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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 1, 2002, 22(9):3580-3593
A Novel Role for p75NTR in Subplate Growth Cone Complexity and
Visual Thalamocortical Innervation
Patrick S.
McQuillen1,
Michael F.
DeFreitas1,
Gabriel
Zada2, and
Carla J.
Shatz3
1 Department of Pediatrics and 2 School of
Medicine, University of California, San Francisco Medical Center, San
Francisco, California 94143, and 3 Department of
Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
 |
ABSTRACT |
In cortical development, subplate axons pioneer the pathway from
neocortex to the internal capsule, leading to the proposal that they
are required for subsequent area-specific innervation of cortex by
thalamic axons. A role for p75 neutrophin receptor (NTR) in
area-specific thalamic innervation of cortex is suggested by the
observation that p75NTR expression is restricted to subplate neurons in
a low-rostral to high-caudal gradient throughout the period of
thalamocortical innervation. In vitro, neurotrophin 3 binding to p75NTR increases neurite length and filopodial formation of
immunopurified subplate neurons, suggesting a role for p75NTR in
subplate growth cone morphology and function in vivo.
Consistent with this idea, subplate growth cones have markedly fewer
filopodia in mice lacking p75NTR than in wild type mice. Despite
this gross morphologic defect, many subplate axons in knock-out mice
pioneer the projection to the internal capsule as they do in wild-type mice. However a few subplate axons in the knock-out mice make ectopic
projections rostral in the intermediate zone and frontal cortex.
Concomitant with the altered morphology of subplate growth cones, mice
lacking p75NTR have diminished innervation of visual cortex from the
lateral geniculate nucleus, with markedly reduced or absent connections
in 48% of knock-out mice. Thalamic projections to auditory and
somatosensory cortex are normal, consistent with the gradient of p75NTR
expression. Our present results are unusual in that they argue that
p75NTR functions in a novel way in subplate neurons, that is, in growth
cone morphology and function rather than in axon extension or neuronal survival.
Key words:
filopodia; development; outgrowth; NT3; p75NTR
expression; cell death
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Distinct areas within adult
mammalian neocortex receive precisely restricted innervation from
individual thalamic nuclei (Sherman and Guillery, 2001
). Although
several molecules involved in pathfinding of thalamic axons into the
internal capsule have been described recently (Kawano et al., 1999
;
Miyashita-Lin et al., 1999
; Tuttle et al., 1999
), very little is known
about the cellular mechanisms and molecular cues guiding thalamic and
neocortical axons to their targets within neocortex.
In developing neocortex, a population of the first postmitotic neurons,
subplate neurons, are the first to extend axons toward the internal
capsule, pioneering what will become a robust pathway between cerebral
cortex and thalamus (McConnell et al., 1989
; De Carlos and O'Leary,
1992
). Growing thalamocortical axons encounter subplate axons in the
internal capsule (Molnar et al., 1998a
; Auladell et al., 2000
) and then
turn to grow tangentially in the intermediate zone until they come to
reside beneath their cortical targets. Ablation of subplate neurons
beneath presumptive primary visual cortex before the arrival of axons
from the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) of thalamus causes these
axons to fail to recognize their target and to grow past,
occasionally innervating inappropriate areas (Ghosh et al., 1990
).
Although thalamocortical and corticothalamic pathways are spatially
(Miller et al., 1993
) and phenotypically (Bicknese et al., 1994
)
separate in mature brain, it is proposed that early thalamic axons use
subplate axons as a scaffold on their way to cortex (Molnár and
Blakemore, 1995
). Studies of thalamocortical axons in reeler
mice are consistent with this conclusion (Caviness, 1976
; Molnar et
al., 1998b
). Taken together, these observations have led to the
proposal that subplate neurons are required for formation of
thalamocortical connections. However, subplate neuron ablations have
only been performed after subplate neurons have established their
pioneer projection to the internal capsule (Ghosh et al., 1990
).
Therefore, the functional necessity of this pioneer projection, as well
as its role in determining area-specific innervation, remains unproven.
Furthermore, the molecular mechanisms involved in subplate neuron
guidance of thalamic axons to their targets remain unknown.
One molecule that could play a role is the p75 neurotrophin receptor
(p75NTR). Within developing neocortex, subplate neurons uniquely
express p75NTR (Allendoerfer et al., 1990
). Near birth in rodent, this
expression takes the form of a low-rostral to high-caudal gradient
(Mackarehtschian et al., 1999
), suggesting a possible role in regional
specificity of neocortex. Mice lacking p75NTR display innervation
defects in the peripheral nervous system (Lee et al., 1992
, 1994
).
To understand the role of p75NTR expression by subplate neurons in the
precise and selective innervation of neocortex by sensory thalamus, we
analyzed subplate growth cones and thalamocortical connections in
p75NTR knock-out and wild-type mice. We found significantly fewer
filopodia on subplate growth cones in p75NTR knock-out mice. Although
subplate axons in p75NTR knock-out mice make occasional ectopic
projections, most of the subplate axons reach the internal capsule.
Subsequently, however, there is reduced thalamic innervation of visual
cortex in knock-out mice, but normal innervation of auditory and
somatosensory cortex. This study provides the first evidence that
subplate neurons and p75NTR play a role in area-specific innervation of neocortex.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Mice and genotype analysis. Unless indicated
otherwise, mice used in this study were littermates generated from
intercross of parents heterozygous for targeted inactivation of
full-length p75NTR expression (Lee et al., 1992
) using a breeding
strategy identical to that described by Yeo et al. (1997)
. Mice were
housed using standard conditions; their care and use conformed to
guidelines from the Animal Care and Use Committee at University of
California, Berkeley. Littermates were genotyped by PCR of tail genomic
DNA as described (Yeo et al., 1997
).
Acquisition and analysis of digital images. Digital images
were acquired using either a Nikon Optiphot or Eclipse 800 microscope (Nikon Instruments Inc., Melville, NY) with a cooled CCD camera (Spot2,
Diagnostic Instruments, Sterling Heights, MI). Digital images were
analyzed on an Apple G4 computer (Apple, Cupertino, CA) using the
public domain NIH Image program (developed at the National Institutes
of Health and available on the Internet at http://rsb.info.nih.gov/nih-image/).
p75NTR in situ hybridization. In situ
hybridization probe templates were obtained by RT-PCR of total RNA made
from embryonic mouse spinal cord. PCR primers used for amplification of
mouse fragments were designed from published sequences (Radeke et al., 1987
) and were as follows: p75NTR intracellular domain:
5'-TGACCACTGTGATGGGCAG-3'/5'-GCCTCGTGGGTAAAGGAGTC-3'; extracellular domain:
5'-GAGAGTGCTGCAAAGCCTG-3'/5'-AATGAGGTTGTCGGTGGTG-3'. A cDNA
template specific for exon III in the extracellular domain was
generated by subcloning the BglI to HindIII
fragment of the extracellular cDNA. Amplified fragments were gel
purified and cloned into pBSII-KS vector. Plasmids were sequenced to
verify the product. In situ hybridization was performed as
described (Lein et al., 1999
). In light of reports of a naturally
occurring splice variant of p75NTR (Dechant and Barde, 1997
), we
analyzed p75NTR expression using all three probes. No differences in
the expression patterns or levels were observed with the three probes, and so only the expression pattern of the exon III-specific probe is shown.
