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EVOLUTIONARYDEVELOPMENTALBIOLOGYOFTHECEREBRALCORTEXNovartis 228: EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN 0-471-97978-3 eISBN 0-470-84663-1 TheNovartisFoundation is an international scienti¢c and educational charity (UK Registered Charity No. 313574). Known until September 1997 as the Ciba Foundation, it was established in 1947 by the CIBA company of Basle, which merged with Sandoz in 1996, to form Novartis. TheFoundation operates independently in London under English trust law. It was formally opened on 22 June 1949. TheFoundation promotes the study and general knowledge of science and in particular encourages international co-operation in scienti¢c research. To this end, it organizes internationally acclaimed meetings (typically eight symposia and allied open meetings and 15^20 discussion meetings) and publishes eight books per year featuring the presented papers and discussions from the symposia. Although primarily an operational rather than a grant-making foundation, it awards bursaries to young scientists to attend the symposia and afterwards work with one ofthe other participants. The Foundation's headquarters at 41 Portland Place, London W1N 4BN, provide library facilities, open to graduates in science and allied disciplines. Media relations are fostered by regular press conferences and by articles prepared by the Foundation's Science Writer in Residence. TheFoundation o¡ers accommodation and meeting facilities to visiting scientists and their societies. Information on all Foundation activities can be found at http://www.novartisfound.org.uk Novartis 228: EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN0-471-97978-3 eISBN 0-470-84663-1 EVOLUTIONARYEVOLUTIONARY DEVELOPMENTALDEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGYOF THEBIOLOGY OFTHECEREBRAL CORTEXCEREBRAL CORTEX 2000 JOHN WILEY & SONS, LTD Chichester ´ New York ´ Weinheim ´ Brisbane ´ Singapore ´ Toronto NovartisFoundation Symposium 228 Novartis 228: EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN 0-471-97978-3 eISBN 0-470-84663-1 Copyright & NovartisFoundation 2000 Published in 2000 byJohnWiley & Sons Ltd, Ba¤ns Lane, Chichester, West Sussex PO19 1UD, England National 01243 779777 International (+44) 1243 779777 e-mail (for orders and customer service enquiries): cs-books@wiley.co.uk Visit our Home Page on http://www.wiley.co.uk or http://www.wiley.com All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise, except under the terms ofthe Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 or under the terms of a licence issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency, 90 Tottenham Court Road, London,W1P 9HE, UK, without the permission in writing ofthe publisher. OtherWiley Editorial O¤ces John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 605 Third Avenue, NewYork, NY 10158-0012, USA WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH, Pappelallee 3, D-69469 Weinheim, Germany Jacaranda Wiley Ltd, 33 Park Road, Milton, Queensland 4064, Australia John Wiley & Sons (Asia) Pte Ltd, 2 Clementi Loop #02-01, Jin Xing Distripark, Singapore 129809 John Wiley & Sons (Canada) Ltd, 22 Worcester Road, Rexdale, Ontario M9W 1L1, Canada NovartisFoundation Symposium 228 ix+271 pages, 48 ¢gures, 1 table Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Evolutionarydevelopmentalbiologyofthecerebral cortex/ [editors, Gregory R. Bock and Gail Cardew]. p. cm. ^ (Novartis Foundation symposium ; 228) Symposium on EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiologyoftheCerebral Cortex, held at theNovartis Foundation, London, 20^22 April 1999. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-471-97978-3 (hbk : alk. paper) 1. Cerebral cortex^Congresses. 2. Brain^Evolution^Congresses. 