Summary
Neural stem cells (NSCs, B1 cells) are retained in the walls of the adult lateral ventricles, but unlike embryonic NSCs, are displaced from the ventricular zone (VZ) into the subventricular zone (SVZ) by ependymal cells. Apical and basal compartments, which in embryonic NSCs play essential roles in self-renewal and differentiation, are not evident in adult NSCs. Here we show that adult SVZ B1 cells extend a minute apical ending to directly contact the ventricle and a long basal process ending on blood vessels. A closer look at the ventricular surface reveals a striking pinwheel organization specific to regions of adult neurogenesis. The pinwheel’s core contains the apical endings of B1 cells and in its periphery two types of ependymal cells: multiciliated (E1) and a novel type (E2) characterized by only 2 cilia and extraordinarily complex basal bodies. These results reveal that adult NSCs retain fundamental epithelial properties, including apical and basal compartmentalization, significantly reshaping our understanding of this adult neurogenic niche.
Introduction
New neurons and glial cells continue to be born in restricted germinal regions in the adult mammalian brain (Alvarez-Buylla and Lim, 2004; Zhao et al., 2008). The largest germinal region of the adult brain is found on the walls of the lateral ventricles. In this region, primary neural progenitors reside in the subventricular zone (SVZ), displaced from the ventricles by ependymal cells. In contrast, primary neural progenitors in the developing brain reside in the ventricular zone (VZ), a pseudostratified epithelium in direct contact with the embryonic brain ventricles. Contact with the ventricle through an apical process is critical for maintaining germinal activity of the primary progenitors in the developing brain (Bittman et al., 1997; Nadarajah et al., 1997; Kosodo et al., 2004; Weissman et al., 2004). It is therefore intriguing that the primary progenitors in the adult brain are displaced from the ventricle.
In the embryonic VZ, the primary neural progenitors are radial glia (Noctor et al., 2007b). These elongated stem cells maintain contact with both the pial surface and the ventricular surface. Shortly after birth however, radial glia transform into parenchymal astrocytes (Voigt, 1989) and ependymal cells (Spassky et al., 2005) and little remains of their unique morphology and behavior as the VZ is replaced by the ependymal epithelium.
Adult neural stem cells (NSC) in the SVZ generate large numbers of olfactory bulb interneurons and some oligodendrocytes in corpus callosum, fimbria and striatum (Jackson and Alvarez-Buylla, 2008). These primary progenitors have been identified as a subpopulation of astrocytes called Type B1 cells (Doetsch et al., 1999a), which are derived from radial glia (Merkle et al., 2004). Interestingly, it has been shown that a small subpopulation of SVZ B1 cells have an apical membrane that contacts the ventricle and that the number of these contacts appears to be increased when SVZ proliferation is stimulated (Doetsch et al., 1999b). For radial glia in the embryo, this apical membrane is a specialized structure enriched in prominin-1 (CD133) (Weigmann et al., 1997), par-3 (Manabe et al., 2002), and numb (Rasin et al., 2007). It is the site where the primary cilium, basal body and daughter centriole are located during interphase (Cohen et al., 1988), where the nucleus migrates for mitosis (Committee, 1970), and where the midbody is found at the end of cytokinesis (Dubreuil et al., 2007). Recent evidence suggests that the apical membrane may determine the symmetry of radial glial cell division (Kosodo et al., 2004). The apical membrane of the ventricle-contacting B cells is therefore a potentially important link between adult neurogenesis from the SVZ and developmental neurogenesis from the VZ and may yield many insights into adult NSC function and niche organization.
We developed a new technique to study the apical and basal specializations and organization of different cell types that touch the ventricle in the adult brain. We find that most, if not all, B1 cells comprise a modified VZ in the adult brain with apical contacts and a unique pinwheel architecture. We have also characterized a novel type ependymal cell with 2 cilia and a previously undescribed basal body. This significantly reshapes our understanding of the architecture of this adult neurogenic niche. The work suggests that a neurogenic VZ persists in the adult mammalian brain.