Subplate neuron culture. Subplate neurons were isolated and
immunopurified from embryonic day (E) 17 rat brains as described (DeFreitas et al., 2001
). Cultures were maintained for 48-96 hr with
the following conditions: no exogenous neurotrophin, 3 ng/ml recombinant human BDNF (Alomone, Jerusalem, Israel), recombinant human
neurotrophin 3 (NT3) (Alomone), or neurotrophin + 200 µg/ml of
FAb fragments of a polyclonal antibody (Rex) to p75NTR (Weskamp and Reichardt, 1991
). The Rex antibody was the generous gift of Lou
Reichardt (University of California, San Francisco). Live subplate
neurons were labeled with calcein-AM (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR).
Digital images of live neurons and their processes were acquired, and
total process area, neurite number, length, and filopodial number were
quantitated in NIH Image.
Carbocyanine dye labeling. Mice were fixed by transcardial
perfusion with 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffered
4% paraformaldehyde or immersion-fixed in the same fixative (embryonic
ages). Brains were removed and stored in fixative with 0.02% sodium
azide. Small (~100 µm) similar-sized crystals of
1,1'-dioctadecyl-3,3,3',3'- tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate
(DiI) (D-282, Molecular Probes) or 1,1'-dioctadecyl-3,3,3',3'-
tetramethylindodicarbocyanine perchlorate (DiD) (D-307, Molecular
Probes) were placed into visual or auditory cortex (for n,
see Table 1). The dye was allowed to transport at room temperature
(embryonic ages) or 37°C for 3-6 weeks adjusted for postconceptual
age. Coronal sections were cut at 50-100 µm on a vibratome. Sections
were counterstained with 0.001% bisbenzamide, mounted, and imaged on a
Nikon Optiphot epifluorescence microscope.
Subplate neuron growth cone analysis. To visualize subplate
neuron growth cones, brains were removed from E13.5 mice (wild-type, n = 3; p75NTR knock-out, n = 4)
produced from time-bred heterozygote matings (see Mice and genotype
analysis). Subplate neuron axons were selectively labeled with DiI (see
Carbocyanine dye labeling) placed in the preplate/developing visual
cortex at E13.5. To control for gestational age, littermates were
analyzed. High-resolution confocal images were acquired with a
plan apo 100× oil objective (numerical aperture 1.40) in 1 µm step
intervals in the z dimension, spanning the complete extent
of the growth cone to ensure that the fiber terminated within the
section and that the entire growth cone was imaged. Two-dimensional
projections were reconstructed from the image stacks using NIH image
brightest point projection; individual filopodia were counted and
length was measured using the "neurite-labeling" macro (V1.1,
ftp://rsbweb.nih.gov/pub/nih-image/user-macros/). Total
filopodia number and individual filopodial length were measured for
each growth cone (wild-type, n = 24; p75NTRknock-out,
n = 22). In addition, the distance from the most distal
filopodial tip to the base of the growth cone was measured in the
wild-type mice. To measure growth cone area in the projection, a circle with a diameter equal to the mean growth cone to distal filopodial tip
distance plus 1 SD was superimposed over the growth cone. Using a known
microscope scale, NIH image was calibrated to measure true area in
micrometers squared after a standardized threshold function performed
on the selected growth cone area.
Transneuronal transport. Intraocular injection of
3H-proline was used to label LGN axon
terminals in layer 4 of visual cortex as described by Drager (1974)
.
3H-proline (200 µCi; Amersham
Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ) was injected into the posterior chamber of
the left eye; 25 µm sagittal sections were dipped in NTB-2
autoradiographic emulsion (Eastman Kodak, Rochester, NY) and exposed in
the dark for 4-6 weeks. After developing, the slides were
counterstained with 0.001% bisbenzamide and coverslipped. After
acquisition of digital images, silver grains representing
3H-proline-labeled LGN terminals in visual
cortex were identified by their gray scale values. A complete
medial-to-lateral series of regularly spaced images encompassing all of
the primary visual cortex was analyzed. Thresholding was used to define
the cortical area innervated by LGN axons. This area was multiplied by
the normalized mean gray scale density (255
mean density/255),
a measurement of silver grain density, to obtain a weighted measure of
innervation area/section. This value was averaged and multiplied by the
total number of sections in the series and the section thickness to
obtain the weighted innervation volume (innervation index).
Serotonin immunohistochemistry. Serotonin
immunohistochemistry was performed as described by Lebrand et al.
(1996)
.
Subplate neuron bromodeoxyuridine birth dating.
Timed-pregnant mice received an intraperitoneal injection of 50 mg/kg
of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) at E12.5
(plug date = E0.5) to label subplate neurons in neocortex (Price
et al., 1997
).
BrdU staining. BrdU-labeled subplate neurons were visualized
as described previously (Lein et al., 1999
). Brains were rapidly removed from the cranium and flash-frozen in OCT mounting media (TissueTek, Sakura Finetek, Torrance CA) in a dry ice-95% ethanol bath. Briefly, coronal cryostat sections (10 µm thick) were fixed in
0.1 M sodium phosphate buffered 4%
paraformaldehyde, extracted with 0.6% Triton X-100, acetylated,
quenched in 3% hydrogen peroxide, and dehydrated through graded
alcohols. To expose incorporated BrdU, the sections were microwaved for
10 min in 0.1 M sodium citrate, pH 5.0. Anti-BrdU
antibody (IU4, Caltag, Burlingame, CA) was applied at 1:20,000 with 100 U/µl of exonuclease III (ExoIII) (Roche Molecular Biochemicals,
Indianapolis, IN) in ExoIII buffer plus 100 mM
NaCl with 1% bovine serum albumin, at 37°C for 1 hr. After washing,
horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse secondary
antibody (Jackson ImmunoResearch, West Grove, PA) was applied at
1:200 in blocking solution (supplied by manufacturer) for 30 min,
followed by tyramide signal amplification (TSA) (Direct-green; PerkinElmer Life Sciences, Boston, MA). The sections were
counterstained with 0.001% bisbenzamide. Subplate neuron density
(cells per section) was counted in coronal sections at three selected
locations corresponding to Figures 22, 48, and 65 of Franklin and
Paxinos (1997)
. The subplate zone was identified using accepted
criteria (Boulder Committee, 1970
) and cytoarchitectonic features of
neocortex (Bayer and Altman, 1990
). Specifically, in the radial domain
the subplate (layer 6B) was localized at the base of the cortical
plate, immediately below layer 6 neurons, and contained characteristic
pyramidal neurons. The subplate zone extended to the subventricular
zone at early ages [E16.5 to postnatal day (P) 7] and into the
myelinated white matter at later ages (>P14). The borders in the
coronal plane were determined by the characteristic six-layered
neocortex and extended to cingulate cortex in the medial direction and
entorhinal cortex laterally. Only heavily BrdU-labeled cells falling
into this region were counted. Heavily labeled cells were defined, as
in previous studies (Price et al., 1997
), as cells in which more than
half the nucleus was labeled. Homozygous knock-out mice (c129ngfr;
Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME) (n = 18) were
compared with BALB/c (n = 6) and 129sv
(n = 12) wild-type control mice maintained in our
colony. Both hemispheres were counted, and the section counts averaged
across the three levels were analyzed. Counts were binned for the
following ages: E18.5 and P0 (n = 8) and P3 and P7
(n = 4). Counts for these ages, as well as for P14 and
P21, are reported as average cell number per section ± SD.
