Different Types of Cerebellar GABAergic Interneurons Originate from a Common Pool of Multipotent Progenitor Cells
Open Access
- 8 November 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 26 (45), 11682-11694
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.3656-06.2006
Abstract
Different cerebellar phenotypes are generated according to a precise spatiotemporal schedule, in which projection neurons precede local interneurons. Glutamatergic neurons develop from the rhombic lip, whereas GABAergic neurons originate from the ventricular neuroepithelium. Progenitors in these germinal layers are committed toward specific phenotypes already at early ontogenetic stages. GABAergic interneurons are thought to derive from a subset of ventricular zone cells, which migrate in the white matter and proliferate up to postnatal life. During this period, different interneuron categories are produced according to an inside-out sequence, from the deep nuclei to the molecular layer (we show here that nuclear interneurons are also born during late embryonic and early postnatal days, after glutamatergic and GABAergic projection neurons). To ask whether distinct interneuron phenotypes share common precursors or derive from multiple fate-restricted progenitors, we examined the behavior of embryonic and postnatal rat cerebellar cells heterotopically/heterochronically transplanted to syngenic hosts. In all conditions, donor cells achieved a high degree of integration in the cerebellar cortex and deep nuclei and acquired GABAergic interneuron phenotypes appropriate for the host age and engraftment site. Therefore, contrary to other cerebellar types, which derive from dedicated precursors, GABAergic interneurons are produced by a common pool of progenitors, which maintain their full developmental potentialities up to late ontogenetic stages and adopt mature identities in response to local instructive cues. In this way, the numbers and types of inhibitory interneurons can be set by spatiotemporally patterned signals to match the functional requirements of developing cerebellar circuits.Keywords
This publication has 64 references indexed in Scilit:
- Math1 Expression Redefines the Rhombic Lip Derivatives and Reveals Novel Lineages within the Brainstem and CerebellumNeuron, 2005
- Math1 Is Expressed in Temporally Discrete Pools of Cerebellar Rhombic-Lip Neural ProgenitorsNeuron, 2005
- Potential of progenitors from postnatal cerebellar neuroepithelium and white matter: lineage specified vs. multipotent fateMolecular and Cellular Neuroscience, 2004
- Morphological classification of the rat lateral cerebellar nuclear neurons by principal component analysisJournal of Comparative Neurology, 2002
- Progenitors in the postnatal cerebellar white matter are antigenically heterogeneousJournal of Comparative Neurology, 2002
- Vertebrate neural cell-fate determination: Lessons from the retinaNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2001
- Developmental fates and migratory pathways of dividing progenitors in the postnatal rat cerebellumJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1996
- Generation of Cerebellar Interneurons from Dividing Progenitors in White MatterNeuron, 1996
- A short term analysis of the behaviour of conditionally immortalized neuronal progenitors and primary neuroepithelial cells implanted into the fetal rat brainDevelopmental Brain Research, 1994
- Reinnervation of cerebellar Purkinje cells by climbing fibres surviving a subtotal lesion of the inferior olive in the adult rat. I. Development of new collateral branches and terminal plexusesJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1991