Results
Three cell types contact the lateral ventricle
Wholemounts provide an en-face view of the ventricular surface (Figure S1)(Doetsch and Alvarez-Buylla, 1996), which we hypothesized would facilitate the identification of ventricle-contacting cells. For this study, wholemounts were dissected from animals 60–120 days old. The ventricular surface was largely covered by tufts of ependymal cilia obstructing a clear view of cells that may lie behind (Figure 1A). To obtain an unobstructed view of the ventricular surface, we used γ-tubulin antibodies to label basal bodies and β-catenin antibodies to delineate the cell membrane (Figures 1B–C). This revealed three distinct cellular profiles in contact with the lateral ventricle (LV): (1) cells with a large apical surface and multiple (32–73, mean 49) basal bodies, with γ-tubulin distributed as small, individual points (diameter: 0.54 um) at each basal body, (2) cells with a small apical surface and a single basal body, with γ-tubulin distributed in a donut configuration (diameter: 0.94 um) presumably around the basal body in the pericentriolar material tube (Ou et al., 2004), and (3) cells with an intermediate-sized apical surface and 2 large, complex basal bodies, with more intense γ-tubulin expression distributed in small, individual points as in (1), but arranged in large donut or horseshoe formations (diameter: 1.35 um). Co-staining for γ-tubulin and acetylated-tubulin revealed that these three cell types could also be distinguished by their cilia (Figure 1D): (1) cells with multiple basal bodies had multiple long cilia, corresponding to ependymal cells, (2) cells with a single basal body had a single, short primary cilium, corresponding to B1 cells, and (3) cells with complex basal bodies were often biciliated, with long cilia comparable to those of ependymal cells. We will refer to these biciliated cells as E2 cells and to multiciliated ependymal cells as E1 cells.
To our knowledge, E2 cells have not been described before (see references in Discussion). To characterize the ultrastructure of E2 cells, we reconstructed several of them by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) (Figure 1E, 1F, Figure S2, and Figure S3). E2 cells had two basal bodies, deep interdigitations of the cell membrane with long lateral extensions, light cytoplasm, and spherical nuclei with no invaginations and dispersed chromatin. Mitochondria were abundant, but unlike E1 cells where mitochondria localize near the basal bodies, in E2 cells they were concentrated around the nucleus. Small dictyosomes similar to those observed in E1 cells were also present. The main feature of E2 cells was the complex set of electron dense particles surrounding the basal body. By correlative TEM, we confirmed the ultrastructural properties of E1 (Figure 1H) and B1 cells (Figure 1G) (Doetsch et al., 1997).
Surprisingly, we found B1 cells with a ventricle-contacting apical surface were not rare: we counted 6,225 on the lateral wall of one LV in a single, untreated adult mouse (Figures 5A–B). These B1 apical surfaces were often found clustered with one another. When quantified, the number of B1 cells was nearly one-third (31.0%) of all cells touching the LV wall (Figure 1I). This finding is in stark contrast to the conventional view that the walls of the adult ventricular system are lined by a monolayer of ependymal cells (Bruni et al., 1985). However, it was now clear why B1 cells were previously difficult to find by TEM. While they were substantial in number, the average size of the apical surface of a B1 cell was 24.1 um2, compared to 265.0 um2 for an E1 cell (Figure 1J). Additionally, the average size of the primary cilium of a B1 cell was 3.2 um compared to 11.5 um for E1 cilia (Figure 1K).
