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Postnatal development of the cerebellar cortex in the rat. I. The external germinal layer and the transitional molecular layer
Author(s) -
Altman Joseph
Publication year - 1972
Publication title -
journal of comparative neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.855
H-Index - 209
eISSN - 1096-9861
pISSN - 0021-9967
DOI - 10.1002/cne.901450305
Subject(s) - synaptogenesis , cerebellar cortex , biology , anatomy , purkinje cell , granular layer , granule cell , biophysics , cerebellum , microbiology and biotechnology , neuroscience , central nervous system , dentate gyrus
The multiplication of cells in the proliferative zone of the external germinal layer and the early steps in the differentiation of basket, stellate and granule cells were studied in the cerebellar cortex of rats aged 0, 3, 5, 7, 10, 12, 15, 21 and 30 days with histological, histochemical, autoradiographic and electron microscopic techniques. Between 0–9 days the proliferative zone has a constant depth of four to five cells; the bipolar cells in the underlying premigratory zone increase in depth during this period from 0–6 cells. Thereafter, there is a decline in the cell depth of both zones. In the premigratory zone there is a gradient in the length of the extruded processes of the bipolar cells (concentration of such profiles), the future parallel fibers. Presumably when the latter reach their final length, the cell body migrates downward and the parallel fiber becomes part of the upper zone of the molecular layer. Thus, parallel fibers are progessively formed on the surface of others from the bottom upward by a stacking process and the external germinal layer, as a consequence, is continually pushed upward. This design makes possible the assembly of a matrix of very long, thin and straight beams of horizontally oriented parallel fibers which pile up vertically according to their age. When synaptogenesis starts during the second week in the molecular layer the enlarging junctional processes produce a spurt in the growth of this layer. Basket cells which are formed in the pyramis on days 6–7 are arrested in the formative molecular layer because their processes are oriented at a right angle to the underlying bed of parallel fibers. Therefore, there is also a stacking of the cells of the molecular layer from the bottom upward as a function of time of onset of their differentiation. Parallel fiber synapses may be seen on differentiating basket cells as early as the seventh day, forming connections with these inhibitory interneurons before they synapse with spines of Purkinje cells.