cortical
regions. However, there were no consistent differences in
appearance for all 12 members of the litter in which double labeling
was performed at E13.5 (1 definite wild type, 3 definite
reeler). B, High-power view of the tips of the
two sets of labeled axons. The outer parts of the two bundles appear
not to be destined to meet (presumably reflecting a misalignment of the
thalamic and cortical crystals), but there is a region of overlap and
the large growth cones of a number of corticofugal axons are seen
contacting labeled thalamic axons, lying in the same plane of focus
within the section. C, D, This individual from the same
litter was slightly more mature. The two bundles have crossed each
other, and there is intimate mixing of the two over a considerable
fraction of their combined width. C, A montage to show the
entire region of overlap, which involves more than half of each
individual labeled array. D, High-power view from the
bottom part of C, showing extensive overlap of
green and red axons in the same confocal optical
plane, showing them to be closely intermingled. Yellow in
C and D is attributable to the optical fusion of
red and green and not to the presence of fibers containing both dyes.
E, From the three-dimensional data sets collected from the
level of the tips of the thalamic axons, indicated with a white
outline box in C, these color stereo pairs (±7°
disparity) demonstrate thalamic and corticofugal fibers running in
opposite directions within the same fascicles, in the
center. The stereo pair should be viewed by diverging the
eyes or with the aid of prisms. Scale bars: A, 250 µm;
B, D, 100 µm; C, 200 µm.
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E14-E18: after the appearance of the cortical plate
At E14, the first cells of the true cortical plate had begun to
arrive in the occipital cortex. At this age, only 1 d or so after
the appearance of the first postmitotic cells in the preplate, individual animals of the mixed litters were already easily
distinguished as wild type or reeler, depending on whether
the cells of the cortical plate were coming to rest within or below the
preplate, respectively (Fig. 1C,F). In normal mice,
the migration of true cortical neurons through the lower part of the
preplate and their accumulation below the marginal zone create sharp
boundaries between regions of different cell density, at the upper and
lower limits of the expanding cortical plate. On the other hand, in
reeler, the entire preplate layer stays intact at the outer
edge of the cerebral wall to form the superplate, and the disorganized
accumulation of cortical plate neurons below it does not produce a
distinct boundary. Bisbenzimide counterstaining alone was quite
adequate, at this and later stages, to reveal the characteristics of
reeler the irregular, unlaminated cortical plate, without a
clear lower boundary and with a loose superplate layer above, rather
than a clearly segregated marginal zone (Fig. 1F).
Distinctive oblique, cell-sparse striations are also seen, extending
through the full depth of the cortical plate, from the superplate above
to the intermediate zone below (see Figs. 1F,
4H, 8H).
Unusual behavior of thalamic fibers in reeler as
they approach the cortex
In each individual of six of the seven litters between E14 and E18
we placed a DiI crystal in the dorsal thalamus (see Table 1 for
details). These thalamic tracing experiments revealed that at
approximately E14, the bundle of regularly packed, labeled thalamic
axons diverges slightly, loosens, and breaks up into a number of
smaller fascicles, as they run through the anlage of the corpus
striatum. Fibers from the dorsal thalamus reach the occipital pole at
approximately E14.5-E15 in both reeler and normal
phenotypes. At this stage the cortical plate itself is ~100-150 µm
thick, whether accumulating above the subplate (in wild type) or below
the superplate (in reeler). No difference between the two
phenotypes in the organization of thalamocortical projections is
evident at any point in the pathway through the diencephalon, the
internal capsule within the striatal anlage, and the ventral
intermediate zone.
Only as they approach the cortex itself do thalamic axons assume
quite different patterns in the two genotypes (Fig.
4). In normal animals, just as in rats
(see Molnár et al., 1998 ), a dense mass of thalamic fibers
gathers in the subplate layer, and very few of them penetrate the
cortical plate above. By contrast, in reeler, as shown in
Figure 4, B and F, thalamic axons run
through the cortical plate in diagonal fascicles, without
branching or terminating, and they accumulate within the layer of
superplate cells, which correspond to subplate neurons in the normal
animal.

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Figure 4.
Comparison, in wild type and reeler, of
the distribution of thalamic axons as they approach the cortex at E14.5
(A-D) and E15 (E-H). The
left column (A, C, E, G) shows results from
wild-type animals, and the right column (B, D, F, H)
shows results from reeler. In each case a single DiI crystal
had been placed in the dorsal thalamus, anterogradely labeling
thalamocortical fibers. No back-labeled cells are seen in the cortex,
implying that no corticofugal axons have reached the dorsal thalamus.
All micrographs were taken from similar sectors of the dorsolateral
aspect of the left hemisphere in these coronal sections (lateral is
up, dorsal is right). Below each fluorescence
micrograph (A, B, E, F) is a matched image showing
bisbenzimide counterstaining (C, D, G, H). Compare
the obvious laminar arrangement in the normal cortex (C, G)
and the distinctive, abnormal appearance of the cortex in
reeler (D, H), with its loose, obliquely
striated cortical plate (cp) lying below the superplate
(s'p) (compare with Fig. 2). The DiI staining in the normal E14.5 animal
(A) shows an approximately parallel array of thalamic
axons running through the intermediate zone (iz) and
entering the subplate (sp). By comparison, in
reeler at the same age (B), thalamic
fibers are growing up obliquely through the cortical plate, and some
are already entering the superplate. At E15, the vast majority of axons
in the normal animal (E) are still restricted to the
subplate layer, but in reeler (F) they all
appear to have passed through the plate and into the superplate above.
