A pioneering growth cone in the embryonic zebrafish brain

  1. S W Wilson and
  2. S S Easter, Jr
  1. Department of Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-1048.

Abstract

During development of the nervous system, growth cones navigate very precisely to their appropriate, often distant, targets. In insects, the task of establishing the earliest pathways is accomplished by a small number of neurons, termed pioneers. These neurons have axons that lay down an early scaffold, which provides a substrate for many later-developing axons. Here we show that a similar type of cell exists in the embryonic vertebrate brain. Using light- and electron-microscopic techniques we have examined the formation of one of the earliest tracts in the zebrafish brain. We find that it is pioneered at a precise time by the growth cone of a single neuron present in a predictable location. These observations show a fundamental similarity in the establishment of axonal pathways in the central nervous systems of both invertebrates and vertebrates.

« Previous | Next Article »Table of Contents