B1 and E1/E2 cells have complementary expression patterns of molecular markers at their apical surfaces
The small apical surfaces of B1 cells could be distinguished from the apical surfaces of E1 and E2 cells by GFAP staining (Figure 2A). These small apical surfaces always contained a single basal body. In serial confocal optical sections, GFAP+ B1 apical terminations were associated to cell bodies in the SVZ that had additional basal processes (see below). The GFAP staining, ultrastructure, and cell body location within the SVZ further identified these cells as B1 cells. E1 cells were GFAP−, but were CD24+, a marker of ependymal cells (Calaora et al., 1996). Interestingly, E2 cells were also CD24+ (Figure 2B). Vimentin also marked the apical surface of both E1 and E2 cells, but not B1 cells (Figure 2C). Finally, S100β, although it was not strongly expressed at the apical surface, was found to be expressed in the cell body of both E1 and E2 cells, but not B1 cells (Figure 2D). Triple labeling confirmed that B1 cells were GFAP+/S100β−/CD24− (Figure S4A).
B1 cells confer unique pinwheel architecture to the ventricular surface in neurogenic regions of the adult brain
We used γ-tubulin and β-catenin staining of the ventricular surface to compare the cellular profiles on neurogenic vs. non-neurogenic adult ventricular walls. Adult neurogenesis occurs throughout most of the lateral wall of the LV and part of the anterior medial wall overlying the septum, but not in the caudal medial wall or the third ventricle. While E1 and E2 cells were found in all regions examined, B1 apical surfaces were found only on the lateral wall and in the anterior medial wall of the LVs, coinciding with the neurogenic niche in the adult brain (Figure 3).
In the neurogenic niche, the presence of B1 apical surfaces influenced the geometry of E1 apical surfaces and conferred a striking architecture to the ventricular wall (Figures 3A–B, 3E–F). The apical surface of one or more B1 cells was surrounded by E1 cells in a specific pattern. The pattern, which resembled a pinwheel (Figure 3G), appeared to maximize the packing of E1 cells around the B1 apical surface. The shape of each E1 apical surface approximated a diamond with one vertex contacting the B1 apical surface. The resulting pinwheel pattern was only observed on the ventricular surface in neurogenic regions, where B1 cells were found (Figures 3A–B, 3E–H), and not in non-neurogenic regions, where E1 apical surfaces were more regularly shaped (Figures 3C–D). Pinwheels were also observed using antibody staining to ZO1, a component of apical junctional complexes that provided a sharper delineation of cell boundaries (Figure S5A). The core of the pinwheels was also evident with GFP staining of wholemounts from Aldh1L-GFP BAC transgenic mice (Figure S5B). Aldh1L has been shown to be enriched in astrocytes (Cahoy et al., 2008) and the regulatory region of this gene has been used to drive GFP expression in astrocytes in a BAC transgenic mouse (GENSAT project).
A high magnification of one pinwheel is shown in Figure 3G. In addition to their striking radial organization, E1 cells have planar polarity that underlies the directional beating of motile cilia to propel cerebrospinal fluid (Sawamoto et al., 2006). The basal body patch in each E1 cell is found downstream with respect to the direction of ciliary beating (ZM and AA-B, unpublished). Interestingly, the geometry and radial polarity of E1 apical surfaces found in pinwheels appeared to be independent of the planar polarity of their basal body patch.
The peripheral packing of E1 cells around central clusters of B1 cells suggested that these cells may have specialized intercellular junctions at their apical surfaces. EM analysis of the apical junctional complexes between the various combinations of cell types (B1-B1, B1-E1, E1-E1, and E1–E2) revealed that B1-B1 and B1-E1 junctions were unique (Figure 4). For this analysis we used serial section reconstruction at the EM to confirm cell identity based on the number of cilia each cell had. B1-B1 junctions (white arrowheads in Figures 4A and 4C) had symmetric discontinuous adherens junctions with periodic electron-dense deposits at sites where membranes became tightly opposed or pinched. Interestingly, these junctions were very similar to those observed between radial glia in the neonatal VZ (Figure 4D). Short stretches of tight junctions were occasionally observed between B1 cells. E1–E2 junctions were symmetric; both tight (black arrowheads in Figure 4E) and adherens junctions (white arrows in Figure 4E) were observed and these junctions were indistinguishable from those observed between E1 cells. Interestingly, B1-E1 junctions (Figure 4B) included both tight and adherens junctions, but the latter were asymmetric. More electron-dense material was accumulated inside the membrane on the E1 side than on the B1 side (black arrows in Figure 4B). Gap junctions cannot be reliably detected by TEM. We therefore stained the LV wall of adult mice with antibodies that recognize gap junction subunit Connexin 43. Dotted staining was observed at the interface of B1-B1, B1-E, and E-E cells (Figure 4F). While we do not know whether these cells are functionally coupled, the above observation suggests that Connexin 43 is not unique to particular junctional complexes between the three cell types contacting the ventricle. Instead, the above results suggest that it is the adherens junctions that characterized homotypic and heterotypic adhesions between the different cell types at their apical intercellular boundaries.