Interestingly, in the selected image from the wild-type mouse
(E), in addition to a number of short branches
entering the very bottom of the cortical plate, a few thalamic fibers
(indicated with white arrows in E) can be seen
growing more obliquely through the cortical plate all the way to the
marginal zone, in a manner very similar to all the axons in
reeler. svz, Subventricular zone; vz,
ventricular zone. Scale bars, 200 µm for all panels.
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It is important to emphasize that the earliest neurons of the cortical
plate proper have completed their migration by the time thalamic axons
arrive in the vicinity of the target region of the cortex. Therefore,
in reeler, thalamic axons must grow through at least a thin
layer (~100-150 µm thick) of cortical plate cells to reach the
superplate layer above. In the wild-type mouse, however, the cortical
plate itself appears to be nonpermissive to ingrowth (as the rat cortex
is, in vitro, at corresponding ages; Molnár and
Blakemore, 1995 ). In general, only a few small side branches of
thalamic axons penetrate the lowest part of the plate in the normal
mouse (as in the rat; Molnár et al., 1998 ). However, a very small
number of axons, some even forming fasciculated bundles, run up
obliquely through the entire cortical plate and enter the marginal zone
in some of the wild-type specimens (Fig. 4E), just
like all the thalamic axons in reeler.
Appearance of the axons of preplate cells close to
their somata
At this stage, neither the early corticofugal axons nor
their cells of origin were back-labeled by dye crystals placed in the
dorsal thalamus in either wild type or reeler. To examine the appearance of the early corticofugal fiber trajectories as well as
those of the newly arriving thalamic axons, we inserted DiI into the
primitive internal capsule of both hemispheres in an E14 litter
(n = 11; six wild-type, five reeler) and of
one hemisphere in two E14.5 litters (n = 29; 12 wild-type, 17 reeler). In each member of the E14.5 litters,
a crystal was placed in the dorsal thalamus of the other hemisphere,
enabling us to compare, in the same specimens, the appearance of
thalamic axons alone and thalamic fibers mixed with corticofugal
efferents (contrast Fig. 4A-D with Figs. 5, 6).
Crystals placed in the internal capsule at E14.5 labeled both
thalamocortical and early corticofugal projections within the telencephalon. In several cases we cut sections at 45° to the coronal
plane, which proved to be optimal for following single fibers in
individual sections over much of their trajectory. In normal mice, the
mixed axon tract, including descending axons that had emerged from
subplate cells 1-2 d earlier, assumes a characteristic pattern a
broad sheet of approximately parallel axons extends through the
intermediate zone and into the subplate, where many cell bodies are
back-labeled (Fig. 5A).
Even in these wild-type specimens a few back-labeled cells with typical
preplate morphology were also seen in the marginal zone at E14.5, with
their efferent axons extending diagonally downward, through the
cortical plate itself, joining the main group of corticofugal axons
below the subplate. Thus axons from a small number of marginal zone
cells in the normal mouse appear to reach at least the ventral
telencephalon at this age, along with the main group of subplate
fibers. The separation of subplate and marginal zone cells and the
appearance assumed by their axons are entirely explained by the
intrusion of cortical plate cells between these two divisions of the
original preplate.
In reeler, the migratory arrest of true cortical plate
neurons below the polymorphous neurons of the preplate leaves all the precocious efferent axons crossing diagonally through the thickening cortical plate (Fig. 5B), just like those of the rare axons
of marginal zone cells seen in normal mice. They become organized into
oblique fascicles, running between the cells of the cortical plate,
presumably corresponding to the cell-sparse, diagonal striations typical of reeler cortex (see Figs. 1F,
4H, 8H). Except for this difference
in distribution in the region of the cortical plate itself, the
trajectories of the early corticofugal axons are indistinguishable in
reeler and normal mice at this and subsequent stages.
Association between thalamic axons and
preplate neurons
At E14.5, shortly after thalamic axons have passed through into
the intermediate zone, both ascending and descending fibers are labeled
by a crystal in the internal capsule. Close to the implantation site,
the stained fibers form a uniform dense mass, but in serial, high-power
confocal images, many of them can be followed either to growth cones or
back to labeled cell bodies in the cortex, unequivocally distinguishing
them as thalamic or corticofugal, respectively. In both wild-type and
reeler mice, just as in the rat (Molnár et al., 1998 ),
identified thalamic axons appear stouter than cortical efferents within
the intermediate zone (Figs.
6A,
7C). In every specimen, the
two sets of axons form two completely overlapping, parallel arrays
(Figs. 5, 6).

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Figure 5.
Here (and in Figs. 6, 7) the relationship among
thalamocortical afferents, early corticofugal axons, and their cell
bodies at E14.5 is seen in extended focus images of the cerebral wall
of the left hemisphere made from thin optical sections collected by
confocal microscopy (lateral is up; dorsal is
right). A small crystal of DiI in the internal capsule has
labeled a restricted group of both classes of axon; they appear
green. The sections are counterstained with acridine orange;
cell nuclei appear blue. The blue background is a
bright-field image showing the boundaries of the cerebral wall.
