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Some observations on the development of the avian optic tectumHart, Jennifer Ruth, January 1970 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1970. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
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The Expression Profile of KIAA0319-like in Chick Embryos and its Involvement in Cell Migration in the Developing Optic TectumCharish, Jason 23 August 2011 (has links)
Several genes thought to confer susceptibility to dyslexia have been identified, and the purpose of this study is to 1) determine the expression pattern of one of these gene products and 2) characterize the function of the product of one of these genes, namely KIAA0319-Like (KIAA0319L), using the developing chick visual system as a
model.
Whole mount in situ hybridization was performed for KIAA0319L on embryonic
day (E)3 – E5 and in situ hybridization on sections was performed at later stages.
Engineered microRNA (miRNA) constructs targeting KIAA0319L were prepared and
their specificity and efficiency for knocking down KIAA0319L were tested. miRNAs
were electroporated in E5 optic tecta (OT). Embryos were sacrificed at E12. OT were
removed, sectioned and analyzed.
Results demonstrate that KIAA0319L is expressed in the developing chick visual
system. Knockdown of KIAA0319L in the OT results in abnormal migration indicating
that KIAA0319L is necessary for this process.
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The Expression Profile of KIAA0319-like in Chick Embryos and its Involvement in Cell Migration in the Developing Optic TectumCharish, Jason 23 August 2011 (has links)
Several genes thought to confer susceptibility to dyslexia have been identified, and the purpose of this study is to 1) determine the expression pattern of one of these gene products and 2) characterize the function of the product of one of these genes, namely KIAA0319-Like (KIAA0319L), using the developing chick visual system as a
model.
Whole mount in situ hybridization was performed for KIAA0319L on embryonic
day (E)3 – E5 and in situ hybridization on sections was performed at later stages.
Engineered microRNA (miRNA) constructs targeting KIAA0319L were prepared and
their specificity and efficiency for knocking down KIAA0319L were tested. miRNAs
were electroporated in E5 optic tecta (OT). Embryos were sacrificed at E12. OT were
removed, sectioned and analyzed.
Results demonstrate that KIAA0319L is expressed in the developing chick visual
system. Knockdown of KIAA0319L in the OT results in abnormal migration indicating
that KIAA0319L is necessary for this process.
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Audiovisual Integration in the Saccadic System of the Barn OwlWhitchurch, Elizabeth A., 1976- 12 1900 (has links)
xiv, 152 p. Adviser: Terry Takahashi (Biology Dept.). Chapter 2 of this dissertation has been previously published in the Journal of Neurophysiology.
Citation:
Whitchurch EA and Takahashi TT. Combined auditory and visual stimuli facilitate head saccades in the barn owl (Tyto alba). J Neurophysiol 96: 730-745, 2006. / A print copy of this title is available through the UO Libraries under the call number: SCIENCE QL696.S85 W54 2006 / Survival depends on our ability to detect and integrate sensory information from multiple modalities, allowing for the most efficient behavioral response. For example, barn owls must combine sights and sounds from the environment to localize potential prey. A vole scurrying through a drift of dried leaves is more likely to meet its doom if a nearby owl can both faintly see and hear it. How does the brain take two physically discreet inputs and combine them into a unified representation of the surrounding multisensory world? Moreover, how is this internal representation transformed into the most efficient behavioral response?
This dissertation comprises original research addressing these questions in the barn owl with two distinct approaches: First, Chapters II and III describe orientation behavior in response to auditory, visual, and audiovisual stimuli. Chapter II probes the effect of stimulus strength on saccadic behavior and the nature of audiovisual integration, and was taken from a co-authored publication. Chapter III explores the behavioral consequence of an induced stimulus asynchrony in audiovisual integration and was taken from a co-authored manuscript being prepared for publication. The second experimental approach is described in Chapters IV and V. These chapters probe the physiological basis of saccadic behavior by measuring single-neuron responses to auditory, visual, and audiovisual stimuli. Chapter IV describes how auditory responses of neurons from the external nucleus of the inferior colliculus depend on sound pressure level. Chapter V describes activity of optic tectum neurons in response to auditory, visual, and audiovisual stimuli.
The behavioral findings described herein suggest that barn owls often incorporate both the speed of the auditory system and the accuracy of the visual system when localizing a multisensory stimulus, even when the two modalities are presented asynchronously. The physiological studies outlined in this dissertation show that sensory representations in the midbrain can be used to predict general trends in saccadic behavior: Neuronal thresholds were within the range of observed behavioral thresholds. Responses to multisensory stimuli were enhanced relative to unisensory stimuli, possibly corresponding to enhanced multisensory behavior. These data support fundamental rules in multisensory integration that may apply across species.
