Abstract
Using olfactory marker protein (OMP) and neural cell adhesion molecule (N-CAM) immunohistochemistry, the present study describes development of olfactory and vomeronasal systems in pre- and postnatal opossums, Monodelphis domestica. As revealed by OMP expression, development of the main olfactory system precedes that of the vomeronasal system by 1-2 weeks. OMP is expressed throughout (homogeneously) the nerve and glomerular layers of the main (MOB) but is expressed more strongly (heterogeneously) in the anterior as compared to the posterior accessory (AOB) olfactory bulb. N-CAM expression is homogeneous in both MOB and AOB. The heterogeneity in the AOB is developmentally regulated, since in the 30-day-old AOB the expression of OMP is homogeneous, becoming heterogeneous during the second month of life. Maximal expression of N-CAM precedes maximal expression of OMP in the VNS by about 2 weeks. From 7 to 21 days of age only, there is a small population of OMP-positive, N-CAM-negative olfactory and vomeronasal axon terminals that penetrate deep into the brain parenchyma, overgrowing their normal targets in the MOB and AOB, respectively.
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