In situ end labeling staining. To visualize dying
cells, we used a modified version of the in situ end
labeling (ISEL+) method (Blaschke et al., 1996
). Sections adjacent to
those analyzed for BrdU were selected and prepared similarly and used
for counts. A reaction mixture containing 1 µM
biotin-dUTP (Roche Molecular Biochemicals, Indianapolis, IN), 0.15 U/ml
of terminal transferase (Invitrogen, Rockville, MD), 1×
terminal transferase buffer, and 1% bovine serum albumin was applied,
and the sections were incubated for 1 hr at 37°C. Sections were
washed, then incubated with NeutraLite avidin-horseradish peroxidase
(Molecular Probes) at 1:1000 in blocking solution (supplied with
TSA-direct kit) for 30 min. The sections were washed and developed with
TSA-Direct Cy3 (PerkinElmer Life Sciences). Labeled cells were counted
only if they were located within the subplate as defined above. Data
were binned for the following ages: E18.5 and P0 (n = 16) and P3 and P7 (n = 4). These ages as well as P14
and P21 are reported as average cell number per section ± SD.
Double-labeling was performed at selected ages (P2-7), with the ISEL
reaction performed before microwave treatment and BrdU primary antibody
incubation. Visualization with direct-TSA was performed sequentially,
with inactivation of peroxidase between development of ISEL and BrdU immunohistochemistry.
 |
RESULTS |
Subplate neurons express p75NTR mRNA throughout
thalamocortical development
Subplate neurons have previously been shown to express p75NTR
protein by immunohistochemistry during early cortical development (Allendoerfer et al., 1990
). p75NTR is known to affect axon outgrowth (Yamashita et al., 1999
; Davies, 2000
), and mice lacking p75NTR have
reduced sensory and sympathetic innervation in the peripheral nervous
system (Lee et al., 1992
, 1994
). Subplate axons pioneer the
intracortical pathway to the internal capsule (McConnell et al., 1989
).
These observations raise the question of whether p75NTR plays a role in
early subplate neuron axon outgrowth and the establishment of
subsequent connections between cortex and thalamus. p75NTR expression,
however, has only been studied after development of thalamocortical
projections (Allendoerfer et al., 1990
, 1994
; Koh and Higgins, 1991
).
To determine whether p75NTR is expressed at early ages when subplate
axons pioneer the intracortical pathway to internal capsule and to
elucidate fully the pattern of p75NTR expression in neocortex, we
examined mRNA expression by in situ hybridization throughout
development of the thalamocortical projection in mice. Subplate neurons
are the first neocortical cells to express p75NTR soon after they
migrate to form the preplate at E14.5 (Fig. 1). At every stage of development from
E14.5 to P14, p75NTR is expressed by neurons in the subplate zone at
the base of the developing cortical plate (Fig. 1), corresponding
precisely to the location of immunostained subplate neurons observed by
others (Allendoerfer et al., 1990
). We found similar patterns of early
expression in ferret, at earlier ages (E30) (P. S. McQuillen,
M. F. DeFreitas, and C. J. Shatz, unpublished observations)
than seen previously (Allendoerfer et al., 1994
). This discrepancy
likely results from higher sensitivity of in situ
hybridization compared with the antibodies used in previous studies.
Thus this early expression is not specific to mice and likely plays a
similar role in other species. In mice, the level of p75NTR mRNA
expression peaks in neocortex by P1 (Fig. 1). By P7, after the peak of
cell death in the subplate, expression declines in cortex. By P14 only
scattered cells at the base of the cortical plate express p75NTR (Fig.
1). This pattern of expression persists in the adult (data not shown). Thus, subplate neurons are the first neocortical neurons to express p75NTR, and at early ages (E14.5-18.5), during formation of
thalamocortical connections, they are the only cells in neocortex that
express this receptor.

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Figure 1.
p75NTR expression in subplate during development.
An in situ probe specific for exon III of p75NTR was
used to survey p75NTR expression. High-magnification view of subplate
p75NTR expression in cross section of cortex at ages from E14.5 through
P14. PP, Preplate; VZ, ventricular zone;
SP, subplate; m, meninges;
MZ, marginal zone; SVZ, subventricular
zone; CCP, condensed cortical plate; WM,
white matter.
|
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p75NTR modulates neurite outgrowth of subplate neurons
in culture
Neurotrophin signaling via p75NTR stimulates axon outgrowth
(Davies, 2000
) and growth cone turning (Gundersen and Barrett, 1979
)
and may provide a stop signal to growing axons (Kohn et al., 1999
). All
of these effects are important for axon pathfinding, target selection,
and innervation. To determine whether p75NTR signaling affects subplate
neuron process outgrowth, we first used an in vitro assay to
examine the morphology of immunopurified subplate neurons in response
to neurotrophin binding by p75NTR. Rat subplate neurons were
immunopurified with an anti-p75NTR monoclonal antibody as described
previously (DeFreitas et al., 2001
). Subplate neurons were purified
from rat rather than mouse because function-blocking p75NTR antibodies
are readily available for rat but not mouse, and subplate neurons
cannot be immunopurified from p75NTR knock-out mice with a p75NTR
antibody. Rat subplate neurons cultured on fibronectin in serum-free
medium develop highly branched neurites with multiple filopodia
(DeFreitas et al., 2001
). Addition of NT3 significantly increases
neurite length (Fig.
2A). This increase is
dependent on NT3 binding to p75NTR, because anti-p75NTR FAb fragments,
which are known to block binding of neurotrophin to p75NTR (Weskamp and
Reichardt, 1991
), block the NT3-dependent increase in neurite length
completely (Fig. 2A). Surprisingly, addition of BDNF
has no effect on neurite length (Fig. 2A), although both NT3 and BDNF stimulate the formation of broad lamellipodia extensions on neurites (data not shown) and can support survival via
p75NTR (DeFreitas et al., 2001
). NT3 also increases the number of
filopodia (Fig. 2B), an effect that is also blocked
by addition of anti-p75NTR FAb fragments (Fig. 2B).
The fact that different neurotrophins can bind p75NTR but cause
different responses in terms of cell signaling is not surprising in
light of observations by many other groups (Kaplan and Miller, 2000
).
These differences in response are consistent with developmental changes
in the expression of neurotrophins. Early in cortical development,
during the period of subplate axon outgrowth, NT3 is the predominant
neurotrophin expressed, whereas BDNF does not increase to similarly
high levels until later ages (Lein et al., 2000
). These observations
indicate that in vitro p75NTR regulates subplate neuron
process outgrowth. They also suggest that p75NTR signaling may
contribute to normal subplate growth cone morphology in
vivo.

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Figure 2.
Blockade of NT3 binding to p75NTR reduces neurite
length and filopodial number in cultured subplate neurons.
Immunopurified subplate neurons were cultured on fibronectin in
serum-free media with addition of BDNF ( ), NT3 ( ), NT3 + anti-p75NTR FAb ( ), or control (no neurotrophin) ( ).
