Plasticity & regeneration COPY Flashcards

1
Q

GENE EXPRESSION

i) what are inducing factors? name the two ways they can act
ii) name three things inducing factors modify? why is cell position in development critical?
iii) what is competence?
iv) name three things that competence depends on

A

i) inducing factors are signalling molecules provided by other cells
- can be freely diffusible > act over long range
- can be tethered to cell surface and act locally

ii) inducing factors modify gene expression, cell shape and motility
- position of cell determines which inducing factors its exposed to > dictates cell fate

iii) competence is the ability of a cell to respond to inducing factors

iv) competence depends on exact set of surface receptors
- transduction molecules
- transcription factors expressed by the cell

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2
Q

NEUROGENESIS

i) what is it?
ii) what time period does it occur in? what week does the neural tube form?
iii) which germ layer does the nervous system arise from?

A

i) process by which neurons are generated

ii) occurs in 5th week-5th month of gestation
- NT forms at week 3

iii) ectoderm

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3
Q

NEURAL STEM AND PROGENITOR CELLS

i) which area are neural stem cells found in?
ii) give two properties of these cells (what is their renewing capacity and what can they give rise to?
iii) can neural progenitor cells self renew continuously?
iv) what cells can neural progenitors give rise to? give an eg

A

i) neural SCs found in the ventricular zone (lines ventric sys)

ii) infinitely self renewing
- after terminal division and differentiation they can give rise to full range of cell classes in the nervous system (multipotent)

iii) incapable of continuing self renewl

iv) neural progenitors can only give rise to one specific cell type until its mitotic capacity is exhausted
- oligodendroglial progenitor can only give rise to oligodendrocyte

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4
Q

DIVIDING PRECURSOR CELLS

i) which two areas do precusors move between before they give rise to neuroblasts and progenitor cells?
ii) at the start of division - which surface to cells in the ventricular zone reach up and migrate to?
iii) how many copies of DNA does the cell contain before it moves back down to the VZ?
iv) once the cell is back in the VZ - what happens to its projections? what process does the cell then go through?
v) what does the fate of the daughter cell depend on?

A

i) between the ventricular and marginal zone
ii) cells in the VZ reach up and migrate to the pial surface
iii) cell grows and nuclei contains 2 copies of DNA before it moves back down to the VZ
iv) once back in the VZ it retracts its arms from the pial surface and undergoes division
v) whether the cleavage is symmetrical or asymmetrical

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5
Q

FATES OF CELL DIVISIONS

i) what two daughter cells result from an symmetrical division? which result from an assymertical division?
ii) which signalling molecule is located at the superior pole of the precursor cell? what role does this molecule play? which is located at the inferior pole?
iii) which signalling molecules are therefore present in the daughter cells of symmetrical division?
iv) which signalling molecules are present in daughter of asymmetrical division? which one will migrate away? why?
v) which type of cleavage occurs early in development? which occurs later in development?

A

i) symmetrical division > two neural stem cells
assymetrical divison > a neuroblast + progenitor cell

ii) sup pole = notch (activates gene expression that inhibits division and migration fron the VZ)
inf pole = numb

iii) symmetrical div = 2x neural SC = both numb and notch

iv) assym = neuroblast (notch) and progenitor cell (numb)
- neuroblast will migrate away as it contains Notch

v) early dev = symmetrical > neural SCs as lots of cells still need to be produced
later dev > assym = NB and progenitor

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6
Q

PRECURSOR CELL DIVISION

i) label signalling molecules A and B
ii) label cell types C,D,E
iii) which of these cell types will migrate away? which one has limited mitotic potential

A

i) A = notch 1 B = numb
ii) C = neural stem cells, D = neuroblast, E = progenitor cell
iii) neuroblast will migrate away and progenitor has limited mitotic potential

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7
Q

NEUROBLASTS

i) what are they? what will they differentiate into?
ii) what is the fate of the migrating neuron determined by? (3)
iii) which signalling molecule does it contain which instructs it migrate away?

A

i) postmitotic, immature nerve cells that will differentiate into a neuron

ii) fate determined by - age of precursor cell
- position in the ventricular zone
- environment at time of division (which signals are present)

iii) notch causes it to migrate away

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8
Q

DEVELOPMENT OF THE CORTEX

i) where do cells begin? what is the first later to be generated? what is the last layer to be generated?
ii) what do the first cells to migrate become? what does this form for the rest of the cells?
iii) where do the second cells to migrate move past? what do they then become?
iv) what plate is the boundary before the marginal zone?
v) which two plates dissappear after all layers are formed?