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Effects of cocaine on visual processing in zebrafishRiley, Elizabeth Brooke 03 November 2015 (has links)
Psychostimulants are known to alter visual function acutely and on withdrawal, and can cause attention deficit following prenatal exposure. However, psychostimulants can also improve visual attention in patients with attention deficit. The mechanisms involved in these contrasting effects remain largely unknown.
To determine the role of specific brain regions and the dopamine system in the impact of cocaine exposure on visual processing, we employed two-photon microscopy and a transgenic larval zebrafish expressing the calcium indicator GCaMP-HS. We documented neuronal responses to contrasting visual stimuli, red light (LF) and dark (DF) flashes.
We found that in the optic tectum neuropil (TOn), both stimuli elicited similar responses, though after repeated stimulus presentation, habituation developed to dark flash only. The dorsal telencephalon (dTe) responded and habituated to LF only. Acute cocaine (0.5 μM) reduced neuronal responses to LF in both brain regions and prevented habituation of dTe neurons to LF, but did not modify responses or habituation to dark flash.
Prenatal cocaine exposure (PCE) did not modify baseline responses, but it prevented the acute effects of cocaine on LF responses in both regions and habituation in
dTe, with no impact on dark flash responses. PCE also significantly reduced D1 dopamine receptor expression in TOn and cerebellum, but not dTe or the eye.
Fish lacking the dopamine transporter (DATKO) retained normal D1 expression throughout the brain, baseline responses to LF in both TOn and dTe, and response reduction following cocaine in TOn. However, they demonstrated abnormal swimming behavior, and neither their swimming behavior nor dTe responses to LF were modified by cocaine.
We discovered that in zebrafish, a diurnal vertebrate, responses to light not only require the primary visual processing center TO (superior colliculus in mammals), but also higher level processing by dTe. Responses to light but not darkness are modified by cocaine, unless the fish lack DAT or were exposed to PCE. Together, our results demonstrate specific effects of cocaine on visual processing mediated by the dopamine system, and provide a novel animal model for further investigation of these phenomena and development of new therapeutic approaches.
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Telencephalic Terminals in the Major Retinal Synaptic Lamina of the Goldfish Optic TectumAirhart, Mark J., Kriebel, Richard M. 17 June 1985 (has links)
Light and electron microscopic degeneration studies were used to examine the telencephalotectal pathway in goldfish. Both techniques showed that each telencephalic lobe sent bilateral projections to several tectal laminae. Degenerating synaptic terminals and fibers were observed in the major retinal projection lamina as well as in other tectal laminae. The terminals contained round to oval synaptic vesicles, asymmetric synapses and contacted relatively small postsynaptic profiles.
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Functional study of the role played by nucleolar proteins in the control of neural progenitor homeostasis using zebrafish as a model / Etude fonctionnelle de gènes codants pour des protéines nucléolaires dans la biologie des cellules souches neurales chez le poisson zèbreBrombin, Alessandro 29 September 2015 (has links)
L’identité des cellules souches et des progéniteurs neuraux, comme celle de tout type cellulaire, est caractérisée par des signatures moléculaires spécifiques qui dépendent de l’environnement dans lesquelles les cellules se trouvent. Ainsi, il est primordial d’étudier ces cellules dans un contexte in vivo. Le toit optique du poisson zèbre est un modèle idéal pour ce type d’étude. En effet, c’est une large partie du cerveau moyen localisée en position dorsale et qui présente la particularité de croitre de manière orientée tout au long de la vie de l’animal grâce aux cellules neuroépitheliales présentes à sa périphérie (dans la « peripheral midbrain layer », PML). De plus, les progéniteurs neuroépithéliaux, les progéniteurs lents et les cellules post-mitotiques sont localisées dans des domaines adjacents du toit, conséquence de sa croissance orientée. Chaque population cellulaire est marquée par des profils d’expression particuliers. Ainsi, une recherche dans la base de données ZFIN nous a permis d’identifier environ 50 gènes ayant une forte expression dans les cellules de la PML (progéniteurs neuroépithéliaux). De façon intéressante, beaucoup de « gènes PML » codent pour des facteurs de la biogenèse des ribosomes. L’accumulation de ce type de transcrits dans les progéniteurs lents était surprenante. Ainsi, au cours de mon doctorat, j’ai étudié le rôle spécifique des facteurs de la biogenèse des ribosomes dans le maintien des cellules neuroepithéliales de la PML. En effet, bien qu’il soit généralement admis que la biogenèse des ribosomes est un processus essentiel dans toutes les cellules, il a été récemment démontré que plusieurs facteurs nécessaires à la synthèse des ribosomes ont un rôle tissu-spécifique. Par exemple, Notchless est requis pour la survie de la masse