A, B, Low-power images of examples of wild-type
(A) and reeler (B) mice
in which thalamic fibers have already reached the cortex. The mass of
axons, forming a parallel array in the intermediate zone, is a mixture
of thalamocortical axons (many of which can be traced in high power to
growth cones at their tips) and early corticofugal fibers (many of
which can be followed back to the labeled cell bodies of origin. In the
wild type (A), the labeled cells lie almost
exclusively in the subplate (SP), with a very small number
(some even with pyramidal morphology) in the cortical plate
(CP) and, in other sections, in the marginal zone
(MZ). In the reeler (B) no
back-labeled somata are seen below the cortical plate (CP),
through which both classes of axon run obliquely, up to the superplate
(S'P) above, where labeled cell bodies are seen, specially
at higher power (Fig. 7B). C, D and E,
F, Examples from a reeler specimen from another E14.5
litter. Sections were cut at 45° to the coronal plane, approximately
parallel to the labeled fibers over much of their course. The images on
the left (C, E) show stained axons, whereas those
on the right (D, F) show the acridine
orange counterstaining, which reveals the characteristic loose
cortical plate (CP) below the superplate (S'P).
C, D, Close to the crystal placement in the internal
capsule, a broad array of thick thalamic axons with growth cones at
their tips (unfilled arrows) has advanced only a short
distance into the intermediate zone. They are superimposed on an array
of much finer axons, only just visible at this magnification (some
indicated with filled arrows), extending back up toward the
cortex. Many of these could be traced, in adjacent sections, to
back-labeled cell bodies in the superplate. E, F, Further
rostral, where development is more advanced, the thick thalamic axons
have advanced further. The growth cones of some of them (unfilled
arrows) are seen entering the cortical plate, clearly superimposed
on a carpet of finer corticofugal axons (filled
arrows), which can be followed back to labeled bipolar and
multiform cell bodies in the superplate (examples indicated with
filled arrowheads). The region within the outline is shown
at higher power in Figure 6. Confocal reconstructions: A, B,
32 sections × 2.0 µm intervals; D, 32 × 5.8 µm; E, 30 × 2.0 µm; D, 32 × 3.3 µm. Scale bars, 100 µm for all panels.
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Figure 6.
High-power view of the outlined area in
Figure 5E, showing the early corticofugal projection and
advancing thalamic axons, revealed by a single DiI crystal in the
internal capsule of an E14.5 reeler mouse. This is an
extended focus confocal image, from a 100 µm section cut at 45° to
the coronal plane, approximately parallel to the mixed axon array close
to the target area. A, In the raw image, the early efferent
projection consists of a broad array of fine, approximately parallel
axons (filled arrows), streaming obliquely through
the gathering cortical plate (compare with the counterstained view in
Fig. 5F) and into the intermediate zone. Many of
these thin axons clearly derive from back-labeled bipolar or multiform
cell bodies, loosely arranged in the superplate below the pial surface
(filled arrowheads). Acridine orange counterstaining
of the nuclei demonstrates that these structures are somata rather than
growth cones. The stouter thalamic fibers, many of which can be
definitively identified by growth cones at their tips within this
section (unfilled arrows), are distributed across the full
width of the carpet of superplate axons. They have advanced, parallel
to and in very close association with the array of corticofugals, into
the cortical plate to within 50 µm of the superplate. B,
In this processed image, individual examples of corticofugal fibers and
the cell bodies from which they originate have been infilled with
red, whereas a few selected, identified thalamic axons are
green. The outlines of axons, defined by a threshold of
pixel contrast, were followed through the entire stack of thin optical
sections. Examples that could be unequivocally traced to a cell body or
a growth cone, within the three-dimensional data set, were then
automatically infilled with the appropriate color and merged with the
original image. Clearly thalamic fibers are tightly associated with the
axons of superplate cells within individual fascicles running through
the cortical plate. Scale bar, 50 µm.
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Figure 7.
Further examples showing both efferent and
afferent axons, labeled with a single crystal of DiI in the internal
capsule of reeler. In these cases, thalamic axons have grown
through the cortical plate and are invading the superplate layer. Each
panel is an extended focus reconstruction, from a stack of thin
confocal images, of part of the dorsolateral cortex of the left
hemisphere (lateral is up; dorsal is right; pial
surface near the top of each image). As in Figures 5 and 6,
unfilled arrows mark definite thalamic fibers, identified by
growth cones visible within the section; filled arrows show
corticofugal axons that can be traced to cell bodies, which are
themselves indicated with filled arrowheads. The sections in
A, C, and D were counterstained with acridine
orange, and cell nuclei appear blue. Although the pial
surface is not revealed in the bright-field image that forms the
background in B, it lies immediately above the upper limit
of the fluorescent axons and cells. A, In this example at
E14.5, the most advanced thalamic fibers are entering the lower part of
the superplate (similar to the examples in Figs. 5E, 6).
B, This enlargement of part of the view in Figure
5B, also from an E14.5 reeler, shows some
thalamic axons in the immediate vicinity of labeled superplate cell
bodies. C, This view from an E15 reeler shows
very clear association between a stout thalamic axon and the fiber of a
bipolar superplate cell. Note that the thalamic axon lies in the middle
of the array of fine corticofugal axons and is not segregated from
them, even here, within the superplate layer. D, In this
further example from an E15 reeler a back-labeled superplate
cell (darker profile in front), whose chromatin, revealed
with acridine orange counterstaining, appears blue here,
lies immediately adjacent to and partly obscures a large bright
profile, which contains no chromatic and is thus identified as a growth
cone, presumably of a thalamic axon. The thalamic fiber and that of the
preplate cell run parallel and in close association. The growth cone
and the soma are so close together that no gap can be resolved between
them in the three-dimensional reconstruction. Confocal reconstructions:
A, 16 sections × 1.5 µm intervals; B,
32 × 1.0 µm; C, 32 × 1.6 µm; D,
32 × 1.0 µm. Scale bars: A, 200 µm; B,
C, 50 µm; D, 10 µm.
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In cases in which the thalamic fibers have not progressed far into
the intermediate zone, their tips are arranged across a broad front
within the intermediate zone, distributed across the entire width of
the array of thinner corticofugal axons (Fig. 5C), many of
which can be traced, in the same or neighboring sections, back to
labeled cell bodies in the cortex. Where thalamic axon growth is
further advanced, the leading growth cones, still entirely interspersed
within the array of corticofugal fibers, approach the cortex itself
(Fig. 5E). Counterstaining with the chromatin stain acridine
orange enabled us to distinguish indubitably between neuronal somata
and the large growth cones of presumed thalamic axons, even when they
were very close.
In fine confocal sections from some of the reeler specimens
at E14.5, growth cones of the most advanced thalamic axons are seen
approaching or entering the cortical plate itself, mixed in individual
fascicles with the efferent axons of back-labeled superplate cells
(Figs. 5B,E, 6, 7). In some cases we saw an efferent axon
running over a considerable distance in close association with an
individual thalamic fiber, the terminal growth cone of which was
approaching the back-labeled cell body in the superplate. The
fortuitous example in Figure 7D shows two axons running side by side, leading to the enormous growth cone of the thalamic fiber in
actual contact with the soma of the superplate cell (identified as such
by the acridine orange staining).
The high-resolution, extended focus image of stacked confocal
sections in Figure 6A (enlarged from the outlined
area in Fig. 5E), shows a contingent of labeled thalamic
fibers (several with clear growth cones at their tips) growing over the
ordered array of parallel corticofugal axons and approaching their
spindle-shaped or polymorphous cell bodies in the superplate. Figure
6B is a processed version of the same image in which
the profiles of a number of definite corticofugal axons have been
infilled with red, along with the cell bodies from which they arise,
and some identified thalamic fibers, ending in growth cones within this section, are filled with green. This shows without doubt that the two
sets of fibers run in very close association within the same growth
compartment, right up to the superplate layer.
E18-P3: invasion and termination of thalamic axons in the
cortical plate
The waiting period in the occipital cortex of wild-type and
reeler mice
Figure 8A-D shows
the patterns of distribution of axons labeled from the posterior dorsal
thalamus in normal and reeler mice at E18, >3 d after they
reach their target region in the occipital cortex. Single crystals in
the dorsal thalamus still back-label no cell bodies in the cerebral
wall and therefore reveal the thalamocortical projection alone. It is
still indistinguishable in appearance in normal and reeler
over most of its course. In both phenotypes, an approximately parallel
array of thalamic axons streams through the primitive internal capsule
and into the ventral intermediate zone. Only near the target area do
the two phenotypes differ in appearance (Fig. 8, compare A,C,
B,D).

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Figure 8.
Behavior of thalamocortical axons at E18
(A-D) and P3 (E-H), after their
arrival at the cortex, in normal (A, C, E, G) and
reeler animals (B, D, F, H). The
dorsolateral segment of the occipital cortex of the left hemisphere is
shown, as in Figures 4-7. A DiI crystal implanted in the posterior
dorsal thalamus labeled thalamic fibers but virtually no cortical cell
bodies. A, C, In the wild-type animal, at E18, ~1 d before
birth, most thalamic axons still appear to be waiting in the subplate
(sp) layer. The higher-power view (C)
shows a number of branches that have penetrated a short distance up
into the cortical plate (cp). One of the very rare
back-labeled cortical cells in layer 6 is visible on the extreme left.
In the background are weakly stained radial processes that extend up to
the marginal zone (mz); these are not axons and are probably
transcellularly labeled radial glia. B, D, At E18 in the
reeler, thalamic axons still occupy oblique fascicles
through the cortical plate and end in the superplate (s'p)
compartment. C and D were taken from the sectors
indicated by arrows in A and B,
respectively. Scale bars, 100 µm. E, G, In the wild type
at P3, bisbenzimide counterstaining (G) shows that
layers V and VI are already recognizable, with the cells of future
layer IV lying at the lower boundary of the dense cortical plate
(dcp). The matched fluorescence micrograph in E
reveals that thalamic axons have now detached from the subplate and
have grown up into the cortical plate as a somewhat haphazard but
predominantly radial array. The majority of them have branched at the
top of layer V, and their growth cones appear to have collapsed as they
presumably terminate on cells of layer IV. F, H, In the
reeler at P3, thalamocortical fibers have formed the curious
looping pattern seen in the adult. They run in their fascicles all the
way up to the superplate, from which many of them have now plunged
down, as individual fibers (obscured by the dense fascicles in low
power, but visible in high power), which appear to terminate in the
lower half of the cortical plate. Comparison of the axons
(F) with the nuclear staining (H)
shows clearly that the cell-sparse striations in H are in
register with the fascicle trajectories. Scale bar (in F;
applies to E, F), 200 µm.
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In the occipital cortex of normal mice, the vast majority of thalamic
fibers have still not penetrated the cortical plate at E18 (Fig.
8A,C), even though they reached the occipital pole some days earlier. Only a small number of short side branches are seen
entering the lowest part of the cortical plate (Fig. 8C).
