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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 15, 2002, 22(8):3161-3173
Dividing Precursor Cells of the Embryonic Cortical Ventricular
Zone Have Morphological and Molecular Characteristics of Radial
Glia
Stephen C.
Noctor1, *,
Alexander C.
Flint1, *,
Tamily A.
Weissman3,
Winston S.
Wong1,
Brian K.
Clinton3, and
Arnold R.
Kriegstein1, 2, 3
Departments of 1 Neurology, and
2 Pathology, and 3 Center for Neurobiology and
Behavior, Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New
York 10032
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ABSTRACT |
The embryonic ventricular zone (VZ) of the cerebral cortex contains
migrating neurons, radial glial cells, and a large population of
cycling progenitor cells that generate newborn neurons. The latter two
cell classes have been assumed for some time to be distinct in both
function and anatomy, but the cellular anatomy of the progenitor cell
type has remained poorly defined. Several recent reports have raised
doubts about the distinction between radial glial and precursor cells
by demonstrating that radial glial cells are themselves neuronal
progenitor cells (Malatesta et al., 2000 ; Hartfuss et al., 2001 ; Miyata
et al., 2001 ; Noctor et al., 2001 ). This discovery raises the
possibility that radial glia and the population of VZ progenitor cells
may be one anatomical and functional cell class. Such a hypothesis
predicts that throughout neurogenesis almost all mitotically active VZ
cells and a substantial percentage of VZ cells overall are radial glia.
We have therefore used various anatomical, immunohistochemical, and
electrophysiological techniques to test these predictions. Our data
demonstrate that the majority of VZ cells, and nearly all mitotically
active VZ cells during neurogenesis, both have radial glial morphology
and express radial glial markers. In addition, intracellular dye
filling of electrophysiologically characterized progenitor cells in the VZ demonstrates that these cells have the morphology of radial glia.
Because the vast majority cycling cells in the cortical VZ have
characteristics of radial glia, the radial glial precursor cell may be
responsible for both the production of newborn neurons and the guidance
of daughter neurons to their destinations in the developing cortex.
Key words:
radial glia; ventricular zone; neuronal precursor; cortex; development; neurogenesis; cell cycle; electrophysiology
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INTRODUCTION |
The ventricular zone (VZ) of the
embryonic cerebral cortex is a pseudostratified neuroepithelium that
contains the precursor cells for most excitatory neurons contributing
to the adult neocortex. The initial anatomical descriptions of the
cells of the VZ were published over 100 years ago by several pioneering
neuroanatomists, including Kölliker, His, Golgi, Magini, and
Ramon y Cajal (for review, see Bentivoglio and Mazzarello, 1999 ). Both
Kölliker (1896) and His (1889) showed the existence of a
neuroepithelium lining the ventricular system, and Kölliker
(1896) also demonstrated, using Golgi impregnations, that cells
of this layer possessed long radial fibers that extended into the
cortical mantle. Magini (1888b) , also using the Golgi method, provided
an explicit anatomical description of the neuroepithelial cells of the
embryonic cortex: "The cylindrical epithelial cells which cover the
ventricular cavity are rather thin (4-6 µm in general), and from
each one there escapes a very fine filament which radiates toward the
surface of the brain often I could follow it after it crossed all the thickness (3 mm approximately) of the medullary and cortical
substance" (translated from the French). Ramon y Cajal's
(1911) illustrations of embryonic cortex clearly show radial
processes extending from the cells of the periventricular
neuroepithelium and terminating in branches at the pial surface of the
cortex. Ramon y Cajal (1911) also suggested that the reticulated
appearance of the "marginal veil," just beneath the pia, resulted
from "the interweaving of branches derived from neuroepithelial cells."
Several terms were used by different authors to refer to the radial
cells of the periventricular epithelium, including "epithelial cells" (Golgi, 1886 ; Ramon y Cajal, 1911 ), "neuroepithelial
cells" (Ramon y Cajal, 1911 ), "ependymal cells" (Retzius, 1894 ),
"spongioblasts" (His, 1889 ), and "neuroglial cells" (Magini,
1888b ). Magini (1888a) was the first to use the term "radial
neuroglial cells."
Magini (1888b) observed numerous "varicosities" containing nuclei
apposed to the radial fibers of these cells and argued that they
represented migrating neurons. Although Ramon y Cajal (1911) agreed
that the neuroepithelial cells possessed long radial fibers, he
dismissed the idea that newborn neurons migrate along these fibers and
postulated instead that the radial fibers serve as general structural
support for the developing brain.
Ramon y Cajal (1911) also suggested that neuroepithelial cells were a
distinct population from neural progenitors. He supposed that the
latter were the round cells with mitotic figures usually observed near
the ventricular surface. This proposal agreed with earlier conclusions
made by His (1889) , who had conceived of separate spongioblast and
germinal cell populations. Decades later, however, Sauer (1935) showed
that neuroepithelial cells in the CNS undergo a process of interkinetic
nuclear migration in which their nuclei descend to the ventricular
surface to divide. Therefore, the neuroepithelial cells and the mitotic
figures at the ventricular surface are not distinct cell populations
but represent different cell cycle stages of the same population.
Despite the acceptance of this idea, a conceptual distinction has
remained between the elongated radial glial cells of the VZ and the
population of neural precursor cells.
This conceptual distinction was reinforced by the finding that many but
not all mitotic cells in the primate VZ express the glial marker GFAP
(Levitt et al., 1981 , 1983 ). The findings that radial cells of the VZ
can express GFAP and possess glycogen granules, a glial histologic
characteristic (Rakic, 1972 ; Levitt and Rakic, 1980 ), supported the
idea that these cells are a specialized form of glial cell. Rakic
therefore first applied the term "radial glia" (Rakic, 1971a ,b ),
and this appellation is now universally accepted. Radial glia are
defined by their characteristic morphology: an endfoot at the
ventricular surface, an oval-shaped nucleus found in the VZ or
subventricular zone (SVZ), a long radial fiber containing 24 nm
microtubules and 9 nm intermediate filaments that extends to the
"limiting membrane" just below the pia, and abundant glycogen
granules in the terminal endfeet near the pia (for review, see Rakic,
1995 ).
Magini's (1888a,b) original suggestion that newborn neurons
migrate along the radial fibers of embryonic epithelial cells was
proven correct by Rakic in the 1970s using Golgi impregnation and
electron microscopy (Rakic, 1972 ). Rakic's electron microscopic reconstructions showed that the long radial fibers of primate radial
glia have bipolar migrating neurons apposed to them at various levels,
showing that radial glia serve as migrational guides for newborn
neurons. Subsequently, much work has been done to elucidate the
specific molecular interactions underlying the migration of newborn
neurons along their radial glial guides (for review see Hatten,
1999 ).
The finding that the long radial cells of the embryonic cortex are
glial cells specialized to subserve neuronal migration was initially
interpreted as additional evidence that this population of cells is
distinct from the population of neuronal progenitors in the VZ. Glial
cells have not been considered previously to be potential neuronal
progenitors, and the demonstrated role of radial glia in supporting
neuronal migration is consistent with the known role of glia as support
cells in the CNS. However, recent evidence from several
laboratories showing that radial glia generate neurons has
called into question the distinction between radial glia and neuronal
progenitors (Malatesta et al., 2000 ; Hartfuss et al., 2001 ; Miyata et
al., 2001 ; Noctor et al., 2001 ; Tamamaki et al., 2001 ).
Radial glia isolated by several different methods have been shown
recently to generate neurons in vitro (Malatesta et al., 2000 ; Hartfuss et al., 2001 ). Using in vivo lineage analysis
with a green fluorescent protein (GFP)-expressing retrovirus, we have shown recently that radial glial cells are neuronal precursor cells
that generate clones of neurons that migrate along parental radial
glial fibers (Noctor et al., 2001 ). In this study, cells labeled in the
VZ soon after infection were nearly all radial glia, suggesting that
most dividing cells in the VZ are radial glia. Experiments published
recently using a GFP-expressing adenovirus and
1,1'-dioctadecyl-3,3,3',3'-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate (DiI) labeling have confirmed that cycling radial glia in the VZ
produce neurons (Miyata et al., 2001 ; Tamamaki et al., 2001 ), showing
that radial glial infection is not a selective property of the
retrovirus used in the above study. Taken together, these data show
that radial glia, in addition to being scaffolds for neuronal
migration, also serve as neuronal progenitors.
It is unclear whether the production of neurons by radial glial cells
represents the rule or exception in neocortical development. If the
conceptual distinction between radial glia and precursor cells is
incorrect, then most cortical VZ precursor cells may be radial glia. To
explore this question we performed a quantitative analysis of the
number of radial glial cells located in the cortical VZ. We first used
multiple anatomical approaches to determine what proportion of VZ cells
has the defining morphologic features of radial glia. Next, we
randomly obtained whole-cell recordings with single-cell dye labeling
to determine what percentage of electrophysiologically identified VZ
precursor cells has radial glial morphology. Finally, we
determined the percentage of dividing VZ cells that express the radial
glial markers vimentin (Alvarez-Buylla et al., 1987 ), 4A4 (Kamei et
al., 1998 ), or RC2 (Misson et al., 1988b ) and have fibers reaching the
pia. Throughout cortical neurogenesis, our results show that most VZ
cells have the morphology of radial glia, that all cells with the
characteristic membrane properties of VZ precursor cells appear to be
radial glia, and that nearly all dividing VZ cells express radial glial
markers and also have radial glial morphology.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Immunohistochemistry. Animals used in these studies
were maintained according to protocols approved by the Institutional
Animal Care and Use Committee at Columbia University. Timed pregnant Sprague Dawley rats (Taconic, NY) at embryonic day (E) 12, E15, and E18
were deeply anesthetized using ketamine and xylazine, and embryos were
removed. Embryos at E15 and E18 were perfused transcardially with
ice-cold PBS followed by 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS, and brains
were removed, post-fixed overnight in paraformaldehyde, and then stored
in PBS at 4°C. E12 embryos were fixed overnight by immersion, and
then brains were removed. Cortical slabs were prepared by dissecting
away dorsolateral cortex, opening the lateral ventricle, and removing
the hippocampal anlage to expose the ventricular surface. Cryostat
sections (10-30 µm) were prepared after cryoprotection in 20%
sucrose in PBS and embedding in Tissue-Tek (Sakura, Torrance, CA)
before freezing. Immunohistochemistry was performed by rehydration in
PBS for 30 min, blocking for 1 hr (10% normal goat or horse serum as
appropriate, 0.1% Triton X-100, and 0.2% gelatin in PBS), washing for
10 min in PBS, incubation overnight at 4°C in primary antibody
(dilutions as described below in 2% normal goat or horse serum as
appropriate, 0.1% Triton X-100, and 0.04% gelatin in PBS), washing
three times for 10 min in PBS, and incubation in secondary antibody for
1-2 hr (dilutions as described below in 2% normal goat or horse serum
as appropriate, 0.1% Triton X-100, and 0.04% gelatin in PBS). For
5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU) immunohistochemistry, an intraperitoneal
injection of BrdU (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) (160 mg/kg in 0.9% NaCl) was
administered to pregnant rats 1-2 hr before they were killed,
cryostat sections were pretreated with 2N HCl in PBS for 30 min at
37°C before the blocking step, and a fluorescent primary antibody
(see below) was used without a secondary antibody step. Primary
antibodies were obtained from the following sources and used at the
indicated dilutions: fluorescein-conjugated rat monoclonal anti-BrdU
(Accurate Chemical; 1:10), mouse monoclonal anti-vimentin (Sigma;
1:40), mouse monoclonal 4A4 (kind gift of Dr. K. Nagata,
Aichi Cancer Center Research Institute, Nagoya, Japan; 1:1000), mouse
monoclonal RC2 (Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank; 1:100), guinea
pig polyclonal anti-L-glutamate/L-aspartate transporter (GLAST) (gift of Dr. J. Goldman, Columbia
University, New York; 1:1000), and rabbit polyclonal anti-brain lipid
binding protein (BLBP) (gift of Dr. N. Heintz, Rockefeller
University, New York; 1:5000). Secondary antibodies were obtained from
the following sources and used at the indicated dilutions:
Cy5-conjugated goat anti-mouse (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA;
1:50), Texas Red-conjugated goat anti-mouse (Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, CA; 1:100), Texas Red-conjugated goat anti-rabbit (Vector;
1:100), and rhodamine-conjugated donkey anti-guinea pig (gift of Dr. J. Goldman; 1:1000).
Fluorescent cell staining. Fluorescent labeling of chromatin
with Syto-11 or bisbenzamide (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) was performed by incubation of sections with 5 µM
Syto-11 and 0.1% DMSO in PBS or 0.001% bisbenzamide in PBS for 20 min
followed by washing three times for 10 min in PBS. Fluorescent labeling of cell membranes with conjugated concanavalin A (ConA) was performed by incubation of sections in 0.02 mg/ml tetramethylrhodamine- or Alexa
Fluor-488-conjugated ConA (Molecular Probes), 2 µM CaCl2, and 200 µM sodium bicarbonate in PBS for 1 hr followed by
washing three times for 10 min in PBS.
DiOlistic labeling of the VZ with DiI.
E12, E15, and E18 brains prepared as above were transferred to PBS
containing 0.4% EDTA for 24-48 hr at 4°C and then removed to PBS
containing 0.1% EDTA. EDTA was added to all solutions for DiI
(Molecular Probes) experiments to prevent cell-to-cell transfer of the
fluorophore (Hofmann and Bleckmann, 1999 ). For ventricular surface
labeling, cortical slabs were dissected as described above. Slabs were
placed pial side down in preparation for delivery of DiI. For coronal slice labeling, E18 brains were embedded in low-melting agarose (Fisher
Biotech, Fair Lawn, NJ) and sliced coronally at 200 µm on a Vibratome
(Ted Pella, St. Louis). Cells were labeled with DiI using the recently
developed "DiOlistics" method (Gan et al., 2000 ). A 3% solution of
DiI in methylene chloride (Sigma) was precipitated onto 0.7 µm
tungsten microcarriers (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). Tefzel tubing (Bio-Rad)
was then sparsely coated along its inner wall with the prepared
microcarriers and cut down to 8 mm for use as bullets. DiI-coated
microcarriers were delivered by gene gun using a 150-200 psi helium
pulse. A 3.0 µm Isopore membrane filter (Millipore, Bedford, MA) was
inserted between the gun barrel and the tissue to reduce delivery of
clumped particles. DiI was allowed to diffuse throughout the membrane
of labeled cells for 24 hr in the dark at 25°C in 4%
paraformaldehyde with 0.1% EDTA. Slabs were then embedded in
low-melting agarose (Fisher Biotech), sliced coronally at 250 µm on a
Vibratome (Ted Pella) for imaging, and stored at 4°C in PBS with
0.1% EDTA. For counting of cells and fiber length analysis, sections
were examined on an epifluorescence microscope, and all distinct
DiI-labeled cells were followed across focal planes to trace fibers
from individual cells. Cells were binned by three independent counters
according to radial glial or nonradial glial morphology and fiber
length by identifying the borders of the VZ, intermediate zone (IZ),
cortical plate (CP), and marginal zone (MZ) on differential
interference contrast (DIC) microscopy. Cells were included in the
fiber length analysis only if the cell body was located within the VZ
and if individual cells and their fibers could be unequivocally
identified. Cells with fibers that were transected at the cut edge of
the Vibratome section were excluded from analysis. Fibers that became
too dim to resolve as they passed deep into the tissue section were
binned according to their furthest resolvable point. For the images
shown in Figure 3, projections were constructed from confocal Z stacks (see below), and in some cases neighboring cells in other focal planes
were masked for clarity.
Latex microsphere labeling. Cortical slabs were prepared
from E18 rats as described above. Fluospheres (Molecular Probes) were painted directly onto the pial surfaces of the slabs, which were
maintained for 9 hr at room temperature in artificial CSF (ACSF) that
was bubbled continuously with 95% O2/5%
CO2. BrdU, 20 µM, was added to the
ACSF for the final 2 hr. The 9 hr incubation period allowed sufficient
time for the latex microspheres to be absorbed and transported
throughout those cells with processes reaching the pia. Slabs were
fixed overnight in 4% paraformaldehyde and embedded in 4% agar, and
100 µm coronal sections were cut on a Vibratome. Sections were
immunostained with anti-BrdU antibodies, and the tissue was
counterstained with fluorescently labeled ConA as described above.