A

i) cells begin in the ventricular zone
- first layer to be generated is layer 6 and the last is layer 1

ii) first cells to migrate become the subplate which forms a scaffold for the rest of the cells
iii) second cells migrate and move past the subplate and become the cortical plate
iv) the cortical plate is the boundary before the marginal zone
v) after all laters have formed the subplate and cortical plate dissappear

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9
Q

DEVELOPMENT OF THE CORTEX

i) label A-D
ii) what happens to the neuroblasts once all layers are developed? how do they do this?

A

i) A = ventricular zone, B = subplate, C = cortical plate,
D = white matter

ii) once all layers have developed the neuroblasts will differentiate by sprouting neurites (axons/dendrites)

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10
Q

NEUROBLAST DIFFERENTIATION

i) name two structures that allow the neuroblast to grow and move
ii) where does a retinal ganglion cell need to migrate to? name the three steps in which it does this
iii) give an example of a chemoattractant? what do they do?
iv) give an example of a chemorepellant? what do they do?
v) what will happen to cells moving along a surface lined with chemoattractants or repellents?

A

i) growth cone and filopodia

ii) retinal gang cell needs to migrate to the thalamus then the LGN
- pathway selection (thalamus), target selection (LGN), address selection (correct layer in LGN)

iii) chemoattractants = netrin
- promote growth to a specific chemical source over distance

iv) chemorepellant = slit
- turns growth the opposite way to the source

v) cells moving along a surface lined with attractants = growth cone will extend along it
- lined with repellents - makes the growth cone retract

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11
Q

CHEMOATTRACTION AND CHEMOREPULSION

i) where are netrins released from in the spinal cord? what effect do they have on spinal thalamic axons?
ii) where is slit released from? what is its associated receptor?
iii) what effect does slit have on sensitivity of the growth cone to netrin? what does this allow?
iv) what information do spinal thalamic axons relay?

A

i) from the ventral surface in the midline of the spinal cord
- influence the growth of spinal thalamic axons from dorsal horn to the ventral midline

ii) slit is released just adjacent to the midline
- assoc receptor is robo

iii) slit stops the growth cone responding to netrin once its crossed the midline
- this means that once the GC has crossed the midline is does not cross back

v) spinal thalamic axons relay pain and temperature information

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12
Q

TROPHIC INTERACTIONS

i) give an example of a neurotrophic factor?
ii) how to inputs get to a target neuron? what is required to happen when they arrive?
iii) how is competition for trophic factors reflected? why is this necessary?
iv) by which mechanism allows refinement of connections made by neurons and target cells?

A

i) NGF

ii) neurons follow a chemoattractant to the target cell
- need to refine the amount of connections made

iii) competition for trophic factors is reflected in selective apoptosis - produces proper match in number of pre and post syn neurons
iv) selective apoptosis

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13
Q

SYNAPSE ELIMINATION

i) what does synaptic capacity lead to? when does it peak and when does it decline?
ii) in what time period are most synapses lost?
iii) which receptors are selectively lost pre synaptically? which two steps does this involve?
iv) which step happens before the axon branch is withdrawn?
v) name another way that a synapse can be eliminated

A

i) synaptic capacity leads to each neuron receiving a finite number of synapses
- peaks in early development and decreases during maturation

ii) most are lost during adolescence

iii) selective loss of pre synaptic Ach receptors
- involves dissembly of the receptor then retraction of the axon branch

iv) Ach R loss post synaptically
v) can also eliminate synapses by blocking the receptor with a toxin (loss of AchRs then withdrawal of axon branch)

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14
Q

CRITICAL PERIODS AND MODIFICATION OF BRAIN CIRCUITS

i) do the first steps in constructing brain circuitry rely on electrical activity?
ii) once electrical activity is established what is important in temporal windows called critical periods?
iii) what concept underlies critical periods? give an example
iv) what are the two important factors for success completion of the critical period?

A

i) no - they rely on intrinsic and cellular mechanisms
ii) activity mediated influences on the developing brain are most consequential in critical periods
iii) critical periods = variable time window for different skills and behaviours to be developed eg sensorimotor skills

iv) two important factors for completion = availability of appropriate influences eg exposure to language
- neural capacity to be able to respond to the influences

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15
Q

OCULAR DOMINANCE COLUMNS/VISUAL DEPRIVATION

i) what layer of the primary visual cortex are these found?
ii) what do they indicate about thalamic input? how can they be visualised?
iii) what does the visual deprivation task show?
iv) what happens when a cat is given three days of visual deprivation during a critical periods? which eye is activation shifted to?
v) what effect does visual deprivation have on the adult?
vi) which other animals has this also been seen in?