But in reeler, most if not all the thalamic fibers run in fascicles through the cortical plate, all the way up to the superplate, where they have gathered below the pial surface (Fig.
8B,D).
Thus, the superplate of reeler seems to play a role similar
to that of the subplate in wild-type animals, both serving as compartments for the temporary accumulation of ingrowing thalamic axons. This observation is entirely compatible with the intimate relationship established in both phenotypes between thalamic
axons and preplate fibers and suggests that the precocious
efferent axons of preplate cells play an important part in
guiding thalamic axons toward the waiting compartment.
The immediate postnatal period: detachment from
preplate cells
We implanted a DiI crystal into the dorsal thalamus on both sides
in all members of one litter at P1.5 (n = 7) and
another at P3 (n = 6). For each genotype, the
distribution of thalamic axons at the cortex is similar at these two
ages and substantially different from the picture at E18, 1 d or
so before birth.
The change in the appearance of thalamic fibers is more immediately
obvious in wild-type specimens; by P1.5 the majority of thalamic fibers
appear to have left the subplate, turned sharply upward and grown
approximately radially some distance into the cortical plate, just as
at the equivalent stage in the rat (see Molnár et al., 1998 ). By
P3 they have followed individual, somewhat erratic paths through the
cortical plate, have arborized broadly, and apparently terminated some
200 µm below the pial surface among cells that will presumably become
layer 4 of the mature cortex (Fig. 8E).
In the postnatal reeler specimens, thalamic axons
still occupy the characteristic oblique fascicles in which they
ascended from the intermediate zone to the superplate region (Figs.
8F, 9). But close
examination shows that most have now left the superplate, defasciculated, and turned sharply back down into the
cortical plate as individual fibers, creating the odd "looping"
pattern seen in adult reeler (Caviness, 1976 ). At this young
age the overall downward distribution of the fine individual thalamic
fibers is difficult to see in single planes of focus, because they are
masked by the dense oblique fascicles (Fig. 9A). However,
axons could be followed under high power, especially in the confocal
microscope, looping out of the superplate layer and descending into the
cortical plate below (Fig. 9C). After growing down through
much of the depth of the gray matter in somewhat irregular patterns,
many thalamic fibers appear, by P3, to have arborized broadly toward the bottom of the cortical plate. They are presumed to terminate among
cells that have recently completed their migration (following the
abnormal, outside-in pattern typical of reeler), whose birth dates are equivalent to those of layer 4 cells in normal animals (see
Caviness 1982 ). At this depth and elsewhere in the cortical plate, we
also saw short branches, originating directly from the ascending
fascicles of thalamic fibers and terminating in close proximity to the
main axons that have grown down from the superplate.

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Figure 9.
Thalamic axons were labeled with a DiI crystal
(black star) placed in the vicinity of the nucleus ventralis
posterolateralis (VPL) of the dorsal thalamus of the left
hemisphere of a P3 reeler animal. The hemisphere was
sectioned at an angle of 50° to the sagittal plane so that the entire
pathway to the lateral cortex could be seen in one 100-µm-thick
section. A, Low-power fluorescence micrograph shows three
distinct patterns of organization of thalamocortical axons in different
parts of the pathway, the transitions between them marked by
white, filled arrows. Within the body of the thalamus, the
thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN), ventral
diencephalon, and internal capsule (IC), adjacent thalamic
axons usually remain approximately parallel, separate but closely
associated. As it passes through the basal ganglia, dorsal to the
caudate-putamen (CPU), the tightly packed,
homogeneous array reorganizes (at the right arrow) into
small, tight fascicles. At the lateral edge of the striatum (left
arrow) the fibers do not defasciculate (as in the normal animal)
but run all the way up in characteristic fascicles through the cortical
plate (CP) to the superplate (S'P).
B, Confocal micrograph in the region indicated by the
outline box in A, showing thalamic axons running
up in oblique fascicles, looping through the superplate (Figure
legend continues.), and then dispersing as fine individual axons that can be
seen at higher power plunging back down into the cortical plate. At
this stage a few fine side branches appear from axons in the oblique
bundles near the bottom of the cortical plate (filled
arrowheads). Extended focus reconstruction: 32 sections at 2 µm
intervals. C, This higher-power view of the region of the
superplate (from the outlined area in B) shows
the plexus of axons that have left the oblique fascicles, starting to
establish the looping pattern so characteristic of the thalamic
innervation in the adult reeler (Caviness, 1976 ). Although
at this age, the fine, individual axons are difficult to resolve
against the dense fascicles and the superficial plexus, some can be
seen running downward into the cortical plate (arrowheads).
In the microscope, single axons can be followed down to the lower half
of the cortical plate, where their growth cones have collapsed, and
they are presumably terminating on cortical neurons. Extended focus
reconstruction: 32 sections at 0.5 µm intervals. Scale bars:
A, 250 µm; B, 100 µm; C, 50 µm.
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Common topography of early corticofugal and
thalamocortical projections
In each member of one litter at E15, consisting of five wild type
and six reeler, we implanted a small DiI crystal into the posterior half of the cortex. In each specimen a single, tight bundle
of labeled axons can be traced down through the intermediate zone and
internal capsule and up into the corresponding region of the
diencephalon. Except very close to the cortex, the pattern of labeling
is indistinguishable in wild type (Fig.
