Publication | Closed Access
Retinal axon guidance by region-specific cues in diencephalon
56
Citations
70
References
1998
Year
Retinal Axon PatterningOptogeneticsOptic NerveCellular PhysiologyGanglion CellRetinaRetinal Axon GrowthHealth SciencesOphthalmologyRetinal AxonsNervous SystemPhotoreceptor CellDevelopmental BiologyNeuroanatomyRetinal Axon GuidanceNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicineRetinal Biology
Retinal axons show region-specific patterning along the dorsal-ventral axis of diencephalon: retinal axons grow in a compact bundle over hypothalamus, dramatically splay out over thalamus, and circumvent epithalamus as they continue toward the dorsal midbrain. In vitro, retinal axons are repulsed by substrate-bound and soluble activities in hypothalamus and epithalamus, but invade thalamus. The repulsion is mimicked by a soluble floor plate activity. Tenascin and neurocan, extracellular matrix molecules that inhibit retinal axon growth in vitro, are enriched in hypothalamus and epithalamus. Within thalamus, a stimulatory activity is specifically upregulated in target nuclei at the time that retinal axons invade them. These findings suggest that region-specific, axon repulsive and stimulatory activities control retinal axon patterning in the embryonic diencephalon.
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