A, After 5 d in vitro, the length of
the longest neurite was measured and plotted against percentage of
cells with length > X. B, After
2 d in vitro, the total number of filopodia per
neuron was measured and plotted versus percentage of neurons with > X total filopodia.
|
|
Absence of p75NTR reduces filopodial formation in p75NTR
knock-out mice
To assess the role of p75NTR in vivo, we examined
subplate growth cone morphology in wild-type and p75NTR knock-out mice. Subplate neuron growth cones are known to be larger and more complex than the growth cones of later-generated neurons, consistent with their
role as pioneer neurons (Kim et al., 1991
). To examine subplate growth
cone morphology, a crystal of DiI was placed in the presumptive visual
cortex of E14 wild-type and knock-out littermates. At E14, thalamic
axons have not yet grown all the way to visual cortex (Auladell et al.,
2000
), and subplate axons are the only descending projection from
cortex; thus subplate axons are selectively labeled. Individual growth
cones at the leading edge of the labeled projection were selected for
analysis so that the entire growth cone could be visualized with no
part being obscured by neighboring fibers. Growth cones were analyzed
in both knock-out and wild-type mice at the internal capsule (Fig.
3A). Examination of subplate
neuron growth cones reveals a striking decrease in complexity in p75NTR knock-out mice when compared with wild-type (Fig.
3B-D). Growth cones in wild-type mice have twice
as many filopodia as in knock-out (Fig. 3B) (mean 8.3 vs 4.1 filopodia/growth cone; p < 0.0001; unpaired
t test). Total growth cone size (see Materials and Methods) is also diminished in the knock-outs (mean 47.5 vs 38.1 µm2; p = 0.0262;
unpaired t test). However, average filopodial length is
unchanged (4.03 vs 4.04 µm). Filopodia in knock-out mice, unlike in
wild-type mice, are often thick and occasionally contained ball-like
extensions at the tips (Fig. 3D). Although there is a range
in the number of filopodia per subplate growth cone in knock-out mice,
there is a shift in the entire population of filopodia per subplate
growth cone in knock-out mice, leading to smaller, more simple growth
cones compared with wild-type littermates (Fig. 3B).

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Figure 3.
Abnormal subplate neuron growth cones in p75NTR
knock-out mice. Subplate neuron growth cones were labeled at E13.5 with
crystals of DiI inserted into developing visual cortex.
A, Individual growth cones are imaged in both
genotypes in the internal capsule, at the leading edge of labeled
subplate projection (boxed area). B,
Filopodia per growth cone measured for wild-type ( ) and knock-out
( ) mice. C, D, Representative examples
of growth cone morphology from wild-type (C) or
knock-out mice (D) are marked with
arrows.
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Subplate axons make occasional pathfinding errors after reaching
the internal capsule
To determine whether the severe alteration in subplate growth cone
morphology affects subplate axon extension and pathfinding, we labeled
descending subplate axons (and some layer 6 axons) at E15.5 with small
crystals of DiI placed into developing primary visual cortex. At this
age, thalamic axons are just reaching subplate beneath visual cortex
(Catalano et al., 1996
; Auladell et al., 2000
); thus the dye
retrogradely labels very few thalamic axons. In both genotypes, at
E15.5 there is a robust projection from primary visual cortex that
traverses the intermediate zone and arrives at the internal capsule
(Fig.
4A,B).
Thus the ability of subplate neurons to read the long-range directional
cues responsible for guidance rostral to the internal capsule does not
appear to be altered by loss of p75NTR expression. Also, subplate axon
extension is not noticeably reduced. At the internal capsule, all
subplate axons in wild-type mice, and most in p75NTR knock-out mice,
turn and enter the internal capsule (Fig.
4A,B). In two of six knock-out hemispheres, however, a few subplate axons failed to turn into the
internal capsule and continued growing rostrally in the intermediate zone, occasionally turning lateral to innervate entorhinal cortex (Fig.
4D). This ectopic projection was never seen in
wild-type mice (Fig. 4C) (n = 6 hemispheres). These observations indicate that despite a clear
abnormality in filopodia in the p75NTR knock-out mice, subplate axon
pathfinding is mostly normal. However, p75NTR may be needed for
subplate growth cones to respond to local cues or interact with other
cell types at the internal capsule.

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Figure 4.
Subplate axons make pathfinding errors in p75NTR
knock-out mice. Crystals of DiI were placed in presumptive visual
cortex at E15.5, before LGN axons have arrived underneath caudal
cortex, to label subplate neurons selectively. A,
B, Coronal sections show DiI-labeled subplate axons
reaching the internal capsule (IC) in wild-type mice
(A) or p75NTR knock-out mice
(B). C, D, In
slightly more rostral sections, ectopic subplate axons were found in
the p75NTR knock-out mice (D) but not wild-type
mice (C), some of which turn lateral
(arrowheads in boxed area) to enter the
preplate (PP). GE, Ganglionic eminence;
IZ, intermediate zone; AC, anterior
commissure.
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p75NTR is expressed in a low-rostral, high-caudal gradient
throughout thalamocortical development
p75NTR mRNA expression has been observed in a low-rostral to
high-caudal gradient in rat cortex at E19 and P1 (Mackarehtschian et
al., 1999
). This suggests the possibility that p75NTR may function in
some aspect of area-specific development of cortex. Although this
expression gradient was noted earlier using immunohistochemistry, it
was thought to be a gradient of maturation, with neurons in rostral
cortex downregulating expression earlier than those more caudal (Koh
and Loy, 1989
). To determine whether the gradient observed at birth is
a maturational or a spatial gradient, we examined expression in
parasagittal sections throughout the lifespan of subplate neurons. From
the earliest time at which p75NTR mRNA can be detected in neocortex
(E14.5) until expression begins to diminish (>P7), p75NTR is expressed
in a low-rostral to high-caudal gradient (Fig.
5A-D). Throughout
this period, p75NTR is expressed uniformly in the subplate across the
medial to lateral aspect of neocortex (data not shown). This expression
pattern is not unique to rodent; similar patterns can be found in
ferret, where expression persists in a rostrocaudal gradient in
subplate neurons until at least P21 (McQuillen, DeFreitas, and Shatz,
unpublished observations). At P21, expression is limited to subplate
and layer 6 neurons in the posterolateral gyrus containing visual
cortex. Thus, the low-rostral to high-caudal gradient of p75NTR
expression is not caused by a maturational gradient and is present in
caudal subplate throughout the period of development of thalamocortical projections [rodent: E14.5-P7 (Catalano et al., 1996
; Auladell et
al., 2000
)]. The low-rostral-high-caudal gradient of p75NTR expression by subplate neurons, taken together with the known participation of subplate neurons in thalamocortical development, suggests that p75NTR might function in some aspect of cortical arealization and area-specific thalamocortical innervation.

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Figure 5.
Gradient of p75NTR expression in subplate during
development. A-D, Mid-sagittal sections
at E14.5 (A), E16.5 (B), P1
(C), and P7 (D) demonstrate
a low-rostral high-caudal gradient of p75NTR expression.
Arrowheads denote rostral-caudal extent of p75NTR
expression. Other structures with p75NTR expression are labeled or
marked with arrow or asterisk.
PT, Posterior thalamus; RT, reticular
thalamus; cb, cerebellum; BFC, basal
forebrain complex.
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p75NTR is also expressed in other brain structures at these times.
Beginning as early as E14.5, cells in the diencephalon transiently
express p75NTR at low levels. At E14, cells in reticular thalamus
express p75NTR (Fig. 5A, arrow). Expression in
reticular thalamus continues throughout development (Fig.
