|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Neurovascular congruence during cerebral cortical development.

First Author  Stubbs D Year  2009
Journal  Cereb Cortex Volume  19 Suppl 1
Pages  i32-41 PubMed ID  19386634
Mgi Jnum  J:252937 Mgi Id  MGI:6099786
Doi  10.1093/cercor/bhp040 Citation  Stubbs D, et al. (2009) Neurovascular congruence during cerebral cortical development. Cereb Cortex 19 Suppl 1:i32-41
abstractText  There is evidence for interaction between the developing circulatory and nervous systems. Blood vessels provide a supporting niche in regions of adult neurogenesis. Here we present a systematic analysis of vascular development in the embryonic murine cortex and demonstrate that dividing cells, including Tbr2-positive intermediate progenitor cells, are closer to the vasculature than expected from a random distribution. To examine whether neurites of the newly generated embryonic neurons find blood vessels as an attractive and permissive substrate, we overlayed green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labeled dissociated cortical progenitors on embryonic organotypic cortical slice cultures with labeled vasculature. Our observations of neurites extending toward and along labeled blood vessels support the notion of vascular-neuronal interactions. The altered cortical layering had no obvious effect on the vascular patterns within the cortical plate (CP) in shaking rat Kawasaki (SRK) and the reeler mutant mouse at the ages studied (E19 and P3). It appears that similarly to other neurogenic regions in the adult, the embryonic "vascular niche" might influence neural progenitor cells during telencephalic neurogenesis, neuronal migration, and neurite extension, but the laminar phenotype of cell classes within the CP has limited influence on the developing vasculature.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

3 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression