Abstract
Using techniques of immunoperoxidase staining of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and TUNEL labeling of fragmented DNA, we studied sites of proliferation and apoptosis in the myelencephalon, cerebellum, tectum opticum, thalamus, and hypothalamus of the Amur sturgeon (Acipenser schrenckii). We found that the processes of proliferation and apoptosis are maintained in the brain of 3-year-old sturgeon individuals; the ratio of these processes in different cerebral regions varied significantly. The maximum intensity of proliferative activity was found in the periventricular zone of the myelencephalon (proliferation index, on average, 21.0 ± 1.3%). This fact allows us to consider this cerebral region a most important zone were adult neurogenesis occurs in the sturgeon. In the medial reticular formation, dorsal thalamic nuclei, inner fibrous layer of the tectum, and lateral hypothalamus, the maximum numbers of apoptotic elements were found. Therefore, these zones in the brain of the sturgeon correspond, apparently, to the regions where postmitotic neuroblasts are localized. In sensory centers (tectum and nuclei of the V, VII, and X nerves), significantly varying ratios of intensities of proliferation and apoptosis were found; this is indicative of dissimilar rates of growth and differentiation in visual and chemosensory centers of the sturgeon brain. The high proliferative activity in sensory and motor cerebral centers of the sturgeon allows us to hypothesize that a neotenic pattern is preserved in these CNS regions of adult sturgeons over a long period after the embryogenesis has been completed.
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