5A-D, arrows) and can be identified
in the adult (data not shown). Although there is expression of p75NTR
in posterior (Fig. 5A,B,
arrows) and dorsal thalamus (data not shown) at very early
ages (E14-16.5) (Fig. 5A,B), this
expression disappears by E18.5. As has been reported (Koh and Higgins,
1991
), we find no expression of p75NTR mRNA in the LGN, or any of
lateral thalamus, at any age (data not shown). Other cell populations
known to express p75NTR (Koh and Higgins, 1991
) are also detected,
including the basal forebrain complex (e.g., septal nuclei, diagonal
band, and nucleus basalis of Meynert) (Fig.
5B-D, asterisk), the developing
cerebellar anlage (Fig. 5C,D), and the meninges
(Fig. 1). Expression in the basal forebrain and Purkinje cells of
cerebellum increases throughout development, and a high level of
expression is maintained in adulthood (data not shown). Importantly,
expression in these brain structures is not in a gradient and does not
correlate with positions of cortical projections.
Decreased visual thalamocortical innervation in p75NTR
knock-out mice
Subplate neurons pioneer the projection from neocortex to internal
capsule, and it has been proposed that subplate neurons are required
for thalamocortical innervation (Ghosh et al., 1990
). Subplate neurons
beneath visual cortex express high levels of p75NTR mRNA during the
period of thalamocortical development. In contrast, subplate neurons
located in more anterior regions express comparatively lower levels of
p75NTR mRNA. This observation suggests that p75NTR may function in
establishing area-specific thalamic innervation of cortex. To consider
whether p75NTR expression by subplate neurons is required for the
area-specific formation of thalamocortical connections, thalamocortical
axons were traced by retrograde transport of carbocyanine dyes between
E17.5 and P10. At these ages, dye placement in cortex labels thalamus
by a combination of retrograde labeling of thalamic neurons and
anterograde labeling of the descending corticothalamic projections.
Placement of DiD into the visual cortex (Fig.
6A,B)
robustly labels neurons and fibers in the LGN of wild-type mice (Fig.
6C). Similar results are seen in heterozygous mice (data not
shown).

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Figure 6.
Reduced visual thalamocortical innervation in
p75NTR knock-out mice. A, B, DiI
(red) and DiD (green) crystal
placement in auditory cortex and visual cortex, respectively, in
wild-type (A) and knock-out
(B) mice at P10. C,
D, Retrograde labeling of cells and anterograde labeling
of fibers in LGN and thalamus after cortical labeling shown in
A and B in coronal sections. DiD
(green) from visual cortex heavily labels the LGN
(outlined in white) in wild-type
(C) but not knock-out (D)
mice. DiI (red) from auditory cortex labels fibers of
passage heading to the MGN (shown in Fig. 8), as well as some cells of
the ventrobasal nucleus of thalamus. E,
F, Anterograde labeling of LGN axons and retrograde
labeling of cortical cells after DiI (red) placement in
the lateral dorsal thalamus. In these sagittal sections (caudal is to
the left), labeled thalamic axons project from the LGN
to the internal capsule (IC), then within the
intermediate zone (IZ) toward visual cortex (denoted
between arrowheads) in wild-type
(E) but not knock-out (F)
mice.
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In marked contrast, when similar dye injections are made into the
visual cortex of p75NTR knock-out mice (Fig. 6B),
there is a severe reduction (<than 5% of LGN area labeled) or
complete absence of LGN labeling in 46% of the cases (Fig.
6D, Table 1). Although
we observed a 10% rate of decreased label in LGN in wild-type mice
caused by technical failure (Table 1, see footnote), the frequency of
decreased label in LGN is significantly greater in p75NTR knock-out
mice compared with their wild-type littermates (p = 0.01; Fisher's exact test). All
experiments with diminished transport were included in the analysis in
both knock-out and wild-type mice. The brains from wild-type and
knock-out littermates were processed simultaneously, in an identical
manner. Thus, this difference cannot be explained by failure of the
technique.
To further examine the thalamocortical pathway abnormality in p75NTR
knock-out mice, dye crystals were placed directly into lateral dorsal
thalamus at P10 to label LGN axons anterogradely and label cortical
neurons retrogradely. In every case, wild-type and knock-outs, a bundle
of labeled fibers could be followed up through the internal capsule and
into the intermediate zone below cortical plate. In wild-type mice,
axons turned caudal and extended beneath visual cortex. In three of
five knock-out mice, however, the projection of thalamocortical axons
was reduced underneath visual cortex as compared with wild-type mice
(Fig. 6E,F). In both
genotypes, cells in cortical areas rostral to visual cortex are labeled
because of the close proximity of somatosensory thalamus and fibers of
passage from medial geniculate nucleus (MGN) to the area of dye crystal
placement in LGN. No cases of aberrant or ectopic thalamic fibers were
noted. Thus, by means of both anterograde and retrograde tracing, it is
evident that the projection from LGN to visual cortex is significantly
reduced in the absence of p75NTR.
To obtain a more selective means of labeling the
thalamocortical projection exclusively from the LGN at a later age,
transneuronal transport of 3H-proline
after an intraocular injection was used. This method allows for a
complete assessment of the thalamocortical projection from the LGN in
mice aged 1 month or older, which is not possible with DiI. Thus, we
examined the projection in mature (>90 d) mice by autoradiography and
densitometric scanning of silver grains representing LGN axon terminals
in visual cortex (see Materials and Methods). This independent
technique confirms and extends our observations that in the p75NTR
knock-out mice there is a reduction in the projection from LGN to
cortex, which in some cases can be quite severe (Fig.
7, compare A, B).
This was not caused by differences in uptake of
3H-proline because the LGN was heavily
labeled in every animal in both groups. A quantitative measure of
innervation density (see Materials and Methods) confirmed that there is
an overall reduction in the projection from LGN to visual cortex in the
knock-out mice (Fig. 7C) (mean wild-type = 0.20 mm3 × mean pixel density vs mean p75NTR
knock-out = 0.12 mm3 × mean pixel
density; p = 0.074; unpaired t test).
Innervation volume was slightly but not significantly smaller in
knock-out mice (mean wild-type = 0.75 mm3 vs mean p75NTR knock-out = 0.60;
p = 0.259; unpaired t test). In all cases in
which label could be detected in cortex, the rostral-caudal boundaries
of primary visual cortex in the knock-out mice were unchanged when
compared with wild-type (Fig.
7A,B), indicating that primary
visual cortex was not spatially contracted or located ectopically.
Unlike with carbocyanine dye labeling at earlier ages, there were no
cases with a complete absence of innervation. This presence of at least
some innervation in all knock-out mice at these ages may be
attributable to delayed innervation, although differences in the
ability of the two techniques to visualize the entire projection from
LGN to primary visual cortex cannot be excluded, because the
transneuronal transport is performed at a much later age than the DiI
labeling. In addition to the general decreased innervation in the
knock-out mice (Fig. 7C), there were three cases of extreme
decrease in innervation density in the knock-out mice, all with values
outside of the range displayed by wild-type mice. These mice with
values lower than 1 SD of the mean wild-type value were the only
individuals scored as having abnormally reduced transport for the
combined statistical contingency analysis. When all three techniques
are considered together (placement of lipophilic dye in cortex,
thalamus, and transneuronal transport), the frequency of abnormally
reduced thalamocortical innervation is significantly greater
(p = 0.0002; Fisher's exact test) in p75NTR
knock-out mice (48%) when compared with wild-type mice (7%). This
shift in the population behavior of LGN axons to generally lower
innervation levels mirrors the decrease in filopodial number in
subplate growth cones in the p75NTR knock-out mice.

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Figure 7.
