Abstract

The architectural organization of the subpial astrocyte processes was examined near the brain surface by single immunostaining methods. The astroglial processes were stained on brain sections made parallel to the pial surface. The astroglial glial fibrillary acid protein (GFAP) antigen was used as a specific marker. We show that these subpial astrocyte processes present a well organized palisading pattern in the adult and rat spinal cord, medulla and pons. This adult astrocyte palisading pattern is compared to the palisading radial glia organization we previously demonstrated in the fetal mouse brain. The observed analogies afford a new and strong argument in favor of a derivation of the subpial astrocytes from radial glia. Double immunostaining methods, using GFAP and neurofilament antigens as glial and neuronal markers respectively, show the close relationship existing between the trajectories of axonal and glial processes. Beside the colinearity already observed between the axon trajectories and the glial palisades we demonstrate a new kind of axon/glia relationship. Axons are closely intermingled, within the palisading glial tufts, with the peripheral processes of the subpial astrocytes progessing to the pial surface. The findings suggest that fetal radial glia organization has a direct and indirect influence on the adult astroglial and perhaps the axonal pattern.

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