cellulaire interne de l’embryon préimplantatoire de souris. Récemment, des expériences de knock-out conditionnel chez la souris ont montré que Notchless était nécessaire au maintien des cellules souches hématopoïétiques et intestinales, mais pas à celui des cellules différenciées. En effet, en absence de Notchless dans les cellules souches, la grosse sous-unité ribosomique (60S) ne peut pas être exportée hors du noyau et s’accumule. Au contraire, dans les cellules différenciées, où Notchless n’est pas indispensable, cette accumulation n’est pas observée. J’ai commencé une étude fonctionnelle basée sur la surexpression conditionnelle de la forme dominante-négative du gène notchless homolog 1 (nle1, homologue poisson zèbre du gène Notchless mammifère). Selon mon hypothèse, les progéniteurs lents de la PML (Slow amplifying progenitors, SAPs) pourraient avoir besoin de Notchless pour la maturation de la sous-unité 60S, contrairement aux cellules différenciées qui pourraient survivre après la délétion de ce gène. Des expériences sont encore en cours, mais nous avons déjà pu démontrer que nle1 joue un rôle crucial dans la survie des progénitéurs neuroépithéliaux de la PML. En parallèle, j’ai étudié des lignées de poisson-zèbre mutantes pour des gènes codants pour des composants du complexe de snoRNP (box C/D small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein : Fibrillarine, Nop56, Nop58). Les trois mutants présentent des phénotypes similaires, en particulier une apoptose massive et une dérégulation du cycle cellulaire dans l’ensemble du toit optique à 48 heures de développement. Étonnamment, ces résultats sont en faveur d’un arrêt du cycle cellulaire à la transition G2/M. Ainsi, cette étude pourrait permettre de mettre en évidence de nouveaux mécanismes d’arrêt du cycle cellulaire lors de défauts de biogenèse des ribosomes. L’ensemble de ces résultats montrent comment les facteurs de la biogenèse des ribosomes (tout comme le processus) contribue à la régulation fine de l’homéostasie cellulaire, et donc à la détermination de l’identité des cellules progénitrices. / In neural stem cells (NSCs) and neural progenitors (NPs), as in other cell types, cell identity is characterized by specific molecular signatures that depend on the environment provided by neighboring cells. Thus, it is important to study progenitor cells in vivo. The zebrafish optic tectum (OT) is a suitable model for that purpose. Indeed, this large structure of the dorsal midbrain displays life-long oriented growth supported by neuroepithelial cells present at its periphery (in the peripheral midbrain layer, PML). Moreover, neuroepithelial progenitors, fast-amplifying progenitors and post-mitotic cells are found in adjacent domains of the OT, as a consequence of its oriented growth. Each cell population is marked by concentric gene expression patterns. Interestingly, a datamining of the ZFIN gene expression database allowed us to identify around 50 genes displaying biased expression in PML cells (neuroepithelial progenitors). Interestingly, many “PML genes” code for ribosome biogenesis factors. The accumulation of transcripts for such ubiquitously expressed genes in SAPs was very surprising so during my thesis I examined whether ribosome biogenesis may have specific roles in these neuroepithelial cells, while improving our knowledge. Indeed, although it is generally admitted that ribosome biogenesis is essential in all cells, it has been shown quite recently that several components of the ribosome biogenesis have tissue restricted roles. For example, Notchless is required for the survival of the inner cell mass in the preimplantation mouse embryo. More recently, conditional knock-out experiments in mice showed that Notchless is necessary for the maintenance of hematopoietic stem cells and intestinal stem cells, but not for committed progenitors and differentiated cells. Indeed in the absence of Notchless in stem cells, the immature 60S subunit cannot be exported from the nucleus and accumulates. This does not happen in differentiated cells where Notchless is dispensable. I started a functional study based on the conditional overexpression of a dominant-negative form of the gene notchless homolog 1 (nle1, the zebrafish homolog of the mammalian gene Notchless). My hypothesis was that the PML slow-amplifying progenitors (SAPs) may require Notchless for the maturation of the 60S subunit, but not the differentiated cells which could survive also after the deletion of this gene. Experiments are still underway. So far we could demonstrate that nle1 has a crucial role in SAPs. I studied zebrafish mutants for genes coding for the components of the box C/D small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein (snoRNP) complex (Fibrillarin, Nop56, Nop58). Mutants displayed a similar phenotype with massive apoptosis and a deregulation of the cell cycle in the whole tectum at 48hpf. Our data suggest a cell cycle arrest at the G2/M transition, highlighting novel possible mechanisms of cell cycle arrest upon impaired ribosome biogenesis. All together, these data highlight how ribosome biogenesis factors and the whole ribosome biogenesis contribute to the fine regulation of cell homeostasis thereby contributing to the determination of progenitor cell identity.