Transneuronal transport confirms
diminished geniculocortical projection in p75NTR knock-out mice.
A, B, Dark-field autoradiography showing
transneuronal transport of 3H-proline to LGN terminals in
visual cortex of adult (>P90) mice in sagittal sections (caudal is to
the left). Arrows denote visual cortex in
wild-type (A) and knock-out
(B) mice. C, Quantification of
innervation. Data points show innervation index (see Materials and
Methods) in all wild-type and knock-out mice examined.
Arrows indicate mice used in A and
B.
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Normal innervation of auditory and somatosensory cortex
The disruption of visual thalamocortical connections in p75NTR
knock-out mice, taken together with the gradient of p75NTR expression
with highest levels in visual cortex, implies a specific role for
p75NTR in the formation of thalamocortical connections from the LGN. If
so, then we would predict that the pathway from MGN to auditory cortex
and from the lateral ventral posterior nucleus to somatosensory cortex
to be less affected in p75NTR knock-out mice, given the relatively
lower levels of p75NTR expression seen there normally. Indeed, this is
exactly the case: after DiI injection into auditory cortex (dye crystal
placement shown in Fig. 6A,B) in
both wild-type and knock-out mice, there is robust label in MGN (Fig.
8A,B,
Table 1) in all mice. To assess innervation of somatosensory cortex, we
took advantage of the fact that sensory thalamic neurons take up, and
become immunoreactive for, serotonin for a brief period of time early
in development (Lebrand et al., 1996
). Examination of somatosensory
cortex demonstrates a normal patchy distribution of somatosensory axon
terminals corresponding to the barrel representations of whisker
vibrissae (Fig. 8C,D, Table 1) in all wild-type
and knock-out mice. Therefore, loss of p75NTR expression selectively
impairs visual thalamocortical innervation but does not affect thalamic
innervation of more rostral auditory or somatosensory cortex.

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Figure 8.
Normal auditory and somatosensory thalamocortical
innervation. A, B, Retrograde labeling of
cells in MGN (outlined in white) after
DiI placement in auditory cortex (for location of DiI crystal
placement, see Fig. 6A,B)
in wild-type (A) and knock-out
(B) mice at P10. Sections are coronal.
C, D, Serotonin immunohistochemistry in
coronal sections at the level of somatosensory cortex of wild-type
(C) and knock-out (D) mice.
Patches of staining indicated by arrowheads show
thalamic axon terminals in the barrel representations of whisker
vibrissae.
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Subplate neuron death is not altered in p75NTR knock-outs
Subplate neurons undergo pronounced cell death
postnatally (Al-Ghoul and Miller, 1989
; Bayer and Altman, 1990
; Woo et
al., 1991
; Wood et al., 1992
; Allendoerfer and Shatz, 1994
; Price et al., 1997
). This period of cell death coincides with decreased expression of p75NTR in neocortex (Allendoerfer et al., 1990
). p75NTR
signaling can support the survival of subplate neurons purified and
maintained in culture (DeFreitas et al., 2001
). Taken together, these
observations suggest the possibility that loss of p75NTR expression may
alter subplate neuron cell death. Early or increased subplate neuron
cell death, rather than altered subplate growth cones, is an
alternative explanation for the disruption of thalamocortical
innervation that we have observed here. To rule out this possibility,
subplate neurons in wild-type and p75NTR knock-out mice were labeled at
their birth dates with a single pulse of BrdU (Price et al., 1997
), and
their numbers were quantitated at subsequent ages. After injections at
E12.5, heavily BrdU-labeled cells are present at high density at the
base of the cortical plate at P2 (Fig.
9A,C,D,F)
in both wild-type and knock-out mice, indicating that subplate neurons
do not undergo early cell death in the knock-out. By P28, only
scattered, heavily labeled cells are present (data not shown) in both
genotypes. When the groups are considered together, a single pulse of
BrdU at E12.5 labels a mean of 79 (SD = 17) cells per section at
E18.5. This number decreases to a mean of 28 cells per section (SD = 11) at P28. These observations are similar to previously reported
values in other strains of mice (Price et al., 1997
). Note that these
values do not differ significantly between p75NTR knock-out and
wild-type mice (Fig. 10), and in both
genotypes a significant number of BrdU-labeled cells persist into
adulthood. These results confirm that in the mouse there is a period of
programmed cell death within the subplate during the immediate neonatal
period (Price et al., 1997
). Moreover, these observations demonstrate
that the p75NTR knock-out mice do not experience an earlier or
significantly enhanced degree of subplate neuron death than their
wild-type littermates.

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Figure 9.
Subplate neuron generation and cell death are
similar in p75NTR knock-out and wild-type mice.
A-I, Coronal sections of P2 wild-type
(A-C) and p75NTR knock-out mice
(D-I) were double labeled with
BrdU immunohistochemistry (green) and ISEL
(red). A, D,
Low-magnification views of BrdU immunohistochemistry performed in P2
wild-type (A) and knock-out mice
(D) after injection of BrdU at E12.5 to label
subplate neurons at their birth. B, E,
ISEL staining of the same sections in wild-type
(B) as compared with knock-out mice
(E). Examples of dying cells in subplate
(asterisk in B; arrow in
E) can be seen in both genotypes. C,
F, Overlay of BrdU labeling and ISEL confirms that
subplate neurons undergo DNA fragmentation, consistent with programmed
cell death (blue label is bisbenzamide nuclear
counterstain). G-I, High-magnification
image of a double-labeled cell (asterisk in
G-I) along with single-labeled
BrdU-positive (horizontal arrow in G,
I) and ISEL-positive (vertical
arrow in H, I) cell.
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Figure 10.
Developmental changes in subplate neuron cell
counts and ISEL are similar in p75NTR knock-out and wild-type mice.
Subplate neurons labeled at E12.5 with BrdU were visualized at E18.5,
P1, P3, P7, P14, and P21 with BrdU immunohistochemistry (see Fig. 9).
Dying cells with DNA strand breaks are detected with ISEL in adjacent
sections. Mean cell counts from three coronal levels were binned at
E18.5/P1 (onset of subplate neuron cell death) and P3/P7 (peak of cell
death) time points (see Materials and Methods). Mean cells per section
is plotted ±SD. BrdU-immunopositive subplate neuron number and
ISEL-positive cell death are not significantly different between
knock-out and wild-type mice at any age.
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It is conceivable that BrdU birth dating is not precise enough to
detect small differences in subplate neuron death. In view of this
concern, dying cells were also examined directly, by means of in
situ end labeling of sections adjacent to those that were BrdU
labeled, and with double labeling (Fig.
9B,C,E,F,H,I).
ISEL-positive cells in the subplate can be detected initially at E18.5,
and they reach a peak frequency during the first postnatal week (Fig. 10), when the number of BrdU-labeled cells per section has begun to
decrease dramatically. Cells in the subplate, double labeled for ISEL
and BrdU, could be found occasionally (Fig. 9C,I,
asterisk), but as expected they are quite rare and therefore
double-labeled cells were not quantified. The time course and numbers
of ISEL-labeled cells in the p75NTR knock-out mice did not differ
significantly from wild-type (Fig. 10), again confirming that subplate
neuron death is not detectably altered in the p75NTR knock-out mice
using this independent method. In retrospect, this conclusion is
entirely consistent with the recent observation that subplate neurons
in vivo are known to express the neurotrophin-selective
receptors, TrkB and TrkC, in addition to p75NTR, and TrkC can
also support the survival of purified subplate neurons in
vitro in the absence of p75NTR signaling (DeFreitas et al., 2001
;
DeFreitas, McQuillen, and Shatz, unpublished observations). Thus,
premature subplate neuron cell death does not explain the disruption of
visual thalamocortical innervation in p75NTR knock-out mice.
