The objective is to understand how neurons in the vertebrate central nervous system (CNS) make proper connections with each other. This is one of the fundamental problems in development neurobiology. Answers to this problem should have important implications for many developmental diseases of the nervous system and problems concerning regeneration following injury to the CNS. One important aspect of how neurons become properly wired is how their growth cones navigate through the developing embryo to find their correct target neurons. However, the mechanisms which guide neuronal growth cones to their targets in the vertebrate CNS have been difficult to study primarily due to the complexity and large number of neurons found in the CNS of most vertebrates. I propose to study this problem in the embryonic spinal cord of the fish, the simplest part of the CNS of a relatively simple vertebrate. The early embryonic spinal cord of fish is an excellent preparation for pursuing this question since it contains a relatively small number of neurons which are easily visualized in the living embryo, can be identified as individuals or members of a small pool of homogeneous neurons, and studied with methods allowing analysis of single neurons.
The aims of this proposal are to describe the behavior of single identified growth cones and to delineate the cellular mechanisms which guide these growth cones to their targets. This will be accomplished by intracellular injection of a variety of dyes into individual embryonic neurons, analyzing their growth cones and the substrates of these growth cones with light and electron microscopy, and manipulating the environment of these growth cones by selectively ablating individual cells with a laser microbeam.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01NS024848-03
Application #
3409804
Study Section
Neurology B Subcommittee 1 (NEUB)
Project Start
1987-04-01
Project End
1990-03-31
Budget Start
1989-04-01
Budget End
1990-03-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Department
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
791277940
City
Ann Arbor
State
MI
Country
United States
Zip Code
48109
Chandrasekhar, A; Schauerte, H E; Haffter, P et al. (1999) The zebrafish detour gene is essential for cranial but not spinal motor neuron induction. Development 126:2727-37
Yee, C S; Chandrasekhar, A; Halloran, M C et al. (1999) Molecular cloning, expression, and activity of zebrafish semaphorin Z1a. Brain Res Bull 48:581-93
Chandrasekhar, A; Warren Jr, J T; Takahashi, K et al. (1998) Role of sonic hedgehog in branchiomotor neuron induction in zebrafish. Mech Dev 76:101-15
Shoji, W; Yee, C S; Kuwada, J Y (1998) Zebrafish semaphorin Z1a collapses specific growth cones and alters their pathway in vivo. Development 125:1275-83
Chandrasekhar, A; Moens, C B; Warren Jr, J T et al. (1997) Development of branchiomotor neurons in zebrafish. Development 124:2633-44
Kanki, J P; Chang, S; Kuwada, J Y (1994) The molecular cloning and characterization of potential chick DM-GRASP homologs in zebrafish and mouse. J Neurobiol 25:831-45
Kuwada, J Y (1993) Pathway selection by growth cones in the zebrafish central nervous system. Perspect Dev Neurobiol 1:195-203
Bernhardt, R R; Patel, C K; Wilson, S W et al. (1992) Axonal trajectories and distribution of GABAergic spinal neurons in wildtype and mutant zebrafish lacking floor plate cells. J Comp Neurol 326:263-72
Bernhardt, R R; Nguyen, N; Kuwada, J Y (1992) Growth cone guidance by floor plate cells in the spinal cord of zebrafish embryos. Neuron 8:869-82
Chitnis, A B; Patel, C K; Kim, S et al. (1992) A specific brain tract guides follower growth cones in two regions of the zebrafish brain. J Neurobiol 23:845-54

Showing the most recent 10 out of 18 publications