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Processus régénératifs du cerveau moyen dorsal chez le poisson zèbre adulte / Midbrain regeneration in adult zebrafishHeuzé, Aurélie 08 December 2017 (has links)
Contrairement aux mammifères, le système nerveux central du poisson téléostéen adulte possède un potentiel énorme de neurogenèse et de régénération après une lésion cérébrale. Chez le poisson zèbre adulte, de nouveaux neurones peuvent être régénérés à partir de progéniteurs constitutifs ou latents. Au cours de mon doctorat, je me suis intéressée aux capacités de régénération neuronale du cerveau moyen dorsal (le toit optique, TO) chez le poisson zèbre. Le TO présente à sa périphérie une zone de progéniteurs de type neuroépithélial à l’origine des neurones et des cellules épendymogliales qui le constituent. J’ai tout d’abord identifié un enhancer potentiel du gène meis2a, qui m’a permis d’effectuer des lignages cellulaires de progéniteurs neuroépithéliaux. En contexte homéostatique, j’ai montré que ces progéniteurs construisent la totalité du TO pendant le développement et soutiennent sa neurogenèse continue pendant la croissance post-embryonnaire. A la suite d’une lésion cérébrale chez la larve et l’adulte, le TO à la capacité de générer de nouveaux neurones, toutefois sa structure topographique n’est pas restaurée. Chez l’adulte, j’ai montré que les progéniteurs constitutifs neuroépithéliaux et des progéniteurs latents épendymogliaux sont activés lors du processus de régénération. / Unlike mammals, the adult teleost brain exhibits widespread neurogenic activity and can regenerate after injury. The adult zebrafish has the capacity to regenerate neurons from constitutive or latent progenitors. During my PhD, I studied the neuronal regeneration in the zebrafish dorsal midbrain (optic tectum, OT). At adult stage, neuroepithelial-like progenitors at the OT periphery contribute to neuronal and glial lineages during homeostasis.I identified a putative enhancer of meis2a, which allowed me to trace the progeny of neuroepithelial-like progenitors. In a non-regenerative context I showed that enhancer-targeted progenitors were at the origin of the whole structure during development and of its continued neurogenesis during post-embryonic growth.Following lesion, OT displayed reactive neurogenesis, at larval and adult stages, nevertheless its topographical structure remained altered. In adults, I showed that both constitutive neuroepithelial-like progenitors and latent ependymoglial progenitors were activated in a regenerative context.