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DISCUSSION |
Here we have considered the effects of p75NTR expression and
signaling on pioneer subplate neurons, and consequently, in the formation of area-specific thalamocortical connections. Our
observations point to a crucial early function for p75NTR in regulating
morphology of subplate growth cones. Furthermore, our results argue
that this early, selective subplate defect in p75NTR knock-out mice leads to impairment of subsequent formation of connections between LGN
and visual cortex. We have confirmed that subplate neurons express
p75NTR (Allendoerfer et al., 1990
) in a gradient (Mackarehtschian et
al., 1999
) and extended these observations to demonstrate that a
gradient of expression is maintained from the time that subplate neurons become postmitotic throughout the period of thalamocortical pathway formation and is not the result of a maturational gradient. Consistent with this p75NTR gradient, thalamocortical projections from
LGN to primary visual cortex are reduced in mice lacking p75NTR
expression. In 48% of p75NTR knock-out mice, the projection is
severely reduced or absent, whereas connections to somatosensory and
auditory cortex are normal. These results provide strong evidence in
favor of an early requirement for subplate neurons in the formation of
connections between thalamus and visual cortex.
Given recent results demonstrating a role for p75NTR in supporting the
survival of subplate neurons in vitro (DeFreitas et al.,
2001
), we initially hypothesized that p75NTR regulates the survival of
subplate neurons in vivo. However, no significant differences in the time course or amount of cell death could be detected between wild-type and mutant littermates, as estimated using
two independent methods: BrdU birth dating and ISEL. In retrospect,
this conclusion is consistent with the fact that subplate neurons also
express mRNA for TrkB and TrkC (DeFreitas et al., 2001
). In
vitro, TrkC can support subplate neuron survival even in the
absence of p75NTR signaling (DeFreitas, McQuillen, and Shatz,
unpublished observations), and our results here suggest that the same
is true in vivo. This analysis is important in that premature subplate neuron cell death cannot explain our observations of
diminished thalamocortical innervation.
p75NTR regulates subplate growth cone morphology
and pathfinding
Remarkably, p75NTR regulates subplate process formation in
vitro and growth cone morphology in vivo. In
vitro, NT3 binding to p75NTR stimulates neurite outgrowth and
filopodial formation in immunopurified subplate neurons, implying a
role for this signaling pathway in axon extension and pathfinding.
In vivo, subplate growth cones derived from visual cortex in
p75NTR knock-out mice are smaller and have significantly fewer
filopodia than those of wild-type mice. Despite stimulation of neurite
outgrowth in vitro, the early subplate projection did not
appear stunted or hypoplastic in p75NTR knock-out mice. This differs
from observations in the peripheral nerves (Yamashita et al., 1999
;
Bentley and Lee, 2000
), where sensory axon outgrowth is reduced.
However, Schwann cell migration is also dependent on p75NTR signaling
(Bentley and Lee, 2000
); thus the reduced outgrowth of these peripheral
nerves may be a secondary effect.
The data presented here suggest a novel role for p75NTR in subplate
growth cone morphology and function. During development, subplate axons
are the first to navigate the intracortical pathway to the internal
capsule (McConnell et al., 1989
; De Carlos and O'Leary, 1992
). As with
pioneer neurons in other systems, early projecting subplate neurons
manifest significantly larger and more complex growth cones than later
projecting cortical neurons (Kim et al., 1991
), implying that they are
sampling the environment to make navigation decisions (Raper et al.,
1983
; Bovolenta and Mason, 1987
). The smaller growth cones with fewer
filopodia observed in p75NTR knock-out mice might be expected to
decrease the fidelity of axon pathfinding and result in errors. Indeed
this was observed in the p75NTR knock-out mice, with a fraction of
subplate axons projecting ectopically into rostral neocortical regions.
However, most subplate axons project normally to the internal capsule. In vitro analysis of filopodial formation and neurite
outgrowth demonstrates that the entire population of p75NTR-expressing
subplate neurons is affected by ligand binding to p75NTR.
Immunopurified subplate neurons used for this analysis represent all
neocortical cells expressing p75NTR, including subplate neurons rostral
to visual cortex. However, in p75NTR knock-out mice, detectable
pathfinding errors were observed in only a fraction of the neurons
coming from caudal cortex, neurons that express the highest levels of p75NTR in wild-type mice. This partial effect is not surprising, because many examples of axon guidance, including guidance to and away
from the ventral midline, can and almost always do involve redundancy
(Tessier-Lavigne and Goodman, 1996
). These axons may use multiple
guidance cues, and loss of any one mechanism often has only a partial
effect. It should be noted that because the large majority of subplate
axons reach the internal capsule, they are still able to respond to
long-range directional cues. Nevertheless, the diminished growth cone
complexity in the p75NTR knock-out mice implies that subplate axons may
have difficulty recognizing local cues at the internal capsule. This
role for p75NTR in regulating growth cone morphology represents a novel
function for p75NTR beyond its more familiar role in axon outgrowth
(Yamashita et al., 1999
; Bentley and Lee, 2000
).
Possible mechanism of p75NTR regulation of subplate
growth cones
It is well established that p75NTR can influence process formation
in neurons. Ligand binding to p75NTR stimulates neurite outgrowth in
cultured ciliary and hippocampal neurons (Brann et al., 1999
; Yamashita
et al., 1999
). In contrast, p75NTR activation in cultured sympathetic
neurons (Kohn et al., 1999
) and adult sensory neurons (Kimpinski et
al., 1999
) inhibits neurite outgrowth. The mechanism of p75NTR
modulation of neurite outgrowth appears to involve the Rho-family
GTPase, RhoA (Yamashita et al., 1999
). p75NTR expression activates RhoA
in a ligand-independent manner, and ligand binding to p75NTR inhibits
this activation (Yamashita et al., 1999
). RhoA activation in turn
decreases neurite outgrowth (Ruchhoeft et al., 1999
; Yamashita et al.,
1999
; Shamah et al., 2001
) through regulation of the actin cytoskeleton
(Hall, 1998
). Our results are consistent with this model because NT3
binding to p75NTR, which would be predicted to inactivate Rho,
increases neurite outgrowth in cultured subplate neurons. In addition
to these effects on neurite outgrowth in vitro, we observed
abnormal growth cone morphology and ectopic projections of subplate
axons in p75NTR knock-out mice. Similar changes in pathfinding and
morphology, rather than axon elongation per se, have been observed
after transfection of a dominant-negative isoform of RhoA (dn-RhoA)
into Xenopus retinal ganglion cells (Ruchhoeft et al.,
1999
). This study noted "thickened filopodia with a balled
appearance" of growth cones expressing dn-RhoA and pathfinding errors
of retinal ganglion cells as they projected to tectum (Ruchhoeft et
al., 1999
). Growth cones that expressed dn-RhoA continued to grow along
the surface of the tectum and beyond, rather than turning into their
tectal target. This combination of abnormal growth cone morphology,
with some axons growing beyond the point at which they should turn, is
what we see in p75NTR knock-out mice. Because p75NTR activates Rho in
the absence of ligand, these observations suggest the model that p75NTR
regulates subplate axon pathfinding through ligand-independent activation of RhoA, rather than via ligand-dependent inactivation.
