{"title":"11 Neurogenic Niches in the Adult Mammalian Brain","authors":"Dengke K. Ma, G. Ming, F. Gage, Hongjun Song","doi":"10.1101/087969784.52.207","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The mammalian brain is a complex organ composed of trillions of neurons connected with each other in a highly stereotyped yet modifiable manner. Most neurons are born during embryonic development and persist throughout life in the adult brain circuit, in contrast to many other adult tissues, including most from epithelial origins that usually harbor stem cells to maintain homeostatic cellular turnover (Weissman et al. 2001; Li and Xie 2005). The relative stability of neural circuits at the cellular level, especially in higher processing centers of the brain such as the cerebral cortex, was thought to be essential to maintain the ongoing information processing, and any loss or addition to the circuitry component could undermine the cognitive process as a whole (Rakic 1985). Therefore, the discovery of adult neurogenesis—that new neurons are indeed generated in specific regions of adult brains and undergo developmental maturation to become functionally integrated into local neural circuits (Fig. 1a)—came as a surprise (Altman and Das 1965; van Praag et al. 2002). During adult neurogenesis, neural stem cells (NSCs) generate functional neurons through coordinated steps, including cell-fate specification, migration, axonal and dendritic growth, and finally synaptic integration into the adult brain (Fig. 1d). Since the pioneering studies of Altman in the early 1960s (Altman 1962), the process of adult neurogenesis has been unambiguously established in all mammals examined, including humans (Eriksson et al. 1998; Gage 2000; Lie et al. 2004; Abrous et al. 2005; Ming and Song 2005; Lledo et al. 2006; Merkle and Alvarez-Buylla...","PeriodicalId":10493,"journal":{"name":"Cold Spring Harbor Monograph Archive","volume":"34 1","pages":"207-225"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2008-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Cold Spring Harbor Monograph Archive","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1101/087969784.52.207","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
The mammalian brain is a complex organ composed of trillions of neurons connected with each other in a highly stereotyped yet modifiable manner. Most neurons are born during embryonic development and persist throughout life in the adult brain circuit, in contrast to many other adult tissues, including most from epithelial origins that usually harbor stem cells to maintain homeostatic cellular turnover (Weissman et al. 2001; Li and Xie 2005). The relative stability of neural circuits at the cellular level, especially in higher processing centers of the brain such as the cerebral cortex, was thought to be essential to maintain the ongoing information processing, and any loss or addition to the circuitry component could undermine the cognitive process as a whole (Rakic 1985). Therefore, the discovery of adult neurogenesis—that new neurons are indeed generated in specific regions of adult brains and undergo developmental maturation to become functionally integrated into local neural circuits (Fig. 1a)—came as a surprise (Altman and Das 1965; van Praag et al. 2002). During adult neurogenesis, neural stem cells (NSCs) generate functional neurons through coordinated steps, including cell-fate specification, migration, axonal and dendritic growth, and finally synaptic integration into the adult brain (Fig. 1d). Since the pioneering studies of Altman in the early 1960s (Altman 1962), the process of adult neurogenesis has been unambiguously established in all mammals examined, including humans (Eriksson et al. 1998; Gage 2000; Lie et al. 2004; Abrous et al. 2005; Ming and Song 2005; Lledo et al. 2006; Merkle and Alvarez-Buylla...
哺乳动物的大脑是一个复杂的器官,由数万亿个神经元组成,它们以一种高度刻板但可修改的方式相互连接。大多数神经元在胚胎发育期间出生,并在成年脑回路中持续存在,这与许多其他成年组织形成了对比,包括大多数来自上皮的组织,通常含有干细胞以维持稳态细胞周转(Weissman et al. 2001;李和谢2005)。神经回路在细胞水平上的相对稳定性,特别是在大脑的高级处理中心,如大脑皮层,被认为是维持正在进行的信息处理所必需的,任何回路成分的损失或增加都可能破坏整个认知过程(Rakic 1985)。因此,成人神经发生的发现——新神经元确实在成人大脑的特定区域产生,并经历发育成熟,在功能上整合到局部神经回路中(图1a)——令人惊讶(Altman和Das 1965;van Praag et al. 2002)。在成体神经发生过程中,神经干细胞(NSCs)通过协调的步骤产生功能性神经元,包括细胞命运规范、迁移、轴突和树突生长,最后突触整合到成体大脑中(图1d)。自20世纪60年代早期Altman的开创性研究(Altman 1962)以来,成人神经发生的过程已在所有被研究的哺乳动物中明确确立,包括人类(Eriksson et al. 1998;计2000;Lie et al. 2004;Abrous et al. 2005;明宋2005;Lledo等人,2006;默克尔和阿尔瓦雷斯-布伊拉……