Surface maps of the LV walls reveal “hot spots” of B1 cells
The above analysis showed that B1 cells were limited to neurogenic regions of the adult ventricular system, but did not show the distribution within the neurogenic regions. To create a comprehensive map of the location of B1 cells on the walls of the LV, we reconstructed the entire surface of one lateral wall and the anterior portion of one medial wall stained with γ-tubulin and β-catenin. These surface maps were reconstructed from a series of 222 (lateral wall) and 106 (medial wall) tiled, high-power confocal fields (212 × 212 um2/field).
B1 cells with ventricle-contacting apical surfaces were found throughout the lateral wall (Figure 5A), in clusters of 1 cell up to 40 cells. We quantified the number and position of B1 apical surfaces in the different regions of the lateral and anterior medial wall of the LV. This data was color-coded to indicate clusters of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6–10, or >10 B1 apical surfaces. B1 apical surfaces were more concentrated in two “hot spots,” in the anterior-ventral and posterior-dorsal regions. B1 apical surfaces were also found in the most anterior aspect of the medial wall of the LV (Figure 5A). This region has recently been found to contain neurogenic precursors that generate specific subpopulations of olfactory bulb neurons in the postnatal rodent brain (Merkle et al., 2007). This is consistent with the idea that ventricle-contacting B1 cells function as progenitor cells and shows that the presence of B1 apical surfaces is an indicator of neurogenic ventricular walls in the adult.
Next, we quantified the number of B1 apical surfaces in 4 different lateral wall regions from 3 more animals (Figure 5C). We consistently found that the anterior-ventral and posterior-dorsal regions had the highest number of B1 apical surfaces, with 2515 and 2206 per mm2, respectively (Figures 5G–H). The anterior-dorsal region had fewer with 823 (Figure 5F), and the posterior-ventral region had the fewest with 442 B1 apical surfaces per mm2. In contrast, the density of E1 cells was similar among the regions (3343–3584 per mm2), except in the posterior-ventral region (2072 per mm2) where E1 cells had a larger surface area. E2 cells were found in similar numbers throughout the different regions (185–211 per mm2).
B1 cells have a long basal process similar to their radial glial progenitors
To understand how specialized apical endings on the ventricular surface relate to the architecture of the SVZ, we used wholemount staining and confocal microscopy to look beneath the ventricular surface and ependymal layer. One striking result was the presence of very long GFAP+ fibers throughout the lateral wall of the LV. These fibers were oriented in different directions depending on location (Figure S6 and Figure S7). Figures 6A and 6B show that most GFAP+ fibers found in the anterior-dorsal lateral wall of LV were oriented tangentially to the surface and ran anteriorly. Fibers found more ventrally were oriented tangentially to the surface but ran ventrally (Figure 6B).