10A) and
reeler (Fig. 10B). At the thalamic end of
the bundle is a back-labeled cluster of cells, providing additional
evidence that thalamic axons have reached their cortical target zones
by this stage. Therefore, the labeled bundle within the intermediate
zone must contain both early corticofugal axons (mainly deriving from
preplate cells at this early age) and the topographically corresponding thalamic afferents.

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Figure 10.
Cortical crystal placements at E15 (A,
B) and at E18 (C, D) after the arrival of thalamic
axons reveal indistinguishable global relationships between thalamus
and cortex in wild-type (A, C) and reeler
(B, D) phenotypes. A, B, Low-power fluorescence
photomicrographs, taken with double exposure (to show DiI and
bisbenzimide), of sections from E15 normal (A) and
reeler (B) mice from the same litter. A
small DiI crystal was placed in the cortex of all members of this
litter (5 wild-type, 6 reeler), quite lateral in the left
hemisphere in these two cases. Sections (200 µm thick) were cut
vertically, at an angle of 45° to coronal (indicated by the
shaded plane in the schematic drawing on the
left), so that most of the pathway, from left lateral cortex
to ventral thalamus, could be followed within a single section. (The
site of crystal placement was visible in an adjacent section.) In both
wild type and reeler, a discrete labeled bundle (a mixture
of corticofugal and thalamocortical axons over much of its course)
descends through the intermediate zone and internal capsule and then
extends up to a group of back-labeled cells in the ventrobasal
thalamus. C, D, Small crystals of three different
carbocyanine dyes (DiA, DiI, and DiAsp) were placed in a parasagittal
line along the convexity of the left hemisphere (see schematic drawing
on the left) of all brains in an E18 litter (4 normal, 6 reeler). From corresponding horizontal sections, just above
the junction of telencephalon and diencephalon, in a wild type
(C) and a reeler (D),
triple-exposure pictures were taken to show all three dyes and the
bisbenzimide counterstaining (DiI appears orange, DiAsp and
DiA yellow-green). In each phenotype, the crystals labeled
three distinct and separate fiber bundles (a-c), which
could be followed, in successive horizontal sections, sweeping down
from the cortex to the internal capsule, passing through, rotating
~90° in the ventral diencephalon (below the level of these
sections), with each running toward an anteroposteriorly elongated
group of labeled thalamic cells (a'-c'). The global
topography of the thalamocortical system seems indistinguishable in the
two phenotypes. Scale bars: A, B, 500 µm; C, D,
300 µm.
|
|
The fact that the labeled bundle is always discrete, narrow, and
unitary over the whole of the resolvable part of its route strongly
implies that the ascending axons are tightly associated with, perhaps
fasciculated on, the pioneer corticofugal fibers. Just as in the rat
(Molnár et al., 1998 ), the single bundles of mixed efferent and
afferent fibers labeled by crystals in the cortex at this early stage
provides strong confirmation that the arrays of corticofugal and
thalamocortical axons occupy the same space within the intermediate
zone in corresponding topographic order. This relationship appears to
be essentially similar in reeler and wild-type animals.
In an E18 litter (four normal and six reeler), we
implanted a number of different carbocyanine dyes in a parasagittal row along the convexity of the cortex and examined the mixed axon bundles
and the back-labeled cells in the diencephalon. These experiments
demonstrated a close similarity in the distribution and topography of
corticofugal and thalamocortical projections in the two phenotypes.
Figure 10, C and D, compares horizontal sections
through the ventral part of the hemisphere of E18 wild-type and
reeler mice, respectively, after placement of three
different dye crystals along the cortex. The bundles of axons
labeled by the three different dyes stay separate from each other, even
as they pass through the constriction of the primitive internal
capsule. They have the same relationship to each other in normal and
reeler over both the telencephalic and the diencephalic
portions of the pathway. And in both phenotypes, the
anteroposterior sequence of crystal placement sites along the
cortex corresponds to a mediolateral sequence of parallel slabs of
back-labeled cells in the thalamus. Just as for the normal rat
(Molnár et al., 1998 ), this implies that there is a single 90°
rotation of the axon array in the ventral diencephalon in both
wild-type and reeler mice.
No cortical neurons reach the dorsal thalamus
before P3
Cells of the Preplate (subplate and marginal zone of normal
animals and superplate of reeler) were readily back-labeled
from dye crystals in the primitive internal capsule at E13-E14.5
(Figs. 2, 5, 6, 7). But over the entire age range studied, up to
and including P3, small dye crystals placed directly in parts of
the dorsal thalamus, well away from the ventral diencephalon and the primitive internal capsule, retrogradely labeled virtually no cell
bodies in the cerebral wall. This was true not only for the presumptive
preplate but also for the true cortical plate (Figs. 4, 8, 9).
Increasing the incubation period for dye transport by an additional
few weeks did not lead to the appearance of label in cortical neurons.
This strongly suggests not only that the axons of preplate cells stop
short of the thalamus, as in the normal rat (Molnár et al.,
1998 ), but also that the fibers of true corticothalamic neurons have
not invaded the dorsal thalamus of the mouse, even several days after
birth.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The apparently normal regional and laminar targeting by thalamic
afferents in the reeler mouse, despite the radical
disorganization of corticogenesis, poses a challenge for models of
thalamocortical development. In particular, the hypothesis that early
postmitotic cells, which normally lie in a strategic position in the
subplate below the cortical plate, play a role in both the guidance and the holding of thalamic axons (Blakemore and Molnár, 1990 ; Shatz et al., 1990 ), seems incompatible with the aberrant location of such
cells above the cortical plate in the superplate of reeler. However, far from falsifying the "handshake hypothesis," our
studies of the early development of reeler suggest that
thalamic axons follow precisely the same algorithm of interaction with
the axons and cell bodies of early-born cortical neurons and that this
parsimoniously accounts for the otherwise mysterious, looping
trajectories of thalamic fibers previously described in mature
reeler (Caviness, 1976 ).
The timing and the overall topography of the initial corticofugal and
thalamofugal projections are essentially identical in normal and
reeler mice. During the earliest stages of thalamocortical development, at approximately E13-E13.5, the cortical preplate, the
thalamus, and their projections are indistinguishable in the two. Cells
of the preplate extend pioneering axons before the migration of any
cells of the cortical plate proper and before the arrival of
afferents from the thalamus or brainstem (Crandall et al., 1992 ). By
E13.5 these descending axons approach the primitive internal capsule,
with a similar degree of fiber order in the two genotypes. At
approximately the same stage, axons from the thalamus have grown, in
topographic order, through the primitive internal capsule and are
approaching their corticofugal counterparts. Thalamic fibers distribute
to the appropriate cortical regions, intimately mixed with the
corresponding pioneer preplate axons, establishing the same simple
topographic relationship between the volume of the thalamus and the
cortical sheet in wild type and reeler (Fig. 10).
Preplate cells as temporary targets
Differences between reeler and wild type start to
become evident immediately after the arrival of the first neurons of
the cortical plate, which stop below the preplate in reeler
rather than penetrating and splitting it (Goffinet, 1979 ; Pinto-Lord and Caviness, 1979 ). The abnormal disposition of the cortical plate in
reeler changes the appearance of the preexisting preplate axons, restricting them to oblique fascicles, running down through the
cortical plate from the superplate above. But this does not alter their
appearance in the basal telencephalon, where they have already made
contact with the array of thalamic axons advancing toward the cortex,
just as in the normal animal.
When they reach the cortex, thalamic axons behave very differently in
the two genotypes. In normal mice, as in rats (Molnár et al.,
1998 ), the vast majority accumulate for a couple of days or so in the
subplate (at least for the occipital cortex) and then grow up radially
into the cortical plate, terminating mainly in layer 4. In
reeler, thalamic fibers appear to penetrate the cortical
plate as soon as they arrive and run diagonally up to the superplate
layer, where they wait before turning down into the plate
itself. However, both patterns are entirely compatible with the
hypothesis that thalamic axons follow the scaffold of corticofugal
preplate fibers toward their cell bodies. Figure 11 is a schematic summary of these
findings.

View larger version (74K):
[in this window]
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|
Figure 11.
Schematic summary of the establishment of early
corticofugal and corticopetal projections in normal and
reeler phenotypes. Each diagram represents an imaginary
section through the right hemisphere, revealing the entire pathway. At
E13 (left diagram) the formation of the preplate, the
outgrowth of descending corticofugal axons, and the concomitant growth
of thalamic axons through the primitive internal capsule all occur
indistinguishably in reeler and normal animals. But by E14
(right diagrams), as thalamic axons are approaching their
target areas, the cortical plate itself has started to form, and the
distinctive differences in the phenotypes begin to emerge. In
reeler (rl/rl) the plate
forms under all the preplate (now superplate) cells, whose pioneer
axons gather into oblique fascicles, running through the thickening
plate. Thalamic axons follow these fibers up to the superplate layer.
In the wild type (rl/+, +/+), the majority of
corticofugal axons derive from those preplate cells that come to lie
below the cortical plate in the subplate.
|
|
Mechanisms of guidance and targeting
The normal tangential topography of thalamocortical projections in
reeler (Caviness and Frost, 1980 ; Caviness and Korde, 1981 ; Crandall and Caviness, 1984 ; Yamamoto et al., 1986 ; Caviness et al.,
1988 ) has been cited as evidence that thalamic axons are guided by
diffusible substances originating from cortical target cells (Caviness
and Rakic, 1978 ; Caviness et al., 1988 ) rather than by contact with
preformed axonal pathways. Co-culture studies (Molnár and
Blakemore, 1991 ; Bolz et al., 1992 ; Yamamoto et al., 1992 ; Rennie et
al., 1994 ) have revealed that the cortex has a remote, growth-promoting
influence on the outgrowth of thalamic axons, but there is no obvious
regional specificity in this effect (Molnár and Blakemore, 1991 ),
and it seems inconceivable that it could generate the topographic
regularity of the thalamic projection seen in vivo
(Molnár and Blakemore, 1995 ).
Observations in vitro also suggest that cells of the
occipital cortical plate do not express surface properties that permit invasion by thalamic axons until several days after those axons arrive
under the cortex in vivo (Bolz et al., 1992 ; Götz et
al., 1992 ; Hübner et al., 1992 ; Molnár and Blakemore, 1995 ;
Tuttle et al., 1995 ). Indeed, the onset of such growth-permissive
characteristics may partly explain why thalamic fibers detach from the
subplate at the end of the waiting period. If the cortical plate of
reeler is also nonpermissive for thalamic axons when they
first arrive, their passage in diagonal fascicles through the plate to
the superplate above must depend on the existence of privileged
pathways through the hostile territory of the plate itself. Because
thalamic axons appear to grow through the intermediate zone in
association with the fibers of preplate (i.e., superplate) neurons, we
conclude that the oblique fascicles that those preplate fibers form
within the accumulating cortical plate constitute the privileged
pathway that thalamic axons follow. This proposal is directly supported by observation of identified thalamic fibers running in close association with superplate axons, right up to their somata (Figs. 5-7). Thus, not only do preplate cells act as temporary targets for
thalamic fibers, but their axons may also constitute a guidance pathway
to those targets, in reeler as well as in normals.