3. Developmental neurobiology^Congresses. I. Bock, Gregory. II. Cardew, Gail. III. Novartis Foundation. IV. Symposium on EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiologyoftheCerebralCortex (1999 : London, England). V. Series. QP383.E95 2000 573.8'6^dc21 00-027101 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 0 471 97978 3 Ty p e s e t i n 10 1 Ù 2 on 12 1 Ù 2 pt Garamond by DobbieTypesetting Limited, Tavistock, Devon. Printed and bound in Great Britain by Biddles Ltd, Guildford and King's Lynn. This book is printed on acid-free paper responsibly manufactured from sustainable forestry, in which at least two trees are planted for each one used for paper production. Novartis 228: EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN0-471-97978-3 eISBN 0-470-84663-1 Contents Symposium on Evolutionarydevelopmentalbiology ofthe cerebral cortex, held atthe Novartis Foundation, London, 20^22 April1999 This symposium is based on a proposal made by Zolta ¨ nMolna ¨ r Editors: Gregory R. Bock (organizer) and Gail Cardew L.Wolpert What is evolutionarydevelopmental biology? 1 Discussion 9 K. Herrup Thoughts on the cerebellum as a model for cerebral cortical development and evolution 15 Discussion 24 P. Rakic Radial unit hypothesis of neocortical expansion 30 Discussion 42 General discussion I 46 E. Boncinelli, A. Mallamaci and L. Muzio Genetic control of regional identity in the developing vertebrate forebrain 53 Discussion 61 J. L. R. Rubenstein Intrinsic and extrinsic control of cortical development 67 Discussion 75 A. J. Reiner A hypothesis as to the organization ofcerebralcortex in the common amniote ancestor of modern reptiles and mammals 83 Discussion 102 General discussion II 109 I. Bar and A. M. Go¤net Evolution of cortical lamination: the reelin/Dab1 pathway 114 Discussion 125 v Novartis 228: EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN 0-471-97978-3 eISBN 0-470-84663-1 Participants E. Boncinelli DIBIT, Scienti¢c Institute San Ra¡aele,Via Olgettina 58, Milan, Italy F. Bonhoe¡er MPI fÏr Entwicklungsbiologie, Abt. Physikal. Biologie, Spemannstr. 35/1, 72076 TÏbingen, Germany V. Broccoli (Bursar) TIGEM Institute Dibit HS Ra¡aele,Via Olgettina 58, I-20132 Milan, Italy A. B. Butler Krasnow Institute for Advanced Study and Department of Psychology, George Mason University, MSN 2A1, Fairfax,VA 22030, USA S. E. Evans Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, University College London, Gower Street, LondonWC1E 6BT, UK A. M. Go¤net Neurobiology Unit, University of Namur Medical School, 61 rue de Bruxelles, B5000 Namur, Belgium K. Herrup Department of Neuroscience and UniversityAlzheimer Research Center of Cleveland, CaseWestern Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44120, USA W. Ho d o s Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742-4411, USA S. Hunt Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, Medawar Building, University College London, Gower Street, LondonWC1E 6BT, UK J. H. Kaas Department of Psychology,Vanderbilt University, 301Wilson Hall, Nashville,TN 37240, USA H. J. Karten (Chair) Department of Neurosciences, University of California at SanDiego,LaJolla,CA92093-0608,USA vii Novartis 228: EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN0-471-97978-3 eISBN 0-470-84663-1 Subject index A adenylyl cyclase 1 233, 236 adenylate cyclase 1 235 aldolase C 21, 28 amniote evolution 109^112 relationships 110 see also stem amniotes amphibian brain 111 Amphioxus 126 amygdala 49, 62, 63, 88, 107, 108 anamniote dorsal thalamus 106 antenna 13 anterior dorsal ventricular ridge (ADVR) 54, 158, 160 see also dorsal ventricular ridge anterior entopeduncular areas (AEP) 69 anterior neural ridge (ANR) 68, 69 anterior thalamus 13 antidromic activation 238 apical ectodermal ridge (AER) 79 apoptosis 36 apoptotic genes 36^38 archicortex 71 astrocyte 183 auditory system 107 axon guidance molecules 174^175 axonal development 235 B baboon 8 barrel cortex 229, 235 barrel formation 236 barrelless mice 232^233 basal forebrain cholinergic system 78 basal ganglia 46, 47, 49 basal portion of dorsal ventricular ridge (BDVR) 54 see also dorsal ventricular ridge basal striatal domain 54 Bauplan 13, 63 bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) 10, 69, 77 brain building 206^226 maps 192 organization 208, 260 postnatal growth 243 re-wiring 181^182 size 206 brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) 185 brainstem 182 branchial arches 2^4 cartilage 4 branchial clefts 3 C cadherins 78 Caenorhabditis elegans 9 Cajal-Retzius cells 18, 19, 22, 56^59, 61, 62, 120, 127, 133, 134, 140, 141 calretinin 56 cAMP 235 canonical circuitry 259 caspase 3 37, 42, 44 caspase 9 37, 38, 42 catecholaminergic amacrine cells 11^12 Cdk5 20, 122^124 cell division 36 cell migration 133 cell populations, evolution 46^52 cell proliferation 173 kinetics 34^36 central nervous system (CNS) 227^228, 232, 263 cerebellar anlage 16 cerebellar ¢eld 15 cerebellar granule cells 17 cerebellum 47, 145 as model for cerebralcortex development 15^29 266 Novartis 228: EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN0-471-97978-3 eISBN 0-470-84663-1 development 15^18 evolution 20^21 morphogenesis 18^20 cerebralcortex cerebellum as model 15^29 in common amniote ancestor 83^108 common patterns of organization across species 212 expansion 44^45 lamination 57, 61, 114^128, 262^263 model of evolution 120^124 neuroepithelium 22 regionalization 173^187 size 34, 39, 42, 206, 235 cerebral peduncle 76 cerebrum 21, 26 chemoattractants 167 chemorepellants 167 chick limb 14 chicken hairy gene 13 claustroamygdaloid complex 49 claustrum 49, 62, 88, 225 CLUSTAL alignments 119 collothalamic pronuclear mass 107 collothalamus 50 common origin hypothesis 89^93, 103 evolutionary transformations 96^98 connectivity 184 patterns 182 regional 154^155 core of dorsal ventricular ridge (CNDVR) 162 see also dorsal ventricular ridge Cornsweet illusion 245^247 corpus striatum 151 cortical a¡erents 223 cortical cell migration syndromes 19 cortical^cortical aggregates 146 cortical development see cerebralcortex cortical expansion 39^40 cortical ¢elds 220 development 213^218 cortical gyri 37 cortical interneurons 132^137 cortical migration 55^59 cortical neurons 24 migration 59 cortical patterning 176 cortical plate 39, 40, 58, 128, 130 development 19, 116 neurons 59 radial organization 115^116 cortical sheet 215, 217 corticoclaustral interconnections 62 corticofugal axons 79 corticofugal projections 149, 151 corticogenesis 33, 34, 36 in reptiles 118^119 corticothalamic path¢nding 154 CPP322 44 Craik^O'Brien^Cornsweet e¡ect 245^247 craniofacial defects 237 critical cellular events 31^33 cyclin-dependent kinase-5 20 see also Cdk5 cytoarchitectonic areas 40, 76, 77 cytoarchitectonic maps 82 cytoarchitecture 81 cytochrome oxidase 75, 190 D Dab1 see reelin/Dab1 pathway deep cerebellar nuclei (DCN) 16^17, 19 developmental patterns 156^157 developmental plasticity 227^239 developmental potential, cell location for modulating 175^176 Devonian period 7 Dictyostelium 126 diencephalon 106 digit development 9 DiI (1,1'dioctadecyl-3,3,3',3'- tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate) 130, 134^136, 167^169, 238 distalless 63 Dlx-positive cells 51 Dlx1 72 Dlx2 72 DNA 37, 126 dorsal cortex 86, 103, 104, 117, 157 dorsal pronucleus 106 dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) 186 dorsal thalamic neurons 63 dorsal thalamus 166, 238 dorsal ventricular ridge (DVR) 46, 47, 49^ 51, 54, 55, 84, 85, 87, 89^93, 99, 103^106, 110, 112, 127, 145, 157, 160, 162, 259, 260 downstream targets 13 SUBJECT INDEX 267 Drosophila 5, 9, 11, 13, 81, 112, 127, 176, 260, 262 E echidnas 225, 226 electroreceptors 221 embryonic forebrain 152 embryonic pallial organization in reptiles and mammals 158^160 Emx1 55, 62, 63, 65, 66, 70, 98, 112 Emx2 55^59, 62, 70, 77, 140 En1 16, 18 En2 16, 18 endodermal cells 3 endopyriform nucleus 49 endopyriform region 88 engrailed genes 16, 78 ephrins 5 epidermal growth factor (EGF) 5, 9 receptors 182 epistriatal dorsal ventricular ridge 112 see also dorsal ventricular ridge eustachian tube 3 eutherian mammals 211^212 evolutionarydevelopmentalbiology 1^14 external granule cell layer (EGL) 17 extracellular matrix 127 F fate-mapping 76, 82, 145 Fgf8 15, 18 ¢broblast growth factor (FGF) 5, 68, 79 ¢eld homology 11^13 ¢sh 7, 21, 48 forebrain development 53^66, 148 genetic control in 53^66 homologous expression patterns 54^55 regional connectivity 154^155 regionalization 