4.5 Article

Cellular and laminar expression of Dab-1 during the postnatal critical period in cat visual cortex and the effects of dark rearing

Journal

BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 1383, Issue -, Pages 81-89

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2011.01.117

Keywords

Disabled-1; Differential display PCR; Neuronal plasticity; Development

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 EY016724]

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This study describes postnatal critical period changes in cellular and laminar expression of Dab-1, a gene shown to play a role in controlling neuronal positioning during embryonic brain development, in cat visual cortex and the effects of dark rearing (DR). At 1 week, there is dense cellular staining which is uniform across cortical layers and very light neuropil staining. At the peak of the critical period (5 weeks), dense cell staining is largely restricted to large pyramidal cells of deep layer III and layer V, there is faint cell body staining throughout all cortical layers, neuropil staining is markedly increased and uniform in layers III to VI. This dramatic change in laminar and cellular labeling is independent of visual input, since immunostaining is similar in 5-week DR cats. By 10 weeks, the mature laminar and cellular staining pattern is established and the major subsequent change is a further reduction in the density of cellular staining in all cortical layers. Neuropil staining is pronounced and uniform across cortical layers. These developmental changes are altered by DR. Quantification by cell counts indicated that age and DR interact such that differences in cellular expression are opposite in direction between 5- and 20-week-old cats. This bidirectional regulation of cellular expression is the same in all cortical laminae. The bidirectional regulation of cellular expression matches the effects of age and DR on physiological plasticity during the critical period as assessed by ocular dominance shifts in response to monocular deprivation. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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