Abstract
In the present study, the expression of the HuC/D RNA-binding proteins, a marker of neurons that have left the mitotic cycle, in cells migrating from the olfactory neuroepithelium toward the telencephalon in the chick embryo was investigated by means of immunofluorescence and confocal laser microscopy. Results showed that this migratory cell population is early and massively labeled by the a-HuC/D antibody starting from the first olfactory pit stage. At this developmental stage, olfactory migratory cells appeared to be the only neuronal population that expressed the HuC/D antigens in the whole embryo. In following developmental stages, the great majority of migratory cells, the number of which increased progressively, continued to be heavily immunopositive for the a-HuC/D antibody while immunopositivity to this antibody begins to be detected in other regions of the nervous system. HuC/D immunopositivity persisted until stage 30 HH (about 6.5 days), the later developmental stage investigated in this study, when colocalization with GnRH was detected. Negativity to the anti-proliferating cell nuclear antigen (anti-PCNA) immunostaining, a marker of S-phase, showed that migratory olfactory cells have left the mitotic cycle. Altogether, these results suggest that we have identified the first population of post-mitotic neurons in the developing nervous system of the chick embryo.
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