Sections were mounted on slides and coverslipped with Aquamount. Serial
optical sections obtained at high magnification were taken on an FV300
laser scanning confocal microscope (Olympus). BrdU-labeled soma in the
VZ were then assayed for the presence of Fluospheres. Only those
BrdU-labeled cells in which it was possible to discern the entire soma
with ConA membrane labeling were included for analysis (see Fig.
5A, right panel). The use of
triple-labeling and confocal microscopy allowed us to confirm colocalization of BrdU and Fluospheres within individual cells.
Microscopy. Epifluorescence imaging was performed using
either a Zeiss Axioskop or an Olympus BX50WI upright microscope and appropriate fluorescence filter sets for fluorescein or rhodamine. Confocal microscopy was performed on a Zeiss LSM410 or LSM510 confocal
laser scanning microscope using the following filter sets with the
indicated wavelengths (in nm) for the excitation laser line and
emission filters: fluorescein (green), 488/(510-540); rhodamine (red),
568/(590-610); and Cy5 (far red), 647/(670-810). For double- or
triple-staining experiments, the confocal pinhole was set to reduce the
depth of optical sectioning as much as possible (always <3 µm), and
the same pinhole setting was used across channels to ensure equal
section thickness for the different channels. For imaging of
bisbenzamide, dual photon excitation with a Ti:sapphire laser tuned to
770 nm was used. In some cases, maximum intensity projections were made
from Z stacks (sets of stacked optical sections), but projection data
were never used for double- or triple-labeling experiments.
Electrophysiology. Whole-cell recordings from living brain
slices were obtained as described previously (Blanton et al., 1989 ). Briefly, embryos were removed at E17-E18, brains were dissected, and
cortical slices were cut coronally at 350-400 µm on a Vibratome (Leica). The extracellular ACSF solution contained (in
mM): NaCl 125, KCl 5, NaH2PO4 1.25, MgSO4 1, CaCl2 2, NaHCO3 25, and glucose 20, pH 7.4, at 25°C, 310 mOsm/l, and was bubbled with 95% O2/5% CO2. Voltage and current-clamp experiments were
performed using an EPC-9 patch-clamp amplifier (HEKA Electronic)
controlled by a Macintosh computer running Pulse v. 8.0 software (HEKA
Electronic). Whole-cell recordings were obtained "blinded" at room
temperature from slices that were superfused continuously with 95%
O2/5% CO2-oxygenated ACSF.
Electrodes (8-12 M ) were lowered onto the ventricular surface of a
cortical slice and slowly advanced until a resistance increase was
detected (10-50 M ), after which a suction pulse was immediately applied to form a gigaohm seal. To establish whole-cell recording, additional suction was applied to rupture the underlying plasma membrane. Patch electrodes were filled with (in
mM): KCl 130, NaCl 5, CaCl2
0.4, MgCl2 1, HEPES 10, pH 7.3, EGTA 1.1, to
which 500 µM Alexa 594-conjugated biocytin
(Molecular Probes) was added to identify recorded cells. Membrane
resistance was calculated by measuring the steady-state current
deflection during 200 msec voltage steps (±10-30 mV) from a holding
potential of 60 mV. I-V relationship was
determined by applying 20 msec voltage steps from 80 to +60 mV.
Leak-subtracted voltage-clamp recordings in response to voltage steps
from 80 to 10 mV were used to examine the presence of
voltage-activated inward currents. Fluorescently labeled cells were
subsequently visualized by epifluorescence on an upright, fixed-stage microscope.
Retrovirus production. Replication-incompetent enhanced
GFP-expressing retrovirus was produced from a stably transfected
packaging cell line (293gp NIT-GFP; gift of Dr. Fred Gage, Salk
Institute, La Jolla, CA). Cells were transiently transfected at ~80%
confluence with pVSV-G using the Calphos Mammalian Transfection
kit (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA). Supernatant was harvested 48 hr after
transfection, filtered through 0.45 µm low-protein binding filters
(Fisher Scientific), and concentrated 1.000-fold at 35,000 rpm, 4°C
for 1.5 hr. Pellets were resuspended in Opti-MEM (Invitrogen,
Rockville, MD) and stored at 80°C. Final titer of retrovirus was
1 × 107 colony-forming
units/ml 1.
Retrovirus injection. Uterine horns of E17 timed pregnant
Sprague Dawley rats were exposed in a sterile biosafety level II hood.
Retrovirus (0.5-1.0 µl) with Fast Green (2.5 mg/ml) (Sigma) was
injected into the cerebral ventricles through a beveled calibrated glass micropipette (Drummond Scientific, Broomall, PA). After injection, the peritoneal cavity was lavaged with 10 ml of 0.9% NaCl,
the uterine horns were replaced, and the wounds were closed.
Laminar analysis. Postnatal day 6 (P6) pups were
anesthetized and transcardially perfused as above. Brains were removed,
post-fixed, and sectioned at 100 µm on a Vibratome (Ted Pella).
Optical sections were collected on a Zeiss 410 laser-scanning confocal
microscope, and Z stack projections were made to analyze the appearance
and position of all the GFP-labeled cells. The laminar position of each
GFP-positive cell was determined by comparing its normalized distance
from the pia with layer position determined from a transmitted light
image of the same sections.
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RESULTS |
Retroviral infection of radial glia demonstrates postnatal labeling
of pyramidal neurons
We have recently demonstrated that radial glial cells generate
radial clones of cortical neurons during embryonic stages of development (Noctor et al., 2001 ). At 24 hr after infection, 96% of
infected cells in the VZ are radial glia (Fig.
1A), and at later time
points (36, 48, and 72 hr), several clonally related cells, including
neurons, are arrayed along the parental radial glial fiber (Noctor et
al., 2001 ). To extend these studies, we examined the postnatal
distribution of GFP-labeled cells at stages when most neurons have
completed migration and taken up their final laminar position.

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Figure 1.
GFP-retroviral labeling at E17 demonstrates radial
glia at 30 hr and upper layer cortical neurons at P6. A,
Representative labeling of radial glia 30 hr after infection.
B1, At P6, GFP-expressing neurons are
distributed mainly in the upper layers of cortex.
B2, Histogram of the laminar
distribution of labeled cells confirms localization to upper cortical
layers. C1, At P6, many pyramidal-like
cortical cells are GFP positive, as are the apical processes of
transforming radial glia (arrowhead).
C3, Optical sections through the
GFP-expressing cortical cells shown in
C2 demonstrate the presence of the
neuronal marker TuJ1. Layers I-VI are indicated. Scale bars:
A, 10 µm; B1, 20 µm; C, 20 µm.
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When we analyzed the brains of P6 animals that had been infected at
E17, we found a high density of GFP-positive cells concentrated in the
upper cortical layers (Fig. 1B1),
as shown by laminar analysis of cell position (Fig.
1B2)
( 2; p value = 6.3 × 10 49).
This result is consistent with the well characterized inside-out pattern of cortical lamination in the postnatal cortex (Angevine and
Sidman, 1961 ), because retroviral labeling at late stages of
neurogenesis such as E17 should give rise to neuronal progeny that
primarily populate the upper layers of the postnatal cortex. In
addition, GFP-labeled pial endfeet of radial glial processes were
interspersed among labeled cortical neurons (Fig.
1C1, arrowhead). As expected
for P6, the radial glia appeared to be transforming into astrocytes by
losing their ventricular endfeet, developing stellate branches, and
translocating away from the VZ (Fig.
1B1, arrow) (Voigt,
1989 ; Misson et al., 1991 ). The GFP-positive cells in the upper
cortical layers expressed the neuron-specific marker TuJ1 (Geisert and
Frankfurter, 1989 ), confirming neuronal identity (Fig.
1C3), and the majority had pyramidal
neuron morphology (Fig. 1B1,C1).
It has been suggested recently that pyramidal neurons derive from
precursor cells located in the cortical VZ, whereas nonpyramidal
neurons are generated elsewhere (Anderson et al., 1997 ; Mione et al.,
1997 ; Tan et al., 1998 ; for review see Parnavelas, 2001).
Therefore the GFP-positive pyramidal neurons that we observe postnatally (Fig. 1B,C) may derive
from initially infected radial glial precursors observed in the
cortical VZ at 24 hr (Fig. 1A). Although we cannot
rule out the possibility that some of the GFP-positive cortical cells
were generated by precursors in other brain regions and migrated into
the cortex, these data are consistent with the concept that radial glia
are neuronal precursors in the VZ (Malatesta et al., 2000 ; Miyata et
al., 2001 ; Noctor et al., 2001 ). However, these studies do not address
whether radial glia represent the predominant precursor cell type or
one subset among a larger precursor population during corticogenesis.
