Anatomic and molecular development of corticostriatal projection neurons in mice.

Cereb Cortex

Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology and Harvard Stem Cell Institute, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA.

Published: February 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • CStrPN are crucial neurons that connect the neocortex to striatal regions, playing a major role in motor control and are linked to diseases like Huntington's and cerebral palsy.
  • Their development is not well understood, but a specific type called CStrPNi is particularly interesting because it displays characteristics of both callosal and corticofugal projection neurons.
  • This study focuses on the development of CStrPNi in mice, examining their birth, growth, projection patterns, and the molecular factors that influence their identity as specific neuron subtypes.

Article Abstract

Corticostriatal projection neurons (CStrPN) project from the neocortex to ipsilateral and contralateral striata to control and coordinate motor programs and movement. They are clinically important as the predominant cortical population that degenerates in Huntington's disease and corticobasal ganglionic degeneration, and their injury contributes to multiple forms of cerebral palsy. Together with their well-studied functions in motor control, these clinical connections make them a functionally, behaviorally, and clinically important population of neocortical neurons. Little is known about their development. "Intratelencephalic" CStrPN (CStrPNi), projecting to the contralateral striatum, with their axons fully within the telencephalon (intratelencephalic), are a major population of CStrPN. CStrPNi are of particular interest developmentally because they share hodological and axon guidance characteristics of both callosal projection neurons (CPN) and corticofugal projection neurons (CFuPN); CStrPNi send axons contralaterally before descending into the contralateral striatum. The relationship of CStrPNi development to that of broader CPN and CFuPN populations remains unclear; evidence suggests that CStrPNi might be evolutionary "hybrids" between CFuPN and deep layer CPN-in a sense "chimeric" with both callosal and corticofugal features. Here, we investigated the development of CStrPNi in mice-their birth, maturation, projections, and expression of molecular developmental controls over projection neuron subtype identity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3888374PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhs342DOI Listing

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