To determine whether these fibers belonged to B1 cells with apical surfaces on the ventricle, we used high-power confocal stacks to image a block of lateral wall 50 um in depth in wholemounts stained for GFAP, γ-tubulin, and β-catenin. At the ventricular surface, we observed GFAP+ B1 apical endings as before (Figure 6D), but tracing the GFAP+ fibers deeper revealed that they extended for a long distance (Figure 6C, arrows indicate apical endings shown in Figure 6D). The thick bundle of GFAP+ intermediate filaments that comprised the long basal process frayed into many thinner bundles closer to the apical surface (Figures 6E and 6F, blue arrow). To quantify the proportion of long GFAP+ processes that made apical contact with the ventricle, we traced individual fibers in confocal stacks. We found that almost all cells (98%, 227 of 232 cells from n=3 mice) identified by their long GFAP+ basal process made apical ventricular contact. At the other end of this basal process, we observed that 96% (134/139, n=3 mice) GFAP+ basal processes terminated in an endfoot on a blood vessel (Figure 6E, yellow arrow). GFAP+ B1 cells with an apical surface on the ventricle and a long basal process were observed at all ages tested (up to 9 months old, data not shown). Chains of migrating neuroblasts in the SVZ are ensheathed by gliotubes that run parallel to the orientation of the chains (Lois et al., 1996; Peretto et al., 1997). Double-staining for GFAP to label B1 cells and doublecortin to label chains of migrating cells showed that B1 basal processes contribute to the gliotubes. Basal processes of B1 cells wrapped around chains and then ran parallel to the orientation of these chains for some distance before terminating on blood vessels (Figure S8). Beneath the layer of GFAP+ B1 cells’ long processes, there was a layer of scattered astrocytes with multipolar morphology revealed by GFAP staining (Figure S9A). These cells correspond to B2 cells previously described (Doetsch et al., 1997). Multipolar astrocytes were also observed beneath the ependyma in non-neurogenic regions such as the third ventricle (Figure S9B).
Based on correlative TEM, we suspected that GFAP staining did not reveal the complete morphology of B1 cells. Consequently we injected an adenovirus expressing Cre under the GFAP promoter (Merkle et al., 2007) into the LV of Z/EG mice (Novak et al., 2000), a Cre reporter line expressing GFP. This technique provided a way to label B1 cells, which have both a ventricle-contacting apical surface (allowing infection via the ventricle) and an active GFAP promoter (allowing Cre expression from the adenovirus). We then reconstructed high-power confocal stacks of labeled B1 cells filled with GFP (Figures 6G–6I). Most B1 cell bodies were located immediately underneath ependymal cells, with a very short apical process extending between ependymal cells to make contact with the ventricle (Figures 7E–F and 7E’–F’). In some cases, rather than extending an apical process, it appeared that part of the B1 cell body was squeezed between ependymal cells to make direct contact with the ventricle (Figures 6H–I). A very long process emanated from the basal side of the cell body and extended tangentially, ending with an endfoot on a blood vessel (Figure 6H, yellow arrow). In addition, B1 cells had lateral lamellar extensions of membrane from their cell body (like a fried egg) that spread across the basal side of adjacent ependymal cells. While in sections, these lateral extensions appeared as individual processes (Doetsch et al., 1997), the wholemount analysis revealed that many of these processes were part of a continuous thin sheet of membrane spanning in all directions away from the cell body. Several smaller processes were also observed emanating from the cell body and the proximal part of the long basal process.
The morphology of B1 cells was reminiscent of radial glia of the embryonic VZ. Radial glia have a short, ventricle-contacting apical process and a very long, pial contacting basal process. This long basal process can be used to specifically label radial glia by injecting an adenovirus expressing Cre into the striatum of neonatal Z/EG mice. This method was used to determine that B cells in the adult SVZ are derived from radial glia (Merkle et al., 2004). To determine if the radial glia-derived B cells identified in the Merkle et al. study correspond to B1 cells we identified above, we performed the same radial glial targeting in neonatal Z/EG mice, sacrificed the animals 2 months later and prepared wholemounts. We observed B1 cells as before. Figure 6L shows two of these B1 cells, each with a short apical process contacting the ventricle (Figures 6J and 6K) and a long basal process distally wrapped around a blood vessel. B1 cells derived from radial glia also exhibited the lateral lamellar extensions of membrane cupping the basal side of adjacent ependymal cells (Figures S10A–B). In addition, we traced, using a camera lucida, the fine details of eight B1 cells with apical contacts in 50 µm horizontal sections, where it was more common to see more of the basal process (Figure S10C). In sharp contrast to the morphology of B1 cells, typical astrocytes elsewhere in the adult brain, including some found in the SVZ (B2 cells), were multipolar with bushy, highly branched processes (Figure S11). This is consistent with previous work showing that dividing GFAP-expressing progenitors in the adult SVZ have a simple morphology compared to differentiated multipolar parenchymal astrocytes (Garcia et al., 2004).