We therefore sought to determine what proportion of VZ cells are radial glia.
Simultaneous electrophysiological recording and dye-filling
demonstrate that cells with precursor cell physiology are radial
glia
Previous studies using whole-cell recording techniques have
described the characteristic physiological properties of cycling precursor cells in the embryonic cortical VZ (LoTurco and Kriegstein, 1991 ; LoTurco et al., 1995 ; Bittman et al., 1997 ). These precursor cells have a low membrane resistance caused by extensive gap-junction coupling and a relative absence of voltage-gated inward conductances. Previous whole-cell recording studies used gap junction-permeable dyes
to confirm the extensive coupling of this cell population (LoTurco and
Kriegstein, 1991 ; Bittman et al., 1997 ). To characterize the morphology
of individual electrophysiologically identified VZ precursor cells, we
labeled cells intracellularly using electrodes filled with
Alexa-594-conjugated biocytin, a fluorescent dye that does not readily
pass through gap junctions. Whole-cell recordings were randomly
obtained from VZ cells in coronal slices from E12 to E19, ages that
span both early and late stages of neurogenesis in the rat cortex.
Recordings were made by advancing electrodes into the ventricular
surface using the blind technique (Blanton et al., 1989 ), an approach
used in previous studies to characterize VZ precursor cell physiology
(LoTurco and Kriegstein, 1991 ; Bittman et al., 1997 ). This method
selects cells that have an endfoot contacting the ventricular surface,
thus allowing for recordings from precursor cells in the VZ but only
rarely from postmitotic neurons.
The mean resting membrane potential of recorded cells ranged from
57.1 to 77.6 mV at all ages (n = 102 cells). The
recorded cells had the expected physiological properties of precursor
cells: input resistance was low (mean of 138.6 ± 6.9 M ;
n = 102) (Fig. 2A), and the
current-voltage relationship was linear between 90 mV and +10 mV
(Fig. 2B), demonstrating a lack of voltage-gated sodium conductances (Fig. 2B). Current steps in
current-clamp mode (Fig. 2C) and leak-subtracted
voltage-clamp recordings (Fig. 2D) confirmed the
absence of voltage-gated sodium conductances. Input resistance
increased as a function of age from 106.0 ± 16.5 M at E12 to
180.6 ± 38 M at E19, consistent with the known decrease in
coupled cluster size during cortical development (LoTurco and Kriegstein, 1991 ).

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Figure 2.
All recorded cells had the expected physiological
properties of precursor cells. A, Typical recordings of
current responses to a series of voltage steps in voltage-clamp mode
demonstrate low input resistance. B, Current-voltage is
linear between 90 mV and +10 mV in the same cell as A.
C, Current responses to a series of voltage steps
recorded in current-clamp mode. D, Leak-subtracted
voltage-clamp recordings confirm the absence of voltage-gated sodium
conductances. E, Representative cells recorded and
filled at E12, E15, E16,
and E18. Five representative recorded cells shown at
E18 exhibit radial glial morphology, with an endfoot on
the ventricle, a cell body within the VZ, and a radial process
extending to the pia (P). Scale bar, 10 µm.
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In all cases (n = 102/102), the recorded cell exhibited
radial glial morphology, with an endfoot on the ventricle, a cell body
within the VZ, and a radial process extending toward the pia. As the
cortical mantle expanded from E12 to E19, the radial fibers of recorded
precursor cells lengthened to span the entire thickness of the cortical
mantle regardless of developmental age (Fig. 2E).
Specifically, at late stages (E18, E19), when a thickened IZ separates
the pia from the VZ and one can unambiguously identify radial glial
morphology, filled radial fibers extended to the pia (n = 60/61) or CP (n = 1/61) (Fig. 2E).
These results show that cells with the membrane properties of precursor
cells have the morphology of radial glia.
Random DiOlistic labeling demonstrates anatomically that most of
the VZ cells are radial glia
The VZ is a pseudostratified neuroepithelium where all cells, with
the exception of postmitotic neurons, contact the ventricular surface
(Sauer, 1935 ). To characterize the morphology of VZ cells, we randomly
labeled VZ cells contacting the ventricle with the recently developed
DiOlistics technique (Gan et al., 2000 ). Small DiI-coated tungsten
beads were delivered via gene gun to the ventricular surface of intact
fixed cortical slabs, and the DiI was allowed to diffuse throughout the
membrane of individual cells (see Materials and Methods). This labeling
technique allowed us to analyze individual VZ cell morphology and
quantify the number of cells with radial glial features.
DiOlistics experiments were performed at E12, E15, and E18. Previous
observations have shown that radial glial fibers sometimes terminate in
the marginal zone, cortical plate, or upper intermediate zone
(Gadisseux et al., 1992 ). Therefore, our criteria for radial glia
included a cell body in the VZ, a ventricular endfoot, and a radial
process extending out of the VZ and into the MZ, CP, or upper IZ. At
E18 the cortical plate and intermediate zone are relatively thick, and
these regions can be distinguished easily. Most of the cells labeled by
this method at E18 (86.6 ± 4.5%; n = 21 slices;
799 cells) (Fig. 3E) had
distinct radial glial morphology (Fig.
3A,B) with a radial process
extending either to the CP/MZ (60.4 ± 4.0%) or the upper IZ
(26.2 ± 3.6%) (Fig. 3B). In our tissue labeled from
the ventricular surface, long fibers become progressively dimmer as
they approach the pia. We measured fiber length based on the furthest
resolvable point and rarely observed abrupt fiber terminations in the
IZ. Therefore our counts most likely under-represent actual fiber
length. We observed a smaller percentage of VZ cells (13.4 ± 4.5%) that had processes restricted to the VZ (Fig. 3C).
This latter group of cells may include newborn neurons, as one would
expect (Takahashi et al., 1996 ; O'Rourke et al., 1997 ), or other cells
with short processes.

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Figure 3.
Random labeling of VZ cells by DiOlistics suggests
that most of the VZ cells are radial glia. A, Shown are
labeled cells at E18 with somata
(arrowheads) in the upper, middle, and lower zones of
the VZ and long fibers extending to the pia. B, Cells
identified by DiOlistic labeling have expected morphological features
of radial glial cells, such as branched pial endfeet of the long radial
fiber (left) and small side branches
(right). C, A small percentage of cells
with processes restricted to the VZ are also observed, with cell bodies
(arrowheads) in the middle (left) and
lower (right) zones of the VZ. D, The
majority of VZ cells labeled by DiOlistics at E15 resembled these two
examples with long radial fibers. E, Quantitative
analysis of the percentage of cells with long pially directed fibers
(Long) versus cells with fibers restricted to the VZ
(Short) identified by random DiOlistic labeling of the
VZ surface at E15 and E18. Scale bars: A,
C, 10 µm; B, D, 5 µm.
CP, Cortical plate; IZ, intermediate
zone; P, pia; SVZ, subventricular
zone.
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To examine the morphology of VZ cells at earlier ages, we also
performed ventricular surface DiOlistic labeling at E12 and E15. At E15
the VZ is separated from the pia only by the marginal zone, because the
cortical plate has yet to develop (Boulder Committee, 1970 ). Most VZ
cells labeled with DiOlistics at E15 had a process that spanned nearly
the entire thickness of the cortical mantle, to the upper marginal zone
or pia (84.8 ± 3.1%; n = 28 slices; 788 cells)
(Fig. 3D). The remainder (15.2 ± 3.1%) had processes restricted to the VZ. At E12, because the neuroepithelium spans the
entire cortical width (Altman and Bayer, 1990 ), virtually every cell
labeled from the ventricular surface contacted the pial surface.
To control for potential bias that could be introduced in ventricular
surface labeling if there is a nonrandom distribution of endfoot size
among cell classes, we also performed DiOlistics on the cut surface of
coronal sections of E18 cortex. In these experiments, 70.1 ± 4.9% of cells with a soma in the VZ were radial glia, whereas
29.9 ± 4.9% were VZ-restricted cells (n = 6 slices; 187 cells). The increased number of nonradial glial cells in
the VZ in these experiments was primarily accounted for by an increase in cells lacking a contact on the ventricular surface that had the
morphology expected of newborn neurons.