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Arrêt de la prolifération cellulaire pendant le développement embryonnaire : étude transcriptionnelle de gènes suppresseurs de tumeurs au cours de la croissance du système nerveux central chez le poisson médaka Oryzias latipes / Cell proliferation arrest during embryonic development : transcriptionnal study of tumors suppressor genes during central nervous system development in medaka fish Oryzias latipesDevès, Mathilde 20 September 2012 (has links)
Comment la taille d'un organisme est-elle régulée au cours du développement embryonnaire ? Quels sont les mécanismes génétiques à l'origine de l'arrêt de la prolifération pendant la croissance d'un organisme pluricellulaire ? Afin d'identifier des acteurs de la sortie du cycle cellulaire au cours du développement, mon travail s’est orienté sur l’étude de gènes suppresseurs de tumeurs pendant la croissance du toit optique (TO) du médaka Oryzias latipes. Le TO, structure dorsale du cerveau moyen des Vertébrés, est un modèle particulièrement adapté à l’étude de la régulation de la prolifération. Trois zones de la marge vers le centre du TO sont discernables : une zone périphérique de prolifération, une zone intermédiaire de cellules sortant du cycle cellulaire et une zone centrale de cellules différenciées. Un crible d'expression par hybridation In Situ a été réalisé et a permis d'identifier 28 gènes exprimés dans le TO, suggérant leur implication dans le contrôle de la sortie du cycle cellulaire au cours du développement. Dans le but de caractériser in vivo la fonction de gènes issus de ce crible, le gène BTG1 (B-cell Translocation Gene 1) et les membres de sa famille, ont été étudiés au cours du développement du médaka. J’ai mené des expériences fonctionnelles sur BTG1, permettant de mettre en évidence son rôle central pour la morphogenèse du système nerveux central. De plus, une autre partie de mon travail s’est penchée sur l’étude de l’expression des membres de la voie de signalisation Hippo, bien connue et caractérisée chez la drosophile et les Mammifères pour son rôle dans le contrôle de la taille des organes via une régulation de l’arrêt de la prolifération. A l’issu de notre travail, une fonction de la voie de signalisation Hippo dans la formation du TO et des somites a pu être mise en évidence au cours du développement du médaka. / How is an organisms’ size regulated during embryonic development? What are the genetic mechanisms that control the proliferation arrest during multicellular organisms growth? In order to identify a cell cycle exit developmental actor genes, I have analysed the role of tumor suppressor genes (TSGs) in the optic tectum (OT) of the medaka Oryzias latipes. This structure is particularly suited for this kind of studies because, during its morphogenesis, there is a strict correlation between the position of a cell and its degree of differentiation. 3 zones can be easily distinguished from the border to the center: a marginal zone made of proliferative cells, an intermediate zone in which cells exit the cycle, and a central zone made of postmitotic cells. Using this criterium, I have performed an in situ hybridization expression screen on 150 TSGs on medaka embryos. The expression patterns of 28 TSGs in the OT suggest their implication in the OT proliferation arrest mechanisms. I focused my study on the BTG1 gene, implicated in many cancers, and for which few developmental data are available. A functional analysis on developing medaka embryos has been performed and permitted to highlight the essential role of BTG1 in central nervous system morphogenesis. Furthermore, I performed an expression study on Hippo signalling pathway components. Hippo pathway is well caracterised for its organ size control function in drosophila and Mammals. Our results show that this pathway could act in OT formation and somitogenesis in medaka fish.
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The emergence of visual responses in the developing retinotectal system in vivoVan Rheede, Joram Jacob January 2013 (has links)
Patterned neuronal activity driven by the sensory environment plays a key role in the development of precise synaptic connectivity in the brain. It is well established that the action potentials (‘spikes’) generated by individual neurons are crucial to this developmental process. A neuron’s spiking activity is jointly determined by its synaptic inputs and its intrinsic excitability. It is therefore important to ask how a neuron develops these attributes, and whether the emergence of spiking might itself be governed by activity-dependent processes. In this thesis, I address these questions in the retinotectal system of Xenopus laevis. First, I investigate the extent to which visuospatial information is available to the developing retinotectal system. I show that the eyes of developing Xenopus larvae are hyperopic at the onset of vision, but rapidly grow towards correct vision. Despite its imperfect optics, the Xenopus eye is able to generate spatially restricted activity on the retina, which is evident in the spatial structure of the receptive fields (RFs) of tectal neurons. Using a novel method to map the visually driven spiking output and synaptic inputs of the same tectal neuron in vivo, I show that neuronal spiking activity closely follows the spatiotemporal profile of glutamatergic inputs. Next, I characterise a population of neurons in the developing optic tectum that does not fire action potentials, despite receiving visually evoked glutamatergic and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)ergic synaptic inputs. A comparison of visually spiking and visually non-spiking neurons reveals that the principal reason these neurons are ‘silent’ is that they lack sufficient glutamatergic synaptic excitation. In the final section of the thesis, I investigate whether visually driven activity can play a role in the ‘unsilencing’ of these silent neurons. I show that non-spiking tectal neurons can be rapidly converted into spiking neurons through a visual conditioning protocol. This conversion is associated with a selective increase in glutamatergic input and implicates a novel, spike-independent form of synaptic potentiation. I provide evidence that this novel plasticity process is mediated by GABAergic inputs that are depolarising during early development, and can act in synergy with N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) to strengthen immature glutamatergic synapses. Consistent with this, preventing the depolarising effects of GABA or blocking NMDARs abolished the activity-dependent unsilencing of tectal neurons. These results therefore support a model in which GABAergic and glutamatergic transmitter systems function synergistically to enable a neuron to recruit the synaptic excitation it needs to develop sensory-driven spiking activity. This represents a transition with important consequences for both the functional output and the activity-dependent development of a neuron.
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