Abundant Occurrence of Basal Radial Glia in the Subventricular Zone of Embryonic Neocortex of a Lissencephalic Primate, the Common Marmoset Callithrix jacchus

Iva Kelava(Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics), Isabel Reillo(Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas), Ayako Murayama(Keio University), Alex T. Kalinka(Max Planck Society), Denise Stenzel(Max Planck Society), Pavel Tomančák(Max Planck Society), Fumio Matsuzaki(RIKEN Center for Computational Science), Cécile Lebrand(University of Lausanne), Erika Sasaki(Keio University), Jens C. Schwamborn(University of Münster), Hideyuki Okano(Keio University), Wieland Β. Huttner(Max Planck Society), Vı́ctor Borrell(Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas)
Cerebral Cortex
November 23, 2011
Cited by 210Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Subventricular zone (SVZ) progenitors are a hallmark of the developing neocortex. Recent studies described a novel type of SVZ progenitor that retains a basal process at mitosis, sustains expression of radial glial markers, and is capable of self-renewal. These progenitors, referred to here as basal radial glia (bRG), occur at high relative abundance in the SVZ of gyrencephalic primates (human) and nonprimates (ferret) but not lissencephalic rodents (mouse). Here, we analyzed the occurrence of bRG cells in the embryonic neocortex of the common marmoset Callithrix jacchus, a near-lissencephalic primate. bRG cells, expressing Pax6, Sox2 (but not Tbr2), glutamate aspartate transporter, and glial fibrillary acidic protein and retaining a basal process at mitosis, occur at similar relative abundance in the marmoset SVZ as in human and ferret. The proportion of progenitors in M-phase was lower in embryonic marmoset than developing ferret neocortex, raising the possibility of a longer cell cycle. Fitting the gyrification indices of 26 anthropoid species to an evolutionary model suggested that the marmoset evolved from a gyrencephalic ancestor. Our results suggest that a high relative abundance of bRG cells may be necessary, but is not sufficient, for gyrencephaly and that the marmoset's lissencephaly evolved secondarily by changing progenitor parameters other than progenitor type.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis