Development of the calcium‐binding proteins parvalbumin and calbindin in monkey striate cortex
- 22 May 1991
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 307 (4), 626-646
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.903070409
Abstract
The development of immunoreactivity for the calcium‐binding proteins parvalbumin (PV) and calbindin‐D28K (Cal) was studied in Macaca nemestrina striate, cortex from fetal (F) 60 days to postnatal (P) 5 + years. We correlated changes in PV and Cal staining patterns with the well‐documented developmental sequence for primate striate cortex neuron generation and maturation, synaptogenesis, and thalamocortical axon interactions in an attempt to deduce a functional role for these proteins. Our major finding is that Cal and PV have diametrically opposed developmental patterns except in layer 1. At F60 days both are present only in neurons of layer 1 and the number of labeled cell bodies and processes increases up to F125 days. Almost all Cal+ and PV+ cells in layer 1 disappear by P12 weeks. Cal is present by F113 days in pyramidal and stellate neurons, particularly layers 4–6. The number and staining density of cells in layers 2–6 increases up to birth and then both decline by P9–12 weeks. Supragranular layers show a second increase in Cal labeling from P20–36 weeks, and then there is a slow decline to the adult pattern which is reached by P1–2 years. Cell bodies in layers 4A, 4Cα, and deep 4Cβ are heavily Cal+ during pre‐and early post‐natal periods, but upper 4Cβ remains unlabeled. PV is not seen until F155–162 days in layers 2–6. Large stellate and a few pyramidal cells appear first in layers 5/6 and 4Cα, but PV + stellate neurons are found in all layers except 4Cβ by P6 weeks. Layer 4Cβ contains a few PV+ cell bodies at P3 weeks, and light neuropile staining at P6 weeks, but then PV labeling rapidly increases so that by P12 weeks the density of 4Cβ exceeds that of 4Cα. Striate cortex has an adult pattern of cell number and neuropile density by P20 weeks. These developmental patterns suggest that the highest density of Cal cell body staining does not correlate with synaptogenesis, or the postnatal critical period of visually driven, binocular interactions. Rather Cal appears when lateral geniculate axons arrive in cortex, persists over the entire span of thalamocortical interactions, and disappears during the decline of cortical plasticity. The appearance of PV is highly correlated with the onset of complex visually driven activity at birth, while both the number of PV+ cell bodies and the density of PV+ neuropile reach adult levels coincident with the completion of thalamocortical connections.Keywords
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