Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Anatomy of the isolated area dentata grown in the rat anterior eye chamber
View through CrossRef
AbstractWe used the intraocular transplantation technique to test the developmental potential of isolated, fetal area dentata, and to help define the determinants of such critical aspects of brain development as cell arrangements, dendritic arborization, axon growth, synaptogenesis, and connectional specificity. Fetal hippocampal formations were removed from embryos of 19 to 20 days of embryonic age. A region, termed area dentata, was dissected from the hippocampal formation. This region included the anlage of the dentate gyrus, the hilus, and the medial regio inferior. Areae dentatae were transplanted into the anterior eye chamber of isogenic, adult rats. The growth and vascularization of area dentata transplants were monitored over the first 2 months in oculo. From 2 to 7 months after transplantation host animals were killed and the area dentata transplants were examined with a variety of histological techniques. The cytoarchitectonics of a great majority of the transplants were highly reminiscent of area dentata in situ. A typical morphogenetic outcome included tightly packed, continuous, C‐shaped sheets of granule cells with mossy fibers which made contact with the proximal dendrites of a segregated group of dispersed hilar cells and a loosely packed layer of pyramidal cells. The axons of pyramidal and hilar cells, in turn, provided the major innervation of the granule cell dendrites. The granule cell dendritic spine density was nearly normal, and synapses were common in the granule cell neuropil. Very little innervation of the transplant was found to originate from the axons of the ciliary or trigeminal ganglia which innervate the host iris and enter the transplant. Sympathetic fibers from the host iris innervate the transplant in a reproducible and organotypic fashion although the degree of innervation is less than the in situ noradrenergic innervation of area dentata. Few Timm‐positive fibers of the transplant were found to leave the transplant and enter the host iris. Area dentata transplants had several features which were different from their in situ counterparts. These differences included less expansive granule cell dendrites, extensive presence of fibrous astrocytes, pyramidal cells with reduced kainic acid sensitivity, hypervascularized neuropil, and transformation of peripheral adrenergic fiber morphology to one of central characteristics.Thus, pieces of isolated area dentata display a great self‐developing capacity, in terms of cellular and afferent organization, both of which follow “rules” present in situ. A powerful capacity for intrinsic and appropriate innervation of area dentata is apparent in the face of a total lack of normal extrinsic afferents and an availability of extrinsic but inappropriate sources of innervation. This initial description of isolated area dentata organization in oculo is meant to lay the groundwork for experimental investigations into the regulatory mechanisms governing morphogenesis and afferent organization.
Title: Anatomy of the isolated area dentata grown in the rat anterior eye chamber
Description:
AbstractWe used the intraocular transplantation technique to test the developmental potential of isolated, fetal area dentata, and to help define the determinants of such critical aspects of brain development as cell arrangements, dendritic arborization, axon growth, synaptogenesis, and connectional specificity.
Fetal hippocampal formations were removed from embryos of 19 to 20 days of embryonic age.
A region, termed area dentata, was dissected from the hippocampal formation.
This region included the anlage of the dentate gyrus, the hilus, and the medial regio inferior.
Areae dentatae were transplanted into the anterior eye chamber of isogenic, adult rats.
The growth and vascularization of area dentata transplants were monitored over the first 2 months in oculo.
From 2 to 7 months after transplantation host animals were killed and the area dentata transplants were examined with a variety of histological techniques.
The cytoarchitectonics of a great majority of the transplants were highly reminiscent of area dentata in situ.
A typical morphogenetic outcome included tightly packed, continuous, C‐shaped sheets of granule cells with mossy fibers which made contact with the proximal dendrites of a segregated group of dispersed hilar cells and a loosely packed layer of pyramidal cells.
The axons of pyramidal and hilar cells, in turn, provided the major innervation of the granule cell dendrites.
The granule cell dendritic spine density was nearly normal, and synapses were common in the granule cell neuropil.
Very little innervation of the transplant was found to originate from the axons of the ciliary or trigeminal ganglia which innervate the host iris and enter the transplant.
Sympathetic fibers from the host iris innervate the transplant in a reproducible and organotypic fashion although the degree of innervation is less than the in situ noradrenergic innervation of area dentata.
Few Timm‐positive fibers of the transplant were found to leave the transplant and enter the host iris.
Area dentata transplants had several features which were different from their in situ counterparts.
These differences included less expansive granule cell dendrites, extensive presence of fibrous astrocytes, pyramidal cells with reduced kainic acid sensitivity, hypervascularized neuropil, and transformation of peripheral adrenergic fiber morphology to one of central characteristics.
Thus, pieces of isolated area dentata display a great self‐developing capacity, in terms of cellular and afferent organization, both of which follow “rules” present in situ.
A powerful capacity for intrinsic and appropriate innervation of area dentata is apparent in the face of a total lack of normal extrinsic afferents and an availability of extrinsic but inappropriate sources of innervation.
This initial description of isolated area dentata organization in oculo is meant to lay the groundwork for experimental investigations into the regulatory mechanisms governing morphogenesis and afferent organization.
Related Results
Runahead threads
Runahead threads
Los temas de investigación sobre multithreading han ganado mucho interés en la arquitectura de computadores con la aparición de procesadores multihilo y multinucleo. Los procesador...
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
1.Effect of chronic haloperidol treatment on D‐2 receptors labelled by (3H)‐spiperone in homogenates of rat corpus striatum. A. L. Gundlach, D. J. de Vries and P. M. Beart2.The eff...
Retinitis Pigmentosa
Retinitis Pigmentosa
In studying the cases with typical and atypical pigmentary degeneration of the retina we strived to analyse in the clinical material all ophthalmoscopic and ocular changes together...
Stability of anterior segments in patients with moderate and high myopia one year after SMILE
Stability of anterior segments in patients with moderate and high myopia one year after SMILE
Abstract
Background: SMILE is one of the most leading-edge corneal refractive surgery.In our study, we aim to investigate the stability of anterior segments in patients wit...
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
14th Annual Meeting, December 1980, Canberra1. Effect of dexamethasone on pineal β‐adrenoceptors. C. A. Maxwell, A. Foldes, N. T. Hinks and R. M. Hoskinson2. A clinicopathological ...
History of anatomy and its involvement with medical science and practice: Historical review
History of anatomy and its involvement with medical science and practice: Historical review
The medical practice starts from Patient’s discomfort in his body structures due to distortion in morphology. This is located and examined by clinician so, medical practice and Ana...
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AUSTRALASIAN SOCIETY OF CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGISTS
1. The development of the prejunctional receptor hypothesis. M.W. McCulloch, M.J. Rand and D. F. Story2. Adrenoceptor‐ and cholinoceptor‐mediated modulation of transmitter release ...
Expression and characterization of rat kallikrein-binding protein in Escherichia coli
Expression and characterization of rat kallikrein-binding protein in Escherichia coli
Rat kallikrein-binding protein is a novel serine-proteinase inhibitor that forms a covalent complex with tissue kallikrein. We have purified rat kallikrein-binding protein and clon...

