4.5 Article

Antigenic Compartmentation of the Cerebellar Cortex in the Chicken (Gallus domesticus)

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY
Volume 518, Issue 12, Pages 2221-2239

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cne.22328

Keywords

Purkinje cell; zebrin II; phospholipase C beta 4; whole mount immunohistochemistry; pattern formation; stripe

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MT9107]

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The The chick is a well-understood developmental model of cerebellar pattern formation,but we know much less about the patterning of the adult chicken cerebellum. Therefore an expression study of two Purkinje cell stripe antigens zebrin II/aldolase C and phospholipase C beta 4 (PLC beta 4)-has been carried out in the adult chicken (Gallus domesticus). The mammalian cerebellar cortex is built around transverse expression domains (transverse zones), each of which is further subdivided into parasagittally oriented stripes. The results from the adult chicken reveal a similar pattern. Five distinct transverse domains were identified. In the anterior lobe a uniformly zebrin II-immunopositive/PLC beta 4-immunonegative lingular zone (LZ; lobule I) and a striped anterior zone (AZ; lobules II-Via) were distinguished. A central zone (CZ; similar to lobules Vla-VIIIa,b) and a posterior zone (PZ; similar to lobules VIIIa,b-IXc,d) were distinguished in the posterior lobe. Finally, the nodular zone (NZ; lobule X) is uniformly zebrin II-immunoreactive and is innervated by vestibular mossy fibers. Lobule IXc,d is considered as a transitional region between the PZ and the NZ, because the vestibular mossy fiber projection extends into these lobules and because they receive optokinetic mossy and climbing fiber input. It is proposed that the zebrin II-immunonegative P3- stripe corresponds to the lateral vermal B zone of the mammalian cerebellum and that the border between the avian homologs of the mammalian vermis and hemispheres is located immediately lateral to P3-. Thus, there seem to be transverse zones in chicken that are plausible homologs of those identified in mammals, together with an LZ that is characteristic of birds. J. Comp. Neurol. 518:2221-2239, 2010. (C) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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