A

i) layer 4

ii) indicate seperate thalamic input for each eye
- vis by injecting a RA tracer > transported along the visual pway > LGN > visual cortex > corresponds to that eye

iii) vis dep task shows that development of visual perception requires sensory experience within the critical period
iv) visual deprivation during a critical period causes a significant shift in cortical activation to the non deprived eye
v) visual deprivation has no effect on an adult
vi) macaque monkeys

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16
Q

CRITICAL PERIODS CONT

i) what may ocular injuries in children result in? when does this need to be corrected?
ii) what may happen if this is not corrected in the critical period? (2)
iii) what happens when newly hatched birds are given early social interaction with humans? how is this concept transferred to humans?
iv) when may mechanisms during critical periods be harvested?

A

i) can result in an imbalance of input into each eye
- needs to be corrected during the critical period

ii) may have poor binocular vision and decreased depth perception

iii) birds will believe the human is its mum and follow it
- shows in humans that early social interaction with other humans is essential for normal social development

iv) to aid recovery from damage after the critical period has ended

17
Q

HEBBIAN MODIFICATIONS DURING DEVELOPMENT

i) what is the underlying hebbian concept? which synapes are strengthened?
ii) what initially happens with inputs from both eyes on a target cell? what are synapses consequently segregated by?
iii) what is the name of the process that allows segregation of synaptic connections based on their activity?
iv) what type of modification do active inputs undergo? what does this result in the connections becoming?

A

i) neurons that fire together wire together
- synapses that have inputs that arrive at the same time are strengthened

ii) initially there are inputs from both eyes but then there is segregation of activity and elimination due to activity (those firing out of sync lose their link)
iii) activity dependent elimination allows segregation of synapses based on their activity
iv) active synapses undergo hebbian modification which results in the cells becoming strengthened

18
Q

CRITICAL PERIODS

i) give three possible explanations for why they end?
ii) what can they be important for understanding? what can this be used to aid?

A

i) axon growth, synaptic transmission matures or constraints on cortical activation with age

ii) can be important for understanding recovery from damage
- harness mechanisms during the crit period to aid recovery from damage that has occured after the critical period has ended

19
Q

SOMATOTOPIC ORDER IN PRIMARY SOMATOSENS CORTEX

i) what does activity in this area depend on?
ii) what other area is this organisation also seen in?
iii) what does each part of the somatosensory cortex represent? are these all equal? explain
iv) can this representation change?

A

i) activity depends on synapse refinement
ii) also seen in motor cortex

iii) each part of the SS cortex represents body parts
- no equal for each - higher represent in lips, mouth, hands

iv) yes representation can change

20
Q

PLASTICITY IN ADULT CEB CORTEX

i) what happens to the cortical representation of the hand digits if one is amputated? what does this indicate?
ii) what to changes in representation reflect? how can this be demonstrated experimentally?

A

i) if one digit is amputated then only repres the four remaining digits which inidcates plasticity

ii) changes in repres reflect enriched experience
- give a disk to rotate using only fingers 2 and 4 - see bigger area of repres for 2 and 4 in the cortex

21
Q

PERIPHERAL VS CENTRAL NERVE REGENERATION

I) in the CNS - are there stem cells for regeneration? what does this mean for regenerative capacity?

ii) which cells promote astrocytes to release inhibitory factors after injury in CNS? what does this lead to formation to?
iii) which cells remove debris from injury in both CNS and PNS?
iv) what four things are expressed after injury in PNS? which cells are essential for axon regeneration?
v) which PNS cells secrete neurotrophins? what do NTs help with in the regenerating neuron?

A

i) no stem cells for regen in the CNS therefore low regen capacity
ii) oligodendrocytes promote astrocytes to release inhib factors post injury > formation of glial scar
iii) macrophages remove debris in both CNS and PNS

iv) PNS injury > neuron expresses growth related genes, growth cone, adhesion molecules and axon promoting signals
- schwann cells are essential for axon regeneration

v) schwann cells secrete neurotrophins which can help the new growth cone find its target

22
Q

ADULT NEUROGENESIS

i) which two brain regions can this occur in?
ii) which neurons are primarily involved in neurogenesis in adults? do these integrate into functional networks well?
iii) which cells create a scaffold for new cells to migrate along in pre and perinatal development? are these cells present in the adult?
iv) what is a barrier to regeneration in the adult? (2) after what event may there be even more reduced regeneration?

A

i) sub ventricular zone to the olfactory bulb and the hippocampus
ii) inhibitory interneurons primarily involved - some integrate into functional networks but most die
iii) radial cells create a scaffold in pre and perinatal development - radial cells not pres in adult

iv) barriers to regen > no interneuron progenitors and no neuronal migration
- reduced regeneration post stroke