Navigating Intermediate Targets: The Nervous System Midline

  1. Yimin Zou2
  1. 1Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP), Dr. Bohrgasse 7, A-1030 Vienna, Austria
  2. 2Division of Biological Sciences, Section of Neurobiology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0366
  1. Correspondence: dickson{at}imp.ac.at and yzou{at}ucsd.edu

Abstract

In a bilaterally symmetric animal, the midline plays a key role in directing axon growth during wiring of the nervous system. Midline cells provide a variety of guidance cues for growing axons, to which different types of axons respond in different ways and at different times. For some axons, the midline is an intermediate target. They first seek it out, but then move on towards their final targets on the opposite side. For others, the midline is a repulsive barrier that keeps them on their own side of the midline. And for many of these axons the midline provides signals that guide them along specific lateral pathways or up and down the longitudinal axis.

Footnotes

  • Editors: Marc Tessier-Lavigne and Alex L. Kolodkin

  • Additional Perspectives on Neuronal Guidance available at www.cshperspectives.org



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      1. Cold Spring Harb. Perspect. Biol. 2: a002055 Copyright © 2010 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; all rights reserved

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