Publication: Lesion and regeneration in the medical cerebral cortex of lizards
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Date
1992
Authors
López-García, Carlos ; Molowny, A. ; Martínez Guijarro, F.J. ; Blasco-lbáñez, J.M. ; Luis de la Iglesia, J.A. ; Bernabeu, A. ; García-Verdugo, J.M.
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Publisher
Murcia : F. Hernández
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DOI
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
The cerebral cortex of Squamate reptiles
(lizards and snakes) may be regarded as an archicortex
or ereptilian hippocampus». In lizards, one cortical area,
the media1 cortex, may be considered as a true ~fascia
dentata» on grounds of its anatomy, connectivity and
cyto- chemo-architectonics of its main zinc-rich axonal
projection. Moreover, its late ontogenesis and postnatal
development support this view. In normal conditions, it
shows delayed postnatal neurogenesis and growth during
the lizard's life span. Remnant neuroblasts in the media1
cortical ependyma of adult lizards seasonally proliferate.
The late-produced immature neurocytes migrate to the
medial cortex cell layer where they differentiate and give
off zinc-containing axons directed to the rest of cortical
areas. This results in a continuous growth of the medial
cortex and its zinc-rich axonal projection.
Perhaps the most important characteristic of the lizard
medial cortex is that it can regenerate after having been
almost completely destroyed. Recent experiments in our
laboratory have shown that chemical lesion of its
neurons (up to 95%) results in a cascade of events; first,
those related with massive neuronal death and axonal-dendritic retraction and, secondly, those related with a
triggered neuroblast proliferation and subsequent neohistogenesis,
and the regeneration of an almost new
medial cortex that shows itself undistinguishable from a
normal undamaged one.
This is the only report to our knowledge that an
arnniote central nervous centre may regenerate by new
neuron production and neo-histogenesis. Perhaps the
media1 cortex of lizards may be used as a model for
neuronal regeneration andlor transplant experiments in
mammals or even in primates.
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