Abstract

Neurons of the mammalian cerebral cortex comprise two broad classes: pyramidal neurons, which project to distant targets, and the inhibitory nonpyramidal cells, the cortical interneurons. Pyramidal neurons are generated in the germinal ventricular zone, which lines the lateral ventricles, and migrate along the processes of radial glial cells to their positions in the developing cortex in an 'inside-out' sequence. The GABA-containing nonpyramidal cells originate for the most part in the ganglionic eminence, the primordium of the basal ganglia in the ventral telencephalon. These cells follow tangential migratory routes to enter the cortex and are in close association with the corticofugal axonal system. Once they enter the cortex, they move towards the ventricular zone, possibly to obtain positional information, before they migrate radially in the direction of the pial surface to take up their positions in the developing cortex. The mechanisms that guide interneurons throughout these long and complex migratory routes are currently under investigation.

Highlights

  • The cerebral cortex is by far the largest part of the brain of mammals containing about half of the total number of neurons

  • The subventricular zone (SVZ) expands greatly in late gestation and in early postnatal life as the ventricular zone (VZ) disappears. According to this conventional scheme of cortical development, radial glial cells serve as a scaffold to support and direct the migration of young neurons from their origin in the VZ to their positions in the cortical plate (CP) [9]

  • The study of cell lineages in the cerebral cortex has become possible with the use of recombinant retroviruses [14,15]

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Summary

The origin of cortical neurons

Presented at the IV International UNESCO Course on “What the Developing Cerebral Cortex Tells About the Adult Cortex (and Vice Versa)”, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil, December 3-7, 2001

Introduction
Development of neuronal lineages
VZ VZ
Findings
LGE MGE

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