Caviness et al. (1988) suggested that the oblique fascicles that
they saw crossing the thickness of the developing cortical plate in
reeler (labeled with the rapid Golgi technique) might consist only of thalamic fibers, but when similar preparations were
stained by neurofilament immunohistochemistry, the same bundles appeared larger. Caviness et al. (1988) therefore suggested that the
fascicles, which they called "plexiform tributaries," include the
fibers of superplate cells, running together with the thalamic axons.
Our observations strongly support this suggestion.
Interestingly, even in wild-type mice, small numbers of thalamocortical
axons approach the marginal zone by growing obliquely through the
cortical plate as soon as they arrive at the cortex (Fig.
4E). Early innervation of the marginal zone has also
been reported in E14 hamsters (Miller et al., 1993 ). In concordance with this, we saw a small population of cells in the marginal zone of
normal mice that have axons projecting down to the primitive internal
capsule at very early stages, before the arrival of thalamic axons,
just like the superplate cells of reeler. We suggest that the rare thalamic fibers that precociously grow up to the marginal zone
in normal animals follow the descending axons of those cells, just like
the whole population in reeler. At somewhat later stages, marginal zone cells can no longer be back-labeled from the internal capsule in normal animals (Molnár et al., 1998 ; McConnell et al.,
1989 ), so presumably they die or withdraw their axons.
Chondroitin sulfate core proteins (Bicknese et al., 1994a ; Miller et
al., 1995 ), with glycosaminoglycan side chains (Derer and Nakanishi,
1983 ), as well as specific peanut agglutinin lectin binding (Götz
et al., 1992 ), are selectively expressed in the subplate layer of
normal rodents. The axons of subplate neurons in normal animals also
express the surface molecules L1 (Godfraind et al., 1988 ; Chung et al.,
1991 ) and fibronectin (Stewart and Pearlman, 1987 ; Chun and Shatz,
1988 ; Sheppard et al., 1991 ). The early-born cortical neurons of
reeler, despite their aberrant location, also express
glycosaminoglycans (Derer and Nakanishi, 1983 ; Godfraind et al., 1988 ;
Bicknese et al., 1994b ) and other adhesion molecules (L1, neural cell
adhesion molecule, and fibronectin). Moreover, glycosaminoglycans and
peanut agglutinin lectin binding are also expressed along the oblique
striations that cross the cortical plate in reeler (Bicknese
et al., 1994b ), which contain the axons of superplate cells. Thus, a
variety of attractive surface molecules exist on the axons of preplate
cells, which in reeler could provide the privileged pathway
needed for the early growth of thalamic axons through the cortical
plate.
Co-culture of thalamic and cortical explants from normal rats has
revealed a temporal cascade of cortical properties (growth-promotion, growth-permissive, and a "stop signal" in layer 4), which might contribute to the timing of outgrowth, waiting, invasion, and termination of thalamic axons but is unlikely to account for their topographic distribution (Molnár and Blakemore, 1991 , 1995 ). If
such factors are similarly expressed in reeler, they could also play a part in determining the sequence of events and the final
termination of thalamic fibers in the equivalent of layer 4. Interestingly, thalamic axons do not selectively innervate the rat
subplate layer in co-culture experiments (Molnár and Blakemore,
1991 ; Molnár, 1998 ). We have taken this to imply that the normal,
quite precise positional targeting of thalamic axons and their
accumulation in the subplate in vivo are at least partly dependent on the establishment of an intimate relationship between thalamic and subplate axons during the hypothesized handshake in the
ventral telencephalon (Molnár and Blakemore, 1995 ). Our observations in reeler support this suggestion.
Ghosh et al. (1990) and Ghosh and Shatz (1993) have shown that
selective destruction of the subplate layer in normal cats, after the
arrival of thalamic axons, prevents the innervation of the cortex. It
would be interesting to perform similar experiments in
reeler, lesioning the superplate before the arrival of
thalamic axons, to see whether this would prevent the precocious
ingrowth of the thalamic fibers.
In conclusion, thalamocortical development in reeler
strengthens the hypothesis that the preplate scaffold serves a guiding role for thalamic axons. Selective fasciculation of growing fibers on a
network of pioneer axons, an established mechanism of guidance in
insects (Goodman et al., 1984 ), appears to operate in the mammalian thalamocortical pathway.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 3, 1998; revised May 8, 1998; accepted May 14, 1998.
This work was supported by grants from the Medical Research Council
(MRC), the Wellcome Trust, the Soros-Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Foundation, Human Frontier Science Program, and Merton College (Oxford,
UK). It forms part of the work of the Oxford McDonnell-Pew Centre and
the MRC Interdisciplinary Research Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience,
for which R.A. is a Research Scientist. Z.M. held an MRC Training
Fellowship. We thank Laurence Waters, Lorraine Chappell, and William
Hinkes for assistance with photography.
Correspondence should be addressed to Zoltán Molnár,
University Laboratory of Physiology, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PT,
UK.
 |
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