The above results labeling adult SVZ B1 cells by multiple approaches showed that these cells have two epithelial compartments: 1) apical, in contact with the ventricle and 2) basal, in contact with blood vessels. In our previous ultrastructural reconstructions we had missed these basic features of adult SVZ NSCs (Doetsch et al., 1997). Both these compartments are very difficult to identify in thin sections: the apical ending is very small and frequently connected by a thin neck with the cell body, which may lie in an entirely separate section. It is therefore not surprising that B1 cells contacting the ventricle were only rarely observed (Doetsch et al., 1999b). Our previous work identified many small profiles of B cells deep in the SVZ. However, as illustrated in the current analysis, the basal processes can run tangentially for several hundred microns making it difficult, if not impossible, using serial sections to link these small profiles of basal processes with their cell bodies.
Ventricle-contacting B1 cells undergo mitosis and are neurogenic
The above observations indicated that GFAP-expressing SVZ B1 cells, which correspond to the adult NSCs, contact the LV. Apical processes of B1 cells were nestin+ (Figure S4B) and 29% (26/89, n=2 mice) were positive for CD133 (Figures S4C–D), both markers of NSCs (Uchida et al., 2000). A recent study suggests that CD133+/CD24− cells in contact with the ventricle are adult NSCs (Coskun et al., 2008). In our study, 100% (720/720, n=2 mice) of E1 and E2 cells expressed CD24, while none of the B1 apical endings expressed this marker. This suggests that CD133+/CD24− cells identified in this previous paper correspond to ventricle-contacting B1 cells. Using sections of the walls of the LVs, previous studies failed to find dividing ependymal cells (Spassky et al., 2005). Here, we stained wholemounts for γ-tubulin and β-catenin to identify B1 apical surfaces, and phospho-histone H3 (PH3) to identify cells in mitosis or Ki67 to identify proliferating cells (BrdU staining was not reliable; required HCl pretreatment decreased β-catenin staining at the surface). We serially reconstructed with the confocal microscope 91 PH3 or Ki67+ B1 cells (n=3 mice) contacting the ventricle (Figure S12). In all cases, the mitotic soma from these ventricle-contacting B1 cells remained squeezed basally by neighboring ependymal cells. Figure S12A shows a B1 apical surface that is PH3+. Following the confocal stack deeper into the tissue revealed that this PH3+ cell was in anaphase, with one of the sister chromatids (yellow arrow) just beneath the apical membrane and the other (magenta arrow) deeper in the SVZ, beneath an ependymal cell. This and another cell shown in Figure S12F appear to be dividing asymmetrically. Interestingly, Ki67 expression is cell cycle phase dependent (Scholzen and Gerdes, 2000) and we observed Ki67+ B1 cells in all phases (Figure S12). We found no evidence of E1 or E2 cells labeled by Ki67, PH3 or BrdU.
