Rate and pattern of migration of lineally-related olfactory bulb interneurons generated postnatally in the subventricular zone of the rat

MB Luskin, MS Boone - Chemical Senses, 1994 - academic.oup.com
MB Luskin, MS Boone
Chemical Senses, 1994academic.oup.com
A spatially discrete region of the anterior part of the postnatal telescephalic subventricular
zone, referred to as the SVZa generates vast numbers of lineally-related neurons destined
for the olfactory bulb (Luskin, 1993). The cells originating in the SVZa migrate to the olfactory
bulb along a highly restricted pathway which is in a direction orthogonal to the orientation of
radial glial fibers. In this study we analysed the number, distribution, orientation and rate of
migration of SVZa-derived cells as they approach the olfactory bulb. In order to track the …
Abstract
A spatially discrete region of the anterior part of the postnatal telescephalic subventricular zone, referred to as the SVZa generates vast numbers of lineally-related neurons destined for the olfactory bulb (Luskin, 1993). The cells originating in the SVZa migrate to the olfactory bulb along a highly restricted pathway which is in a direction orthogonal to the orientation of radial glial fibers. In this study we analysed the number, distribution, orientation and rate of migration of SVZa-derived cells as they approach the olfactory bulb. In order to track the SVZa-derived cells, a retroviral lineage tracer, encoding the reporter gene E.coli β-galactosidase (lacZ) was injected precisely into the rat SVZa at postnatal day 1 (Pl). The lacZ-positive cells were visualized 1, 2 and 3 days later by X-Gal histochemistry in cryostat sections. As the number of SVZa-derived cells in the pathway increased with survival time, their distribution changed systematically. The distribution pattern of lacZ-positive cells by 2 and 3 days postinjection suggested that some of the progeny of infected progenitor cells were undergoing neurogenesis as they proceeded to the olfactory bulb; a large percentage of the lacZ-positive cells were substantially displaced from the SVZa injection site. To investigate whether lacZ-positive cells migrate in a directed fashion, their orientation preference was scored. For the majority of lacZ-positive cells (>94%), their leading process was directed toward the olfactory bulb, possibly reflecting a response to migratory cues present along the pathway. The estimated average rate of cell migration to the olfactory bulb was 23 μm/h, which is approximately twice the speed of radially directed neuronal migration from the telencephalic ventricular zone to the cortical plate (O'Rourke et al, 1992). Collectively, these results suggest that SVZa-derived intemeurons en route to the olfactory bulb may employ a novel mode of tangential migration.
Oxford University Press