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Towards a New Neuromorphology (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016)
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Towards a New Neuromorphology (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2016)
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This book demonstrates that the systematic study of gene expression
patterns in embryonic and adult brains, in combination with
selected data from earlier studies, can pave the way for a new
neuromorphology, the most salient features of which may be
summarized as follows: (1) Causal analysis of molecular patterning
at neural plate and early neural tube stages has shown that the CNS
is essentially organized into transverse neural segments or
neuromeres and longitudinal zones which follow the curved axis of
the brain. (2) The FMUs initially represent thin neuroepithelial
fields; in the course of further development they are transformed
into three-dimensional radial units, extending from the ventricular
surface to the meningeal surface of the brain. (3) The principal
histogenetic processes, including cellular proliferation, cell
migration and differentiation, essentially take place within the
confines of these radial units, controlled by characteristic sets
of developmental regulatory genes. (4) Although most developing
neurons migrate radially and settle within their own FMU, at many
locations neuroblasts leave the FMU where they were produced and
migrate tangentially to other nearby or remote territories,
colonizing parts of foreign FMUs. (5) Many structural complexes in
the adult brain, including the cerebral and cerebellar cortices,
are the products of radial and tangential intermingling of migrated
cell contingents. (6) By using appropriate molecular markers, all
neuron types in the adult CNS can be traced back to a specific
progenitor zone within a specific FMU, and the progeny of any FMU
can be traced to their final positions with the help of selective
labeling approaches. (7) Early outgrowing axons form bundles, which
tend to pass close to the border zones of the radial units. By
means of their molecularly diversely tuned growth cones, these
extending axons decide how to behave at each boundary they
encounter, sometimes even reorienting at right angles. Collectively
these early axonal bundles form a checkerboard-like scaffold, which
accentuates the molecular regionalization of the CNS and leads to
the formation of topographically ordered synaptic fields. The book
covers all of these aspects in detail, providing a morphologic
model (blueprint) that highlights the natural coordinates of CNS
structure resulting from the conserved molecularly controlled
shaping phenomena within morphogenetic fields.
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