Abstract

BackgroundNeurons are dynamically coupled with each other through neurite-mediated adhesion during development. Understanding the collective behavior of neurons in circuits is important for understanding neural development. While a number of genetic and activity-dependent factors regulating neuronal migration have been discovered on single cell level, systematic study of collective neuronal migration has been lacking. Various biological systems are shown to be self-organized, and it is not known if neural circuit assembly is self-organized. Besides, many of the molecular factors take effect through spatial patterns, and coupled biological systems exhibit emergent property in response to geometric constraints. How geometric constraints of the patterns regulate neuronal migration and circuit assembly of neurons within the patterns remains unexplored.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe established a two-dimensional model for studying collective neuronal migration of a circuit, with hippocampal neurons from embryonic rats on Matrigel-coated self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). When the neural circuit is subject to geometric constraints of a critical scale, we found that the collective behavior of neuronal migration is spatiotemporally coordinated. Neuronal somata that are evenly distributed upon adhesion tend to aggregate at the geometric center of the circuit, forming mono-clusters. Clustering formation is geometry-dependent, within a critical scale from 200 µm to approximately 500 µm. Finally, somata clustering is neuron-type specific, and glutamatergic and GABAergic neurons tend to aggregate homo-philically.Conclusions/SignificanceWe demonstrate self-organization of neural circuits in response to geometric constraints through spatiotemporally coordinated neuronal migration, possibly via mechanical coupling. We found that such collective neuronal migration leads to somata clustering, and mono-cluster appears when the geometric constraints fall within a critical scale. The discovery of geometry-dependent collective neuronal migration and the formation of somata clustering in vitro shed light on neural development in vivo.

Highlights

  • The brain is composed of hundreds of nuclei densely populated with neuronal somata, while the rest is packed with interconnecting neurites

  • We found that such collective neuronal migration leads to somata clustering, and mono-cluster appears when the geometric constraints fall within a critical scale

  • Neuronal migration at specific developmental stage on coated surfaces in vitro Primary hippocampal neurons from Sprague Dawely (SD) rats (See Materials and Methods for details on primary neuron culture) migrate actively on Matrigel (MG) coated gold substrates

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The brain is composed of hundreds of nuclei densely populated with neuronal somata, while the rest is packed with interconnecting neurites. A range of molecular[5] and activity-dependent[6] factors have been elucidated in regulating neuronal migration, mostly at the single cell level[7]. As neurons are dynamically connected with each other through neurite adhesion during development, the migratory behaviors of adjacent neurons within a circuit are coupled, making it a dynamic system. In this regard, systematic analysis of neuronal migration and circuit assembly has been lacking. While a number of genetic and activity-dependent factors regulating neuronal migration have been discovered on single cell level, systematic study of collective neuronal migration has been lacking. How geometric constraints of the patterns regulate neuronal migration and circuit assembly of neurons within the patterns remains unexplored

Methods
Results
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.