Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Dynamics of target recognition by interstitial axon branching along developing cortical axons
View through CrossRef
Corticospinal axons innervate their midbrain, hindbrain, and spinal targets by extending collateral branches interstitially along their length. To establish that the axon shaft rather than the axonal growth cone is responsible for target recognition in this system, and to characterize the dynamics of interstitial branch formation, we have studied this process in an in vivo-like setting using slice cultures from neonatal mice containing the entire pathway of corticospinal axons. Corticospinal axons labeled with the dye 1,1′-dioctodecyl- 3,3,3′,3′-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate (or Dil) were imaged using time-lapse video microscopy of their pathway overlying the basilar pons, their major hindbrain target. The axon shaft millimeters behind the growth cone exhibits several dynamic behaviors, including the de novo formation of varicosities and filopodia-like extensions, and a behavior that we term “pulsation,” which is characterized by a variable thickening and thining of short segments of the axon. An individual axon can have multiple sites of branching activity, with many of the branches being transient. These dynamic behaviors occur along the portion of the axon shaft overlying the basilar pons, but not just caudal to it. Once the collaterals extend into the pontine neuropil, they branch further in the neuropil, while the parent axon becomes quiescent. Thus, the branching activity is spatially restricted to specific portions of the axon, as well as temporally restricted to a relatively brief time window. These findings provide definitive evidence that collateral branches form de novo along corticospinal axons and establish that the process of target recognition in this system is a property of the axon shaft rather than the leading growth cone.
Title: Dynamics of target recognition by interstitial axon branching along developing cortical axons
Description:
Corticospinal axons innervate their midbrain, hindbrain, and spinal targets by extending collateral branches interstitially along their length.
To establish that the axon shaft rather than the axonal growth cone is responsible for target recognition in this system, and to characterize the dynamics of interstitial branch formation, we have studied this process in an in vivo-like setting using slice cultures from neonatal mice containing the entire pathway of corticospinal axons.
Corticospinal axons labeled with the dye 1,1′-dioctodecyl- 3,3,3′,3′-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate (or Dil) were imaged using time-lapse video microscopy of their pathway overlying the basilar pons, their major hindbrain target.
The axon shaft millimeters behind the growth cone exhibits several dynamic behaviors, including the de novo formation of varicosities and filopodia-like extensions, and a behavior that we term “pulsation,” which is characterized by a variable thickening and thining of short segments of the axon.
An individual axon can have multiple sites of branching activity, with many of the branches being transient.
These dynamic behaviors occur along the portion of the axon shaft overlying the basilar pons, but not just caudal to it.
Once the collaterals extend into the pontine neuropil, they branch further in the neuropil, while the parent axon becomes quiescent.
Thus, the branching activity is spatially restricted to specific portions of the axon, as well as temporally restricted to a relatively brief time window.
These findings provide definitive evidence that collateral branches form de novo along corticospinal axons and establish that the process of target recognition in this system is a property of the axon shaft rather than the leading growth cone.
Related Results
The Effect of Axon Resealing on Retrograde Neuronal Death after Spinal Cord Injury in Lamprey
The Effect of Axon Resealing on Retrograde Neuronal Death after Spinal Cord Injury in Lamprey
Failure of axon regeneration in the central nervous system (CNS) of mammals is due to both extrinsic inhibitory factors and to neuron-intrinsic factors. The importance of intrinsic...
Topographic specificity of corticospinal connections formed in explant coculture
Topographic specificity of corticospinal connections formed in explant coculture
ABSTRACT
The corticospinal pathway connects layer V pyramidal neurons in discrete regions of the sensorimotor cortex to topographically matching targets in the spina...
UNWANTED AXON GROWTH: PTEN AND THE SUPPRESSION OF AXON PLASTICITY IN ADULT NERVES
UNWANTED AXON GROWTH: PTEN AND THE SUPPRESSION OF AXON PLASTICITY IN ADULT NERVES
ABSTRACT
In adults, peripheral nerves comprise bundles of disseminated motor, sensory and autonomic axons that are considered stable neuroanatomi...
Bidirectional, unlike unidirectional transport, allows transporting axonal cargos against their concentration gradient
Bidirectional, unlike unidirectional transport, allows transporting axonal cargos against their concentration gradient
Abstract
Even though most axonal cargos are synthesized in the soma, the concentration of many of these cargos is larger at the presynaptic terminal than in the som...
Nell2 regulates the contralateral-versus-ipsilateral visual projection as a layer-specific positional cue
Nell2 regulates the contralateral-versus-ipsilateral visual projection as a layer-specific positional cue
SUMMARY STATEMENT
Nell2 is an ipsilateral layer-specific axon guidance cue in the visual thalamus and contributes to establishment of the eye-specific retinogenic...
Innervation of avian latissimus dorsi muscles and axonal outgrowth pattern in the posterior latissimus dorsi motor nerve during embryonic development
Innervation of avian latissimus dorsi muscles and axonal outgrowth pattern in the posterior latissimus dorsi motor nerve during embryonic development
AbstractThe distribution of the innervation to the anterior latissimus dorsi (ALD) and posterior latissimus dorsi (PLD) muscles of the chicken are described on the day of hatching ...
Nidogen/NID-1 guides regenerating motor axons in the mature nervous system
Nidogen/NID-1 guides regenerating motor axons in the mature nervous system
Abstract
Restoring function to injured axons requires not only regeneration, but also accurate guidance and synapse reformation. Our understandin...
A central role for Numb/Nbl in multiple Shh-mediated axon repulsion processes
A central role for Numb/Nbl in multiple Shh-mediated axon repulsion processes
Abstract
Sonic hedgehog (Shh) is an axon guidance molecule that can act as either a chemorepellent or a chemoattractant, depending on the neuron type and their deve...