68 founder cells 37, 39, 40, 43 fructose-1,6-bisphosphate 21 G GABA 18, 21, 51, 64, 71^72, 129, 132, 134, 136^137, 140, 141, 143, 184, 232 g-aminobutyric acid see GABA ganglionic eminence 129^147 see also lateral ganglionic eminence; medial ganglionic eminence GAP43 56 Gbx2 71, 75, 77, 78, 145, 168, 170, 176 Gelb e¡ect 254 gene duplication 7 gene expression 65 patterns 260, 262 genetic control in vertebrate forebrain development 53^66 geniculate nucleus 81 see also lateral geniculate nucleus Gli3 70 glial cells 59, 184 gliophilic ¢bres 33 globus pallidus 62 granular cells 26 growth di¡erentiation factors 69 growth factor signalling 176^177 growth rates 8 H handshake hypothesis 149, 223 hawk^goose stimulus 256^257 hedgehog neocortex 92 b-heregulin 177 heterochrony 40 hippocampus 27, 50, 55^56, 78, 86 homeobox genes 13 homology, homologous structures 11^13, 63, 112, 156-157, 215, 260 Hox genes 5^8, 10 HVC 49 hydrocephalus 44 hyperstriatum ventrale 63, 184 hypothalamus 185 I IGL 18 immunopositive cells 44 incus 65 inferotemporal cortex 102 intermediate zone 25 intralaminar thalamus 95 isocortex 105, 225, 226 L lamination 47^48, 57, 59, 61, 114^128, 262^263 268 SUBJECT INDEX LAMP 174^177, 179, 184^186 lateral cortex 104, 105, 157 lateral ganglionic eminence (LGE) 48, 51, 132^134, 137, 139, 141, 167 see also medial ganglionic eminence lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) 193 see also geniculate nucleus lateral limbic cortex 71 lateral pallium 106 see also pallium Lef1 70 LEF1 transcription factor 69 lemnothalamic nuclei 50 limbic system-associated membrane protein see LAMP limbs 7^8 lissencephaly ofthe Miller^Dieker type 19 lobe-¢nned ¢sh 7 luminance 241, 246, 247 Lxh2 77 M Mach bands 247^252 malleus 65 marsupials 209^211 Math1 22 Math1-positive cells 17 Mdab1 20 meandertail gene 26 mechanoreceptors 221 medial cortex 117 medial ganglionic eminence (MGE) 133^137, 139, 141, 142, 167, 171 see also lateral gangionic eminence medial pallium 69 see also pallium median forebrain bundle 78 midbrain^hindbrain boundary 20, 176 middle temporal visual area (MT) 102^103 migratory cells 125 molecular patterning 174 Monodelphis 158, 167, 224 monotremes 209^211, 225 motor cortex 76 mRNA expression 121, 122 mystacial whisker follicles cortical representation 228^229 pattern of 231 selective breeding for variations in number 231^232 N nematode 9, 14 neocortex 10, 11, 70^71, 129, 134, 142, 262 arealization 78, 261 eutherian mammals 212 evolution in mammals 83^88 evolutionary expansion 39^40 size 207, 215 subdivision techniques 206^207 neocortical cells 222 neocortical expansion, radial unit hypothesis 30^45 neocortical lamination 59 neocortical neuronal migration 56 neocortical regionalization 71 neocortical subdivisions 75 neocortical surface 31 neural plate 68, 79 neurogenesis 43, 55, 118 neuromere 11 neuron generation 262 neuronal cell types 129^147 neuronal precursors 36 neurons 24, 32^33, 39, 43, 45, 49^51, 59, 63, 182, 184 cortical and subcortical origins 71^72 neurophilic cells 33 Nkx2.1 69, 70, 79, 176 Nkx2.2 80 NMDA 237 NMDA receptor 229, 236^237 norepinephrine 235 Notch^delta 5 O ocular dominance columns 192, 221 olfactory bulb 27, 47, 70 olfactory cortex 86, 95 olfactory placode 70 olfactory projections 162 olfactory system 225 ontogeny 1 opossum neocortex 92 optic tectum 194 orbital frontal cortex 225 Otx1 70 Otx2 16, 70 SUBJECT INDEX 269 [...]... neurons ofthe deep cerebellar nuclei (DCN) and the Purkinje cells ofthe cerebellar cortex, are the ¢rst to emigrate from THE CEREBELLUM 17 FIG 2 Migration pattern ofthe early cerebellar granule cells (A) Three-dimensional view ofthe migratory paths ofthe granule cells over the surface ofthe embryonic cerebellum The upward pointing arrows indicate the direction of migration of these precursors from the. .. form, together with the establishment of a new pattern of Hox gene expression in the more distal region Growth and timing Many ofthe changes that occur during evolution re£ect changes in the relative dimensions of parts ofthe body Growth can alter the proportions ofthe human baby after birth, as the head grows much less than the rest ofthe body The variety of face shapes in the di¡erent breeds of dog,... development 240 Discussion 254 Final discussion 259 Index of contributors Subject index 266 264 Novartis 228: EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiology ofthe CerebralCortex Copyright & 2000 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN 0-4 7 1-9 797 8-3 eISBN 0-4 7 0-8 466 3-1 What is evolutionarydevelopmental biology? L Wolpert Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK Abstract... di¡erent A nice example of a modi¢cation of an existing structure is provided by the evolution ofthe mammalian middle ear This is made up of three bones that transmit sound from the eardrum (the tympanic membrane) to the inner ear In the reptilian ancestors of mammals, the joint between the skull and the lower jaw was between the quadrate bone ofthe skull and the articular bone ofthe lower jaw, which... ofthe cerebellum In a chapter of this length, it is not feasible to do justice to the complex topic of cerebellar evolution Rather, a few observations are presented here for consideration in the context ofthe relevance of the evolution ofthe cerebellar cortex to that of the cerebral cortex Perhaps the most basic observation of all is that the cerebellum as a laminated cortex evolved in vertebrates... genes along the anteroposterior axis is usually the same as their sequential order in the gene complex Hox genes are key genes in the control of development and are expressed regionally along the anteroposterior axis of the embryo The apparent universality of Hox genes, and certain other genes, in animal development has led to the concept of the zootype This de¢nes the pattern of expression of these key... in the two-dimensional plane of the pial membrane with a relatively modest thickness in the radial dimension The question for this chapter then is whether these similarities, in particular the sheet-like organization are coincidental or indicative of larger themes that play deeper roles in the development and function of these two seemingly disparate brain regions 2000 Evolutionarydevelopmental biology. .. subserving the lateral line organ of ¢sh, a somatosensory array that alerts the organism to the movement ofthe surrounding water The comparative anatomy ofthe expression ofthe glycolytic enzyme, aldolase C, has been used to suggest a set of steps in the evolution ofthe cerebellum (Lannoo et al 1991) Aldolase C is a glycolytic enzyme that catalyses the cleavage of fructose1,6-bisphosphate and is the antigen... pattern of expression and downstream targets without depriving the organism ofthe function ofthe original gene The process of gene duplication has been fundamental in the evolution of new proteins and new patterns of gene expression; it is clear, for example, that the di¡erent haemoglobins in humans have arisen as a result of gene duplication One ofthe clearest examples ofthe importance of gene... a meaningless concept Eur J Morphol 37:95^99 Novartis 228: EvolutionaryDevelopmentalBiology ofthe CerebralCortex Copyright & 2000 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN 0-4 7 1-9 797 8-3 eISBN 0-4 7 0-8 466 3-1 Thoughts on the cerebellum as a model for cerebral cortical development and evolution Karl Herrup Department of Neuroscience and University Alzheimer Center of Cleveland, Case Western Reserve University, . Biology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN 0-4 7 1-9 797 8-3 eISBN 0-4 7 0-8 466 3-1 Contents Symposium on Evolutionary developmental biology ofthe cerebral cortex, . at http://www.novartisfound.org.uk Novartis 228: Evolutionary Developmental Biology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN 0-4 7 1-9 797 8-3 eISBN 0-4 7 0-8 466 3-1 EVOLUTIONARYEVOLUTIONARY DEVELOPMENTALDEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY. EVOLUTIONARY DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY OF THE CEREBRAL CORTEX Novartis 228: Evolutionary Developmental Biology ofthe Cerebral Cortex. Copyright & 2000 JohnWiley & Sons Ltd Print ISBN 0-4 7 1-9 797 8-3