The present paper is the first comprehensive study on the astroglia of a teleost fish that is based on the immunohistochemical staining of GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein, an immunohistochemical marker of astroglia). The ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) and their largest group, the Teleostei, represent a separate pathway of vertebrate evolution. Their brain has a very complex macroscopic structure; several parts either have no equivalents in tetrapods or have a very different shape, e.g., the telencephalon. The results show that the teleost brain has a varied and highly specialized astroglial architecture. The primary system is made up of radial glia, which are of ependymal origin and cover the pial surface with endfeet. The tendency is, however, that the more caudal a brain area is, the less regular is the radial arrangement. A typical radial glia dominates some parts of the diencephalon (median eminence, lobus inferior and habenula) and the telencephalon. In the rest of the diencephalon and in the mesencephalon, the course of the glial fibers is modified by brain tracts. The most specialized areas of the teleost brain, the optic tectum and the cerebellum, display elaborate variations of the original radial system, which is adapted to their layered organization. In the cerebellum, an equivalent of the Bergmannglia can be found, although its fiber arrangement shows meaningful differences from that of mammals or birds. In the lower brain stem radial glia are confined to fibers separating the brain tracts and forming the midline raphe. A dense ependymoglial plexus covers the inner surface of the tectum and the bottom of the rhombencephalic ventricle, intruding into the vagal and facial lobes. The structure and the position of the rhombencephalic plexus suggest that it corresponds to a circumventricular organ that entirely occupies the bottom of the ventricle. Perivascular glia show an unusual form as they consist of long fibers running along the blood vessels. In the large brain tracts long glial fibers run parallel with the course of the neural fibers. At least in the diencephalon, these glial fibers seem to be modified radial fibers. Real astrocytes (i.e., stellate-shaped cells) can be found only in the brain stem and even there only rarely. The glial specialization in the various areas of the teleost brain seems to be more elaborate than that found either in amphibia or in reptiles.
SummaryThe subfornical organ (SFO) is a circumventricular organ with a chemosensitive function, and its vessels have no blood-brain barrier. Our study investigated the glial and vascular components in the SFO to determine whether their distributions indicate subdivisions, how to characterize the vessels and how to demarcate the SFO. To this end, we investigated glial markers (GFAP, glutamine synthetase, S100) and other markers, including vimentin and nestin (immature glia), laminin (basal lamina), β-dystroglycan (glio-vascular connections), and aquaporin 4 (glial water channels). We determined that the 'shell' of the SFO was marked by immunoreactivity for S100, GFAP and aquaporin 4. Nestin immunoreactivity was characteristic of the 'core'. Vimentin was almost evenly distributed. Glutamine synthetase immunoreactivity occurred in the shell but its expression was sparse. Vessels in the core were decorated with laminin but showed a discontinuous expression of aquaporin 4. Vimentin and GFAP staining was usually in separate glial elements, which may be related to their functional differences. Similar to other vessels in the brain, β-dystroglycan was detected along the shell vessels but laminin was not. The gradual disappearance of the laminin immunopositivity was attributed to the gradual disappearance of the perivascular space. Thus, our findings suggest that the shell and core glio-vascular structures are adapted to different sensory functions: osmoperception and the perception of circulating peptides, respectively.
This paper supplements former studies on elasmobranch species with an immunohistochemical investigation into glutamine synthetase and S-100 protein, in addition to GFAP, and extends its scope to the representatives of almost every group of Elasmobranchii: squalomorph sharks, galeomorph sharks, skates (Rajiformes) and rays (Torpediniformes and Myliobatifomes). More glial elements were labeled by S-100 protein, and even more so by using glutamine synthetase immunostaining than by GFAP: more astrocytes (mainly non-perivascular ones) were detected in the telencephalon of sharks, skates and rays. Only the markers S-100 and glutamine synthetase, but not GFAP, characterized the Bergmann-glia of skates and rays and astrocyte-like non-ependymal cells in Squalus acanthias. Another squalomorph shark species, Pristiophorus cirratus, however, had GFAP immunopositive astrocytes. Of all the species studied, the greatest number of GFAP positive astrocytes could be observed in Mobula japanica (order Myliobatiformes), in each major brain part. According to anatomical location, perivascular glia comprised varied types, including even a location in Mobula, which can also be found in mammals. Remnants of radial glia were found in confined areas of skates, less so in rays. In the rhombencephalon and in the spinal cord modified ependymoglia predominated in every group. In conclusion, there was no meaningful difference between the astroglial architectures of squalomorph and galeomorph sharks. The difference in the astroglial structure between sharks and batoids, however, was confined to the telencephalon and mesencephalon, and did not take place in the rhombencephalon, the latter structure being quite similar in all the species studied. The appearance of astrocytes in the relatively thin-walled shark telencephalon, however, indicates that the brain thickening promoted the preponderance of astrocytes rather than their appearance itself. Although the evolutionary changes of astroglia had some similarities in Elasmobranchii and Amniota, there was one meaningful difference: in Elasmobranchii astrocytes did not prevail in conservative brain regions as they did in the progressive brain regions.
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