Consequences of altered subplate axon pathfinding for formation of
thalamocortical projections
We show that lack of p75NTR leads to diminished thalamocortical
innervation restricted to the LGN. How might lack of p75NTR expression
result in such a restricted defect in the geniculocortical projection?
Because neither LGN nor any other neurons belonging to the sensory
thalamic nuclei of the lateral dorsal thalamus ever express detectable
levels of mRNA for p75NTR, the deficit cannot be attributable to a
direct effect on LGN neurons themselves. Other neurons that express
p75NTR include the reticular thalamus, which makes early, transient
projections both throughout cortex and to dorsal thalamus (Adams and
Baker, 1995
), and the basal forebrain, which sends axonal projections
throughout the neocortex (Mechawar et al., 2000
). However, given the
uniform expression of p75NTR in these neurons and their homogeneous
projections, it is extremely unlikely that they could account for the
selective loss of projections from LGN but not those of other thalamic
nuclei. Rather, it is most likely that the abnormality in growth cone morphology and pathfinding by caudal subplate neurons located underneath forming visual cortex leads to the defect in the
geniculocortical projection.
The question of what happens to missing LGN axons in knock-out animals
is not definitively answered by our analysis. We know from early
anterograde DiI labeling that LGN axons follow the normal trajectory to
the internal capsule. We never observed misrouted LGN axons, nor were
any LGN neurons retrogradely labeled with dye placed in auditory
cortex. Thus we must conclude that LGN fibers project along their
normal course, but a reduced number come to innervate visual cortex.
Transneuronal transport of 3H-proline at a later age
demonstrates that visual cortex is not spatially contracted or
ectopically located, again arguing that there are not major pathfinding
errors of LGN axons. However, we cannot rule out the possibility that a
minority of LGN axons makes a transient, early misprojection.
The low-rostral to high-caudal p75NTR expression gradient suggested the
possibility that p75NTR itself functions as a gradient guidance cue for
thalamic neurons analogous to ephrins in the tectum (Nakamoto et al.,
1996
; Tessier-Lavigne and Goodman, 1996
). A related possibility is that
p75NTR acts to specify cortical cell fate, in which case its absence
would be manifested by alterations in the expression of area-specific
genes. In both cases, loss of p75NTR expression would alter the spatial
distribution of cortical areas. However, the absence of an ectopic
geniculocortical projection as well as the normal size and position of
visual cortex in knock-out mice discounts these possibilities.
Our data are most consistent with a model in which subplate neurons are
required to pioneer the pathway from cortex into the internal capsule,
where they must interact with growing thalamic axons, or some
intermediate target, for the subsequent successful formation of the
thalamocortical projection. Although all subplate neurons examined
in vitro respond to p75NTR signaling, and all subplate
growth cones from caudal cortex in the knock-out manifest striking
abnormalities, many subplate axons project into the internal capsule. Subsequently, the entire projection from LGN to visual cortex is diminished as assessed by transneuronal transport. In younger
mice, almost half of mice studied had greatly reduced (<5% of LGN
area labeled) or absent visual thalamocortical innervation, indicating
a profound disruption of visual cortical innervation. This observation
suggests that the abnormal thalamocortical projection results from more
than simply mistargeted subplate axons. Subplate growth cones in p75NTR
knock-out mice must be functionally as well as morphologically
defective. Many previous studies have shown that the growth cones of
thalamic axons and those of subplate neurons are located adjacent to
each other in the internal capsule (McConnell et al., 1989
;
De Carlos and O'Leary, 1992
; Catalano et al., 1996
; Molnar
et al., 1998a
; Auladell et al., 2000
). It has been proposed that there
are direct interactions between the two sets of growth cones in the
internal capsule (Molnár and Blakemore, 1995
). The deficit in
geniculocortical projection to visual cortex could arise directly from
an abnormality within subplate neurons, arguing strongly for a direct
role for pioneer subplate neurons in controlling subsequent thalamic
axon pathfinding.
A similar conclusion was reached recently in an analysis of Tbr1
knock-out mice, where thalamocortical and corticothalamic connections
are completely absent (Hevner et al., 2001
). Tbr1, like p75NTR, is
expressed in subplate neurons; however, unlike p75NTR, Tbr1 is also
expressed in all cortical layers, as well as in many thalamic regions
(Hevner et al., 2001
). Moreover, the cortical plate is severely
diminished in the Tbr1 but not p75NTR knock-outs. Consequently the
failure of thalamic axons to leave the diencephalon in the Tbr1
knock-out mice, although consistent with a requirement for subplate
axons, could also be caused by loss of pathfinding cues in these
Tbr1-expressing cells in the thalamus or by cues provided by the
later-growing cortical plate axons. Mice lacking expression of the
nuclear orphan receptor COUP-TF1 also fail to develop projections from
thalamus to cortex (Zhou et al., 1999
). However, the pioneer subplate
neuron projection to the internal capsule appeared entirely normal in
the COUP-TF1 mice (Zhou et al., 1999
). Finally, mice lacking expression
of sema6A develop a selective defect in thalamic innervation of caudal neocortex, with normal projection to rostral neocortex (Leighton et
al., 2001
), much like the selective defect in p75NTR knock-out mice.
However in these mice, thalamocortical axons fail to turn up in the
internal capsule and never reach subplate axons. Thus these studies do
not provide conclusive evidence that subplate neurons are necessary for
thalamocortical development.
In p75NTR knock-out mice, most aspects of early cortical development
are normal, including corticogenesis, initial thalamic pathfinding,
subplate generation, and cell death. Early subplate axon outgrowth
appears normal. Thus with the exception of a selective defect in
p75NTR-expressing subplate growth cones, the normal environment through
which thalamic axons must navigate is preserved. Although the altered
growth cone morphology is striking and fully penetrant, only a fraction
of labeled subplate axons from caudal cortex appear to be mistargeted.
Subsequently, we identify a significant and selective decrease in
formation of connections from LGN to visual cortex, whereas innervation
of auditory and somatosensory cortex appears normal. The coincidence of
pathfinding abnormalities in visual subplate and diminished innervation
of visual cortex by LGN axons suggests that normal subplate axons are
required for the successful formation of area-specific thalamocortical connections. Our present results are unusual in that they argue that
p75NTR functions in a novel way in subplate neurons, that is, in growth
cone morphology and function rather than in axon extension or neuronal survival.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 6, 2001; revised Jan. 18, 2002; accepted Feb. 22, 2002.
This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of
Health (NIH EY02858) (C.J.S.), the Pediatric Scientist Development Program (NIH K12HD00850), and the University of California San Francisco Child Health Research Center, National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development Grant HD28825-07 (P.S.M.), and National
Eye Institute Grant EY06602 (M.F.D.). We thank Cynthia Cowdrey
for assistance with preparing histological sections, Denis Escontrias
for assistance with mouse breeding and animal care, Louis Reichardt for
the generous gift of Rex antibody, and Gene Huh for help designing
primers and cloning neurotrophin receptor cDNAs and in
situ hybridization.
Correspondence should be addressed to Patrick S. McQuillen, University
of California San Francisco Medical Center, Box 0106, Department of
Pediatrics, Room M680, 505 Parnassus Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94143. E-mail: psmcq{at}itsa.ucsf.edu.
 |
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