Taken together, the results of our electrophysiological and DiOlistics
experiments show that most of the VZ cells identified either
physiologically or anatomically have radial glial morphology. The
nonradial glial cells labeled by both approaches likely included newborn neurons, but on the basis of these data we cannot rule out the
possibility that some of these cells represent a distinct population of
cycling progenitor cells. We therefore performed a series of
experiments to further characterize the VZ by examining the
characteristics of mitotically active VZ cells.
VZ cells in S-phase express the radial glial markers vimentin
and RC2
Neuronal precursors in the embryonic VZ undergo a process of
interkinetic nuclear migration in which cells pass through S-phase of
the cell cycle with their nuclei in the outer half of the VZ and then
enter M-phase along the border of the lateral ventricle (Sauer, 1935 ).
To assess what percentage of S-phase cells in the VZ are radial glia,
we labeled S-phase cells in utero at three ages spanning the
neuronogenetic interval (E12, E15, and E18) and determined what
percentage of S-phase cells at these ages express radial glial markers.
Pregnant rats received a single injection of BrdU and were killed 1-2
hr later. VZ cells were labeled with an antibody to the radial glial
marker, vimentin, an intermediate filament protein that has been shown
to specifically label radial glial cells in the cortex at the ages used
here (Dahl et al., 1981 ; Pixley and de Vellis, 1984 ; Kalman and Ajtai,
2001 ). Vimentin labeling is localized to the cytoplasm, whereas
the BrdU label is limited to the nucleus. To ensure that individual
double-labeled cells were identified correctly, we used a third marker,
tetramethylrhodamine-conjugated ConA, to label cellular membranes
(Tarasova et al., 1997 ), thereby outlining individual cells. We used
confocal microscopy to visualize all fluorescent labels in the same
optical section. The use of this triple-labeling and imaging
protocol allowed us to confirm colocalization of BrdU and vimentin
immunolabeling in individual cells (Fig.
4A2).

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Figure 4.
S-phase cells in the VZ express the
radial glial markers vimentin and RC2.
A1, BrdU labeling
(BrdU, green) in E18 rat tissue fixed 1 hr after BrdU injection to identify S-phase cells. Vimentin labeling
(vim, red) labels most cells in the VZ.
Overlay of the two channels is shown in the right panel
(merge). A2,
Colocalization of BrdU and vimentin labeling in brain slices was
confirmed using a third marker, concanavalin A (ConA,
blue) to label cellular membranes. Overlay of the BrdU,
ConA, and vimentin channels is shown on the right
(merge). B, BrdU-positive dissociated
single cells are also vimentin positive. Some cells
(arrows in DIC panel) do not
express either marker, and some vimentin-positive cells do not express
BrdU (arrowheads). C1,
In E15 mouse brain slices, BrdU (green)
colocalizes with the murine radial glial marker, RC2
(red). C2,
Colocalization of BrdU and RC2 was determined at higher magnification
than in C1, as shown here.
D, BrdU-positive dissociated single cells are also RC2
positive. Scale bars: A, C, 15 µm;
B, 5 µm; D, 20 µm.
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As shown in Figure 4A1,
vimentin is expressed in the vast majority of BrdU-positive VZ cells.
To limit counting of newborn neurons that might have exited the cell
cycle between the injection of BrdU and the time rats were
killed, we counted only BrdU-positive cells in the outer half of the
VZ, where S-phase nuclei reside. At E12, 99.3 ± 0.3% of cells
labeled with BrdU in the S-phase zone were positive for vimentin
(n = 13 sections; 548 cells). At E15, the percentage
was 98.6 ± 0.5% (n = 7 sections; 564 cells), and
at E18, the percentage was 98.3 ± 0.4% (n = 9 sections; 539 cells).
To confirm these data, we also performed a quantitative analysis
of the colocalization of BrdU and vimentin labeling in dissociated VZ
cell suspensions to unequivocally identify individual cells. In these
experiments, 94.5% (n = 310 cells) of BrdU-labeled
cells were vimentin positive (Fig. 4B). These data
demonstrate that most of the proliferative VZ cells in S-phase express
the radial glial marker vimentin throughout neocortical neurogenesis.
We repeated these experiments in mouse using the murine radial
glial-specific marker RC2 (Misson et al., 1988b ). S-phase VZ cells were
pulse labeled with BrdU in E15.5 mice (roughly equivalent to E18 in the
rat), and mice were killed 1-2 hr later. We then labeled radial glia
with antibodies to RC2 and determined the percentage of BrdU-labeled
cells that were RC2 positive. RC2 densely labeled the entire VZ (Fig.
4C1,C2)
and appeared qualitatively identical to vimentin staining in the rat.
As in the vimentin double-labeling experiments described above, we used
concanavalin-A to confirm colocalization of the markers within VZ
cells. We found that in E15.5 mice, 96.1 ± 0.8%
(n = 5 sections; 342 cells) of the BrdU-positive VZ
cells were positive for RC2. We also dissociated BrdU-labeled mouse
cortical cells and stained them with RC2 to unambiguously calculate the
percentage of BrdU cells that also expressed RC2. We found that 97%
(233/239) of dissociated BrdU-positive cells coexpressed RC2 (Fig.
4D). In addition we stained embryonic brain slices
using antibodies against BLBP (Feng et al., 1994 ) and the
astrocyte-specific glutamate transporter, GLAST (Shibata et al., 1997 ),
both of which are proteins expressed in subsets of radial glial cells
(Hartfuss et al., 2001 ). In cortical regions where these markers are
expressed, 93.0 ± 2.7% (n = 5 sections; 204 cells) of BrdU-positive cells were positive for BLBP and 95.4 ± 0.3% (n = 4 section; 313 cells) of BrdU-positive cells
were positive for GLAST. These data indicate that the vast majority of
S-phase cells in the embryonic VZ express a range of radial glial markers.
VZ cells in S-phase have fibers that extend to the pia
If S-phase cells are radial glia, they should have characteristic
radial glial fibers that extend to the pial surface. To examine this
morphological feature of S-phase VZ cells, we applied fluorescently
labeled latex microspheres (beads) to the pial surface of acute
cortical slabs. The slabs were incubated for 9 hr to allow retrograde
labeling of those cells in the VZ with processes contacting the pia
(Katz et al., 1984 ), and BrdU was added during the final 2 hr to label
S-phase cells. Slabs were then fixed, and coronal slices were examined
to quantify the number of BrdU-positive cells in the VZ that contained
fluorescent beads. All sections were counterstained with ConA to label
cell membranes and outline individual VZ cells. With this
triple-staining protocol, and the use of serial confocal sectioning, we
were able to unambiguously identify VZ cell somata that
contained beads (Fig. 5A).

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Figure 5.
M-phase cells in the VZ express the radial glial
marker 4A4, and cells in S-phase and M-phase have radial glial
morphology. A, BrdU-positive cells
(green) are labeled by fluorescent microspheres
(beads, red) placed on the pia.
Colabeling (shown at E17) is confirmed by ConA staining of cell borders
(blue). Cells were analyzed in the VZ underlying pial
bead application sites (box). Most BrdU-positive cells
contain beads as shown in the right panel.
B, Confocal sections of the ventricular surface from
intact cortical slabs (shown at E15) demonstrate localization of 4A4
immunostaining (red) in cells identified as M-phase
cells by the pattern of Syto-11 labeling (green).
Arrows identify cells in different stages of (Figure legend continued.) M-phase that
are 4A4 positive. Arrowheads identify cells
without condensed chromatin that are not in M-phase and do not express
4A4. C, Cells in specific stages of M-phase, including
metaphase, anaphase, and telophase, are clearly identified by Syto-11
chromatin morphology (green) and have surrounding
4A4 fluorescence (red). D1a,
Overlay of Syto-11 (green) and 4A4
(red) fluorescence in a coronal section at E15.
D1b, 4A4 staining in this same section
(black) shows multiple cells labeled at the ventricular
border and 4A4-positive radial fibers extending toward the pia
(arrowheads). D2a, Radial processes
of 4A4-positive cells (arrowhead) extend to the pia and
marginal zone (MZ). D2b, Faint 4A4
labeling is present in distal fibers that reach the MZ
(arrowheads). E1, Overlay of
Syto-11 (green) and 4A4 (red) in
P8 cerebellum demonstrates colabeling in Bergmann radial glia
(arrowheads). Granule cell precursors in the external
granule layer (EGL) do not express 4A4.
E2, 4A4-positive staining (black)
in the same section as E1 demonstrates morphology
of M-phase Bergmann radial glia (arrowheads). Scale
bars: A, 100 µm; B, 5 µm;
C, 4 µm; D1,
D2a, E, 10 µm;
D2b, 5 µm.
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After pial application of fluorescent beads, we found that the beads
retrogradely labeled VZ cells in regions underlying the pial painting,
whereas neighboring regions of VZ remained unlabeled (Fig.
5A, middle panel). When we examined serial
optical sections, we found that 90.5 ± 2.5% (n = 11 sections; 658 cells) of BrdU-positive VZ cells contained beads in
their perinuclear cytoplasm (Fig. 5A, right
panel). It is likely that this number under-represents the
actual percentage of bead-labeled VZ cells, because in the optical
sections we could only examine the BrdU-labeled cell body and not the
endfeet or radial fibers of VZ cells. Therefore, we could not determine
whether cells without perinuclear beads contained beads in their
processes. These data indicate that in addition to expressing radial
glial markers, most VZ cells in S-phase have radial processes extending
to the pia. To examine cycling VZ cells at a different stage in the
mitotic cycle, we next analyzed the expression of phosphorylated
vimentin in cells undergoing M-phase at the ventricular surface.
VZ cells in M-phase express 4A4, a specific marker for dividing
radial glia
Vimentin is phosphorylated by the cell cycle kinase cell division
cycle 2 (cdc2) in radial glial cells during cytokinesis (Kamei
et al., 1998 ). An antibody raised against the cdc2 phosphorylation site
on vimentin, termed 4A4, has been shown to specifically label radial
glia in M-phase (Kamei et al., 1998 ). We used 4A4 immunohistochemistry to determine what percentage of VZ cells in M-phase are radial glia. We
stained coronal sections and intact cortical slabs with the 4A4
antibody and then labeled all cell nuclei using the fluorophore Syto-11. Using this approach, all M-phase cells at the ventricular surface can be clearly identified morphologically by their condensed chromatin and arrangement of chromatin into mitotic figures. As shown
in Figure 5B, confocal imaging of intact neocortex from the
ventricular surface revealed Syto-11-labeled cells in various stages of
M-phase (arrows). All of these Syto-11-labeled mitotic figures (Fig. 5B, green) are surrounded with
positive immunolabeling for 4A4 (Fig. 5B, red).
Other cells in the field without condensed chromatin (Fig.
5B, arrowheads) are negative for 4A4. Cells in specific stages of M-phase metaphase, anaphase, and telophase could be identified in both coronal sections and intact cortical slabs, as
shown in Figure 5C. As shown previously for 4A4
immunostaining (Kamei et al., 1998 ), positive staining is found almost
exclusively in cells with nuclei along the ventricular border (Fig.
5D), where VZ precursor cells undergo M-phase. To determine
what percentage of M-phase cells express 4A4, we performed quantitative
analysis in coronal sections. To conservatively identify M-phase cells for quantification, we counted only cells in anaphase and telophase, stages that could be easily and unambiguously identified (Fig. 5C). Results were virtually identical at the ages studied.
At E12, 98.7 ± 0.1% of anaphase and telophase cells lining the
VZ surface were positive for 4A4 (n = 3 brains; 551 cells). At E15, this percentage was 98.3 ± 0.3%
(n = 3 brains; 555 cells), and at E18, this percentage
was 98.8 ± 0.1% (n = 3 brains; 597 cells). Therefore, consistent with our data for vimentin expression in S-phase
cells, virtually all M-phase cells in the VZ express the radial
glial-specific marker 4A4 throughout development.
Because low levels of 4A4 staining were also present within the
cytoplasm of labeled cells, we were able to examine the morphology of
M-phase VZ cells to determine whether they resembled radial glia. It
has been shown recently that dividing radial glial cells retain their
radial fibers even through M-phase of the cell cycle (Miyata et al.,
2001 ); thus we are able to ask whether mitotic VZ cells have radial
processes characteristic of radial glial cells. We found that dividing
cells often had 4A4-positive radial processes extending from the VZ to
the marginal zone (Fig. 5D2).
To examine whether 4A4 is specific for dividing radial glial cells and
not ubiquitously expressed in dividing cells in the brain, we also
examined 4A4 staining in sections of P8 cerebellum. At this stage of
cerebellar development, significant numbers of granule cells are
dividing in the external granule cell layer (EGL) where radial glia are
not found. In contrast, a population of cerebellar radial glial cells,
the Bergmann glia, have their nuclei at the top of the inner granule
cell layer (Hatten and Heintz, 1995 ). In P8 cerebellum, specific 4A4
immunoreactivity was found in some Bergmann glial cells, but not in
mitotic cells in the EGL (Fig. 5E), consistent with previous
data that 4A4 is specific for dividing cells of the radial glial
lineage (Kamei et al., 1998 ).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Precursor cells in the VZ are radial glia
The cortex develops from a proliferative neuroepithelium that
initially spans the entire cortical mantle and thickens progressively during neurogenesis. During this process, radial glia contact the
ventricle and elongate their apical fibers far beyond the upper border
of the VZ. A distinction has traditionally been made between radial
glia that extend processes to the pia and neural precursor cells that
are believed to be restricted to the VZ. However, these two cell
populations actually share a number of common features, including
interkinetic nuclear migration during the cell cycle (Misson et al.,
1988a ), expression of the neural precursor marker nestin (Hockfield and
McKay, 1985 ; Lendahl et al., 1990 ), and a characteristic radial
morphology with endfeet contacting the ventricular surface (Sauer,
1935 ). These common features, together with evidence that cortical
radial glia generate neurons (Malatesta et al., 2000 ; Noctor et al.,
Miyata et al., 2001 ; 2001 ), raise the possibility that neuronal
precursor cells and radial glia may represent overlapping populations
of VZ cells. Furthermore, the population of neuronal precursors that
are presumed to be distinct from radial glia has not been clearly characterized.
We find here that most of the cycling VZ cells have morphological,
molecular, and physiological characteristics of radial glia. We first
specifically examined VZ cells that had characteristic membrane
properties of precursor cells and found that they have radial glial
morphology. We next randomly labeled VZ cells using the DiOlistics
technique and found that most exhibit radial glial morphology,
including ventricular endfeet, lamellate projections that frequently
contact blood vessels, and radial processes with branched endings on
the pia. Because postmitotic neurons are generated by cell divisions at
the ages we studied, we next examined mitotic VZ cells at specific
stages in the cell cycle to determine whether they have radial glial
characteristics. We labeled S-phase cells using BrdU and found that
most of the proliferating cells express the specific radial glial
markers vimentin, RC2, BLBP, and GLAST. Colabeling of M-phase cells
with Syto-11 and 4A4 confirmed that dividing VZ cells also express the
phosphorylated form of the radial glial-specific marker vimentin.
Moreover, visualization of phosphorylated vimentin within the long
radial processes of M-phase cells directly demonstrated that dividing
VZ cells have radial glial morphology. Finally, pial application of
fluorescent microspheres led to labeling of 90% of VZ cells in
S-phase, indicating that most cycling VZ cells have processes that
reach the pia. Therefore, most VZ cells overall have radial glial
morphology and virtually all proliferating VZ cells both express
specific radial glial markers and have fibers that span the cortex.
Throughout the period of neuronal production, we do not find evidence
for a nonradial glial population of dividing VZ precursor cells.
Therefore, we propose that most precursor cells in the embryonic
ventricular zone are radial glial cells.
Radial glia have traditionally been classed as specialized glial cells
with a unique developmental role in guiding neuronal migration (Rakic,
1988 ). Recent data, however, indicate that radial glia serve dual roles
as both neuronal precursors and migrational guides (Alvarez-Buylla et
al., 1990 ; Malatesta et al., 2000 ; Noctor et al., 2001 ), suggesting
that there may be no appropriate distinction between radial glia and
neuronal progenitors in the VZ (Alvarez-Buylla et al., 2001 ; Parnavelas
and Nadarajah, 2001 ). We show here that nearly all mitotically active
VZ cells appear to be radial glia. Taken together with recent evidence
that radial glial cells generate neurons, the data presented here raise
the possibility that radial glia may be the predominant neuronal
precursor cells in the embryonic neocortical VZ.
