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    Wandering neuronal migration in the postnatal vertebrate forebrain

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    Authors
    Scott, Benjamin B.
    Gardner, Timothy
    Ji, Ni
    Fee, Michale S.
    Lois, Carlos
    UMass Chan Affiliations
    Lois Lab
    Neurobiology
    Document Type
    Journal Article
    Publication Date
    2012-01-25
    Keywords
    Animals
    Animals, Newborn
    Cell Movement
    Finches
    Male
    Neurons
    Prosencephalon
    Neuroscience and Neurobiology
    
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    Link to Full Text
    http://www.jneurosci.org/content/32/4/1436.full.pdf+html
    Abstract
    Most non-mammalian vertebrate species add new neurons to existing brain circuits throughout life, a process thought to be essential for tissue maintenance, repair, and learning. How these new neurons migrate through the mature brain and which cues trigger their integration within a functioning circuit is not known. To address these questions, we used two-photon microscopy to image the addition of genetically labeled newly generated neurons into the brain of juvenile zebra finches. Time-lapse in vivo imaging revealed that the majority of migratory new neurons exhibited a multipolar morphology and moved in a nonlinear manner for hundreds of micrometers. Young neurons did not use radial glia or blood vessels as a migratory scaffold; instead, cells extended several motile processes in different directions and moved by somal translocation along an existing process. Neurons were observed migrating for approximately 2 weeks after labeling injection. New neurons were observed to integrate in close proximity to the soma of mature neurons, a behavior that may explain the emergence of clusters of neuronal cell bodies in the adult songbird brain. These results provide direct, in vivo evidence for a wandering form of neuronal migration involved in the addition of new neurons in the postnatal brain.
    Source
    J Neurosci. 2012 Jan 25;32(4):1436-46. Link to article on publisher's site
    DOI
    10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2145-11.2012
    Permanent Link to this Item
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/37839
    PubMed ID
    22279228
    Related Resources
    Link to Article in PubMed
    Rights
    Copyright © 2012 the authors. Copyright of all material published in The Journal of Neuroscience remains with the authors. The authors grant the Society for Neuroscience an exclusive license to publish their work for the first 6 months. After 6 months the work becomes available to the public to copy, distribute, or display under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2145-11.2012
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