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RESEARCH
SUMMARY
The development of the central nervous system encompasses a
series of critical processes, including the production of
neurons from progenitor cells, the determination of discrete
neuronal phenotypes, the migration of young neurons into
appropriate positions within the brain, and the formation of
specific synaptic contacts. These processes ultimately
generate the formation of precisely wired neuronal circuits
that underlie complex behaviors. The goal of our work is to
understand how neurons in the developing cerebral cortex are
produced, assigned specific phenotypes, and wired together
into functional circuits.
TOPICS
The control of neuronal
identity
Asymmetric divisions and
neurogenesis
Neuronal migration and axon guidance
Genetic analysis of forebrain patterning
BACKGROUND
Sitting at the apex of neural processing in the mammalian
brain is the cerebral cortex, the convoluted sheet of
neurons covering the two cerebral hemispheres. Neurons
within the neocortex underlie our most sophisticated
cognitive and perceptual abilities and are thus highly
specialized for the analysis of sensory inputs or the
generation of motor outputs. The position, connectivity, and
morphology of each neuron reflects its particular function.
Although neurons in the adult brain are organized in highly
ordered and differentiated arrays, these cells arise from
dividing progenitor cells of a simple neuroepithelium in
which cells appear morphologically indistinguishable. Our
lab is interested in how diverse neuronal phenotypes are
generated from apparently homogeneous progenitors in
appropriate numbers, times, and positions during the
development of the cerebral cortex. Our studies focus on key
steps in neurogenesis including the molecular control of
cell number, the decision to generate a neuron, and cell
type specification.
The neurons of the neocortex are organized in two dimensions
relative to the cortical surface. Tangential to this
surface, different areas subserve a variety of functional
modalities. Each area is characterized by a set of
distinctive architectual features, and most importantly by
the pattern of both incoming and outgoing axonal
connections. These connections underlie the functional
specificity of neurons in each area: for example, auditory
cortex receives information that originates from neural
structures in the ear, whereas visual information is
delivered from the retina to neurons of the visual cortex.
In the perpendicular dimension, the cortex is comprised of
six sheets or layers, each of which is defined by the
density and morphology of its constituent neurons. Thus,
along a radial line through the cortex, one encounters a
variety of neurons with differing physiological properties
and axonal connections, each typical of that layer. A
general rule of thumb for projection neurons in sensory
areas of cortex is that neurons in the upper layers 2 and 3
send long-distance axons to other cortical areas, whereas
neurons in the deep layers 5 and 6 extend axons to
subcortical targets. This radial stack of neurons forms the
cortical column, a minimal unit of neurons and connections
required to analyze a small portion of the sensory
world.
Neurons of the neocortex are generated from proliferating
cells of the telencephalic ventricular zone. During the cell
cycle, the nuclei of cortical progenitor cells undergo a
series of "elevator movements" that correlate with their
progression through the cycle. During DNA synthesis, or the
S-phase of the cell cycle, nuclei occupy the outer half or
third of the ventricular zone. In G2, nuclei descend rapidly
toward the ventricular surface, where cells then complete
mitosis. Entry into the G1 phase of the cell cycle is
accompanied by an outward movement of the nucleus, as each
daughter cell prepares either to reenter the cell cycle or
exit the ventricular zone and differentiate. During
neurogenesis, the latter choice is accompanied by the
migration of the young neuron along radial glial fibers
through the cell-sparse intermediate zone (future white
matter) and into the cortical plate, which will later form
the layered adult cerebral cortex. Neurons are generated in
an orderly progression, with cells of the deepest cortical
layers born first, followed by cells of the middle and
finally the upper layers. This inside-out pattern of
neurogenesis produces neurons within a given layer that
share similar birthdays as well as common functional
properties and connectivity.
Below: Pattern of layers
in the mature cortex (left) and sequence of generation of cortical
neurons during development (right).
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