Are radial glia, glia?
If radial glial cells are to be considered neuronal precursors, is
it appropriate to term them "glia"? In the late 19th century, it
was thought that most, if not all, neuroepithelial cells in the cortex
extend a long radial process across the cortical mantle (Magini, 1888b ;
Kölliker, 1896 ). In today's nomenclature, these cells would be
called radial glial cells. It has been presumed that these cells are
differentiated support cells committed to the glial lineage, in part
because they were shown to express the astrocyte marker GFAP and
possess glycogen granules (Rakic, 1972 ; Levitt and Rakic, 1980 ). Glial
cells specialized to guide neuronal migration (Rakic, 1978 ; Schmechel
and Rakic, 1979a ; Levitt and Rakic, 1980 ) were not believed to be
capable of producing neurons as well. However, it is now clear that
these cells are multipotential. Therefore, it may now be timely to
reconsider the general nature of radial glial cells. Radial glia have
many features in common with astrocytes beyond common expression of molecular markers such as glial filaments. For example, both cell types
make specialized contacts with blood vessels (Chanas-Sacre et al.,
2000 ), contain glycogen storage granules (Rakic, 1972 ; Bruckner and
Biesold, 1981 ), are coupled together with gap junction channels (Massa
and Mugnaini, 1982 ; LoTurco and Kriegstein, 1991 ), and sustain
intracellular calcium waves (T. A. Weissman and A. R. Kriegstein, unpublished observations). In addition, radial glial cells are known to transform into astrocytes. Thus it is seems
appropriate to consider radial glia a form of glial cell. However,
because astrocytes and radial glia can generate neurons (Doetsch et
al., 1999 ; Malatesta et al., 2000 ; Noctor et al., 2001 ; Seri et al.,
2001 ), the radial glial cell can be considered less a specialized glial
cell and more a precursor cell with glial characteristics and the
potential to generate cells of both neuronal and glial lineages. This
formulation recalls the concept of the "radial neuroglial cells"
described by Magini in the 19th century.
Because radial glia self-renew (Levitt et al., 1981 ; Misson et al.,
1988a ), generate neurons (Malatesta et al., 2000 ; Noctor et al., 2001 ),
and later transform into astrocytes (Schmechel and Rakic, 1979a ; Misson
et al., 1991 ), it may be most accurate to refer to them as bipotential
or multipotential precursor cells. There may be restrictions on the
diversity of neuronal and glial cell types generated by cortical radial
glia. For example, neurons generated by radial glia in the cortical VZ
may include only principal cells (pyramidal and projection neurons)
rather than interneurons (Mione et al., 1997 ; Tan et al., 1998 ;
Anderson et al., 1999 ). The glial cells generated by cortical radial
glia may be restricted to the astrocytes into which they are thought to
differentiate (Schmechel and Rakic, 1979a ; Misson et al., 1991 ).
However, it has been suggested that in mammals, some radial glial cells
might also be the precursors for the major classes of adult glial
cells, including oligodendrocytes as well as astrocytes (Choi and Kim, 1985 ; Hirano and Goldman, 1988 ; Rakic, 1995 ). It is also possible that
there are subclasses of radial glial precursor cells (Schmechel and
Rakic, 1979b ; Qian et al., 1998 ; Hartfuss et al., 2001 ) with more or
less restricted potential to act as neuronal or astrocytic progenitors.
For example, the transcription factor genes Emx2 and
Pax6 are expressed within precursor cells
of the cortical VZ along two complementary gradients (Gulisano et al.,
1996 ; Bishop et al., 2000 ; Muzio et al., 2002 ). These patterns may
reflect expression of different transcription factors by radial glial cells in different proliferative regions. Such selective expression has
been demonstrated for the transcription factor Pax6, which is expressed
in radial glia of the cortex but not radial glia of the basal
telencephalon (Götz et al., 1998 ),
Radial glial cells and neuronal migration in the cortex
Recently, lineage analysis experiments using chimeric embryos as
well as retroviral labeling indicated that radially migrating cortical
neurons are primarily projection neurons, whereas tangentially migrating neurons are primarily interneurons (Mione et al., 1997 ; Tan
et al., 1998 ). Moreover, most of the tangentially migrating neurons
appear to be inhibitory interneurons generated in the proliferative
zone of the adjacent ganglionic eminence (Anderson et al., 1997 ;
Wichterle et al., 1999 ), whereas the excitatory projection neurons are
thought to migrate radially from the cortical VZ (Anderson et al.,
1997 ; Mione et al., 1997 ; Tan et al., 1998 ). Thus there appear to be
different proliferative zones for the generation of distinct classes of
cortical neurons. We observe that after infection of radial glia in the
VZ with a GFP-expressing retrovirus, many of the postnatal
GFP-expressing cells in the cortex appear to be pyramidal neurons. This
observation is consistent with the hypothesis that cortical radial glia
may generate clones consisting primarily of pyramidal neurons.
Our anatomical labeling shows that most of the VZ cells have radial
glial morphology, with both an endfoot on the ventricle and a long
radial fiber extending toward the pia (Magini, 1888b ; His, 1889 ;
Kölliker, 1896 ; Schmechel and Rakic, 1979a ; for review, see
Bentivoglio and Mazzarello, 1999 ). Until recently it was thought that only radial glial cells have this morphology. It has been suggested, however, that at early stages of neurogenesis some migrating
neurons may resemble radial glia (Brittis et al., 1995 ; Nadarajah et
al., 2001 ). A new time lapse study from Miyata et al. (2001) suggests
that newborn neurons may span the width of the cortex by inheriting the
morphology of their parent radial glial cell. This study indicates that
production of neurons by radial glial cells is quite common, which
supports our conclusion that most VZ precursor cells have radial glial
characteristics. In addition, Miyata et al. (2001) suggest that radial
glial cells have short radial processes transiently that
re-extend after mitosis. These radial glia with processes that do not
reach the pia may correspond to the "freely arborizing
spongioblasts" described by Stensaas (1967) . Other studies have also
indicated heterogeneous radial glial fiber length during periods of
neurogenesis (Gadisseux et al., 1992 ). One possible explanation is that
some radial glial cells in G1-phase may have
shorter regrowing processes after mitosis, whereas at subsequent cell
cycle stages, S-, G2- and M-phase, radial glial
fibers are full length. This interpretation is consistent with our
observations of long fibers in some dividing cells. Although some newly
generated postmitotic neurons may have been included with our radial
glial counts in the DiOlistics experiments, we find no evidence that a
separate population of mitotically active nonradial glial precursor
cells exists in the VZ.
Radial glial cells as neuronal precursor cells in adulthood and
throughout the CNS
Radial glial cells may play a role in neurogenesis in multiple CNS
regions, in both development and adulthood. In the vertebrate retina,
radial glial cells known as Müller glia have been suspected to be
retinal precursor cells both during early development and during
regeneration (Reh and Levine, 1998 ; Fischer and Reh, 2001 ). In the
chick optic tectum, radial glia appear to generate radial clones of
neurons during development (Gray and Sanes, 1992 ). At postnatal stages
of cortical development, some radial glial cells transform into
subventricular zone astrocytes (Schmechel and Rakic, 1979a ), which in
the adult have been shown to generate neurons that subsequently migrate
into the olfactory bulb (Doetsch et al., 1999 ). In the dentate gyrus of
the hippocampus, radial glia persist into adulthood in specific regions
where adult neurogenesis occurs (Gould et al., 1997 ), and recently a
link between hippocampal radial glia and adult neurogenesis has been
suggested (Seri et al., 2001 ). In the adult avian ventricular zone,
"hotspots" of dividing radial glia correspond to local regions of
neurogenesis (Alvarez-Buylla et al., 1990 ). Thus radial glia may
generate neurons in the adult nervous system as well as produce neurons
during embryonic development.
Developmental insults can affect radial glia, migration, and
neurogenesis. In utero radiation exposure during periods of
peak neurogenesis disrupts neurogenesis and causes severe disruption of
radial glia (Roper et al., 1997 ). Similarly, exposure to an antimitotic
agent disrupts radial glial cells and impairs normal cortical layering
(Noctor et al., 1999 ). In humans, developmental causes of cortical
malformations such as heterotopias, lissencephaly, polymicrogyria, and
related conditions have been interpreted to represent varying forms of
neuronal migration disorders. However, in many of these conditions,
there is evidence for greatly decreased neuronal numbers in addition to
the failure of neurons to migrate to their appropriate destinations.
