Abstract

The prenatal and early postnatal neurogenesis of the human climbing fibers of the lateral cerebellar hemispheres have been studied, with the rapid Golgi method, and correlated with the developmental stages of Purkinje cells. A transitional phase has been established in the neurogenesis of the human Purkinje cell between the second and third stages of Cajal. This phase coincides with the arrival of the climbing fibers. It is characterized by the reabsorption and subsequent transformation of Purkinje cell's basal dendrites into somatic spines. Following the arrival of the climbing fibers and the establishment of contacts, the Purkinje cell is progressively transformed from an immature stellate and nonoriented cell into a monopolar and spatially oriented one which acquires all of its mature morphological and functional features. The human climbing fibers arrive at the Purkinje cell plate by the 28th week of gestation and establish a transient paraganglionic plexus before contacts with these neurons can be recognized. They start to form pericellular nests by the 29th week, and by the 31st week of gestation all Purkinje cells of the lateral hemispheres have pericellular nests around their bodies. These pericellular nests are progressively and rapidly transformed into supracellular "capuchones" which themselves are also short-lived because the climbing process starts readily in them. Supracellular "capuchones" are recognized by the 34th seek and their fibrils start to climb the dendrites of Purkinje cells (young climbing phase) by the 36th week of gestation. The process of climbing the dendrites of the Purkinje cells will continue through late prenatal and early postnatal life. The human climbing fibers are distributed, in the internal granular layer, within narrow and long vertical territories which are transverse to the long axis of the follium. A single climbing fiber is (1) able to establish contacts with many Purkinje cells located within its narrow territory of distribution; (2) has a tendency to establish contacts with small groups of Purkinje cells rather than with isolate neurons; (3) able to send collaterals to several contiguous cerebellar folia; and (4) able to send collaterals to the internal granular layer and to form pericellular nests in it. The human cerebellum may be considered to be subdivided into a series of parallel, narrow, and transverse structural/functional planes, each one characterized by the distribution of a climbing fiber.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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