Stockx EM, Anderson CR, Murphy SM, Cooke IR, Berger PJ
The development of descending projections from the brainstem to the spinal cord in the fetal sheep.
BMC Neurosci. 2007 Jun 18;8(1):40.
ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Although the fetal sheep is a favoured model for studying the ontogeny of physiological control systems, there are no descriptions of the timing of arrival of the projections of supraspinal origin that regulate somatic and visceral function. In the early development of birds and mammals, spontaneous motor activity is generated within spinal circuits, but as development proceeds, a distinct change occurs in spontaneous motor patterns that is dependent on the presence of intact, descending inputs to the spinal cord. In the fetal sheep, this change occurs at approximately 65 days gestation (G65), so we therefore hypothesised that spinally-projecting axons from the neurons responsible for transforming fetal behaviour must arrive at the spinal cord level shortly before G65. Accordingly we aimed to identify the brainstem neurons that send projections to the spinal cord in the mature sheep fetus at G140 (term = G147) with retrograde tracing, and thus to establish whether any projections from the brainstem were absent from the spinal cord at G55, an age prior to when the marked change in fetal motor activity has occurred. RESULTS: At G140, CTB labelled cells were found within and around nuclei in the reticular formation of the medulla and pons, within the vestibular nucleus, raphe complex, red nucleus, and the nucleus of the solitary tract. This pattern of labelling is similar to that previously reported in other species. The distribution of CTB labelled neurons in the G55 fetus was similar to that of the G140 fetus. CONCLUSIONS: The brainstem nuclei that contain neurons which project axons to the spinal cord in the fetal sheep are the same as in other mammalian species. All projections present in the mature fetus at G140 have already arrived at the spinal cord by approximately one third of the way through gestation. The demonstration that the neurons responsible for transforming fetal behaviour in early ontogeny have already reached the spinal cord by G55, an age well before the change in motor behaviour occurs, suggests that the projections do not become fully functional until well after their arrival at the spinal cord. [Abstract/Link to Full Text]
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2007
(20)
-
▼
July
(20)
- From perception to action: phase-locked gamma osci...
- Neuronal expression of muskelin in the rodent cent...
- Requirement of aggregation propensity of Alzheimer...
- Sensitization of spinal cord nociceptive neurons w...
- Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 efficiently bi...
- Extracellular ascorbate modulates glutamate dynami...
- Asymmetric lateral inhibitory neural activity in t...
- Reduced expression of TAC1, PENK and SOCS2 in Hcrt...
- Metabolic compartmentalization in the human cortex...
- Differential development of neuronal physiological...
- Central administration of dipeptides, beta-alanyl-...
- Scale-invariance of receptive field properties in ...
- Functional distribution of Ca2+-coupled P2 puriner...
- The development of descending projections from the...
- Selective stimulation of catecholamine release fro...
- Cocaine reward and locomotion stimulation in mice ...
- Discontinuing treatment for psychiatric disorders....
- An event-related functional MRI study of working m...
- Free articles on open access in The Journal of Neu...
- Free Online Full-text Articles for Neuroscience
-
▼
July
(20)
No comments:
Post a Comment