Our finding that radial glia subserve both proliferation and migration
may explain the apparent combination of proliferative and migrational
defects in patients affected by these disorders. It remains to be seen,
however, whether radial glia play the same roles in primate development
that we have observed in rodent development.
Conclusion
Our findings expand the role of radial glia in neocortical
development. The prevailing model for cortical neurogenesis and neuronal migration holds that a distinct population of precursors restricted to the VZ give rise to neurons that then migrate out of the
VZ along nearby radial glial cells. The present data support a modified
model in which radial glial neuronal precursor cells first generate
neurons in the VZ and then guide the migration of their neuronal
progeny into the cortex (Fig. 6). The
centralization of neurogenesis and migrational guidance in one cell
type expands the role of the cortical VZ precursor cell and provides an
efficient mechanism for establishing the laminar and columnar
organization of the developing neocortex. The sequential migration of
clonally related neurons along the parent radial glia fiber enables
related cells to take up positions in different cortical layers during the inside-out formation of the cortex as predicted by the radial unit
hypothesis (Rakic, 1988 ). Mutual contact with the parental radial glial
fiber (Noctor et al., 2001 ) may also allow for the formation of
synaptic connections among neurons within the clone to form a local
micronetwork across the cortical layers. Therefore the clonal
relationship between radial glia and their neuronal daughter cells may
underlie the establishment of local cortical circuitry to form
functional radial units.

View larger version (22K):
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|
Figure 6.
Schematic hypothesis for neuronal generation in
the neocortex. Our model proposes that one population, the radial glial
cell (RG), both generates neurons and guides neuronal
migration. Newborn neurons (N) generated by
radial glial precursor cells ascend along the radial fiber of the
parental radial glial cell. A series of asymmetric radial glial cell
divisions produces a clone of cortical pyramidal neurons. After
neurogenesis, some radial glial cells transform into astrocytes
(A).
|
|
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 26, 2001; revised Dec. 26, 2001; accepted Jan. 29, 2002.
*
S.C.N. and A.C.F. contributed equally to this work.
We thank Dr. David Owens, Dr. Lidija Ivic, Xiaoyan Wang, and Vivek Unni
for their helpful comments on this manuscript; Dr. Nathaniel Heintz,
Dr. James Goldman, and Dr. Kohichi Nagata for kindly providing
antibodies and reagents; and Dr. Fred Gage for kindly providing the
retroviral packaging cell line. Dr. Wen-Biao Gan, Dr. Carol Mason, Dr.
Anna Dunaevsky, Holly Engelman, Sudhindra Swamy, and Theresa Swayne
provided technical assistance and advice. This work was supported by
National Institutes of Health Grant NS35710, the Robert Lee and Clara
Guthrie Patterson Trust, and the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Arnold Kriegstein, Columbia
College of Physicians and Surgeons, 630 W. 168th Street, P&S
Building, Room 4-408/Box 31, New York, NY 10032. E-mail:
ark17{at}columbia.edu.
 |
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P. A Riquelme, E. Drapeau, and F. Doetsch
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H.T. Ghashghaei, J. M. Weimer, R. S. Schmid, Y. Yokota, K. D. McCarthy, B. Popko, and E.S. Anton
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G. D. Rosen, J. Bai, Y. Wang, C. G. Fiondella, S. W. Threlkeld, J. J. LoTurco, and A. M. Galaburda
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K. M. Young, M. Fogarty, N. Kessaris, and W. D. Richardson
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F. T. Merkle, Z. Mirzadeh, and A. Alvarez-Buylla
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Z. Mo, A. R. Moore, R. Filipovic, Y. Ogawa, I. Kazuhiro, S. D. Antic, and N. Zecevic
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F. M. Vaccarino, D. M. Fagel, Y. Ganat, M. E. Maragnoli, L. R. Ment, Y. Ohkubo, M. L. Schwartz, J. Silbereis, and K. M. Smith
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I. Kulbatski, A. J. Mothe, A. Keating, Y. Hakamata, E. Kobayashi, and C. H. Tator
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V. Borrell, B. K. Kaspar, F. H. Gage, and E. M. Callaway
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U Shivraj Sohur, J. G Emsley, B. D Mitchell, and J. D Macklis
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N. Haubst, E. Georges-Labouesse, A. De Arcangelis, U. Mayer, and M. Gotz
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A. von Holst, S. Sirko, and A. Faissner
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J. S. Gal, Y. M. Morozov, A. E. Ayoub, M. Chatterjee, P. Rakic, and T. F. Haydar
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M. Sakurai, K. Ayukawa, R. Setsuie, K. Nishikawa, Y. Hara, H. Ohashi, M. Nishimoto, T. Abe, Y. Kudo, M. Sekiguchi, et al.
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A. J. Barkovich, R. I. Kuzniecky, G. D. Jackson, R. Guerrini, and W. B. Dobyns
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G. Wieck, R. J. Leventer, W. M. Squier, A. Jansen, E. Andermann, F. Dubeau, A. Ramazzotti, R. Guerrini, and W. B. Dobyns
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R. A. Pearson, N. L. Luneborg, D. L. Becker, and P. Mobbs
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W. J. Moody and M. M. Bosma
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J. M. Angelastro, J. L. Mason, T. N. Ignatova, V. G. Kukekov, G. B. Stengren, J. E. Goldman, and L. A. Greene
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K.-i. Mizutani and T. Saito
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R. Feuer, R. R. Pagarigan, S. Harkins, F. Liu, I. P. Hunziker, and J. L. Whitton
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M. Andres, V. M. Andre, S. Nguyen, N. Salamon, C. Cepeda, M. S. Levine, J. P. Leite, L. Neder, H. V. Vinters, and G. W. Mathern
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F. T. Merkle, A. D. Tramontin, J. M. Garcia-Verdugo, and A. Alvarez-Buylla
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C. Zimmer, M.-C. Tiveron, R. Bodmer, and H. Cremer
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R. E Russo, A. Fernandez, C. Reali, M. Radmilovich, and O. Trujillo-Cenoz
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K. Yoon, S. Nery, M. L. Rutlin, F. Radtke, G. Fishell, and N. Gaiano
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G. Munoz-Elias, A. J. Marcus, T. M. Coyne, D. Woodbury, and I. B. Black
Adult Bone Marrow Stromal Cells in the Embryonic Brain: Engraftment, Migration, Differentiation, and Long-Term Survival
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C.-J. Zhou, C. Zhao, and S. J. Pleasure
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C. Gregg and S. Weiss
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A. H. Yang, D. Kaushal, S. K. Rehen, K. Kriedt, M. A. Kingsbury, M. J. McConnell, and J. Chun
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S. Fukuda, F. Kato, Y. Tozuka, M. Yamaguchi, Y. Miyamoto, and T. Hisatsune
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M. Gotz
Glial Cells Generate Neurons--Master Control within CNS Regions: Developmental Perspectives on Neural Stem Cells
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E. Hartfuss, E. Forster, H. H. Bock, M. A. Hack, P. Leprince, J. M. Luque, J. Herz, M. Frotscher, and M. Gotz
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D. A. Lyons, A. T. Guy, and J. D. W. Clarke
Monitoring neural progenitor fate through multiple rounds of division in an intact vertebrate brain
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P. Rakic
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T. Weissman, S. C. Noctor, B. K. Clinton, L. S. Honig, and A. R. Kriegstein
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R A Barker, M Jain, R J E Armstrong, and M A Caldwell
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H. L. Picken Bahrey and W. J. Moody
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Q. Shen, W. Zhong, Y. N. Jan, and S. Temple
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H. L. P. Bahrey and W. J. Moody
Voltage-gated Currents, Dye and Electrical Coupling in the Embryonic Mouse Neocortex
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K. Echeverri and E. M. Tanaka
Ectoderm to Mesoderm Lineage Switching During Axolotl Tail Regeneration
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A. J. Fischer, C. R. McGuire, B. D. Dierks, and T. A. Reh
Insulin and Fibroblast Growth Factor 2 Activate a Neurogenic Program in Muller Glia of the Chicken Retina
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