To test whether B1 cells with a ventricular contact are neurogenic, we injected adeno-GFAPp:Cre into one LV of Z/EG mice. To ensure that we were tracing the fate of only those B1 cells labeled via their ventricle-contacting surface, we focused our analysis on the contralateral side. Labeling on the contralateral side could only occur through viral diffusion from the ventricular system and this was confirmed by the pattern of labeling close to the foramen of Monro (arrow in Figure 7C). Labeled B1 cells in the contralateral wholemount had an apical surface on the ventricle (Figures 7E’–F’) and a long basal process ending on a blood vessel (Figures 7E–F). Labeling B1 cells contacting the LV in this manner resulted in labeled neuroblasts in the contralateral SVZ (Figure 7C, inset), and labeled neuroblasts and neurons in the contralateral olfactory bulb in 6/6 animals (Figure 7D). This shows that B1 cells labeled via their apical surface produce neurons and neuroblasts up to one month after labeling. We also microdissected the contralateral SVZ two days after unilateral injection of adeno-GFAPp:Cre and plated dissociated cells as previously described (Scheffler et al., 2005). GFP+ cells from the contralateral side could be passaged and generated large colonies of Tuj1+ cells. These cultures also generated many GFP+ adherent GFAP+ astrocytes and a few Olig2+ oligodendrocytes (Figure 7G). These data indicated that B1 cells labeled via their ventricle-contacting apical surface are capable of generating large numbers of neurons in vivo and in vitro.
Discussion
Here we uncovered a novel architecture for the germinal layer of the adult brain LV, revealing its pinwheel organization and the presence of biciliated ependymal cells with unique basal bodies. The work, summarized in the illustration in Figure 8, suggests that B1 cells maintain a modified neurogenic VZ in the adult brain.
E2 cells: a novel ependymal cell
E2 cells were ultrastructurally similar to E1 cells and had long (9+2) cilia. The most distinctive feature of E2 cells was their large basal body (Figure 1F). Multiple studies have described the ultrastructure of ependymal cells (Bruni et al., 1985; Flament-Durand and Brion, 1985; Del Brio et al., 1991), but to our knowledge, this basal body organization has not been observed before. E2 cells comprised less than 5% of cells on the ventricular surface and had only two cilia. Therefore their contribution to CSF flow is likely minute. They were not observed in division and were present in non-neurogenic regions like the 3rd and 4th ventricle (ZM & AA-B, unpublished) making it unlikely that they function as progenitors. Interestingly, unlike E1 cells, the cilia of E2 cells were partially invaginated (Figure 1E). Primary cilia, which are also partially invaginated (Sorokin, 1968) (Figure 1G), function as transducers for cell signaling pathways including Shh (Huangfu et al., 2003; Corbit et al., 2005) and Wnts (Gerdes et al., 2007). The basal body and pericentriolar region appears to play an important role in the signaling function of primary cilia (Gerdes et al., 2007; Rohatgi et al., 2007). E2 cells and their cilia may serve as mechanical or chemical sensors for CSF flow or composition (Bruni et al., 1985). The elaborate basal body of E2 cells may be involved in transmitting information between the ciliary axoneme and other intracellular compartments.
B1 cells retain a long basal process
During earlier development, neuroepithelial cells and radial glia bridge between the ventricular and the subpial surfaces; signals arising at both poles are essential for proper germinal activity (e.g. ventricular: (Bittman et al., 1997; Nadarajah et al., 1997; Kosodo et al., 2004; Weissman et al., 2004), e.g. subpial: (Halfter et al., 2002; Haubst et al., 2006)). Radial glia establish specialized endings with blood vessels (Misson et al., 1988; Noctor et al., 2001). In the subgranular zone of the adult hippocampal dentate gyrus, NSCs reside in close proximity to blood vessels (Palmer et al., 2000). It has been suggested that extracellular matrix (Mercier et al., 2002) and soluble factors (Leventhal et al., 1999; Shen et al., 2004) secreted by blood vessels play important roles in regulation of adult neurogenesis. In the present study we found that the long basal process of B1 cells terminated directly on blood vessels forming specialized endfeet. B1 cells are derived from radial glia and their basal processes are likely remnants of radial glial fibers. Basal processes and their contacts with the vasculature may allow B1 cells to respond to signals in the perivascular extracellular matrix (Kerever et al., 2007) or to hormones or growth factors present in the circulation, such as prolactin (Shingo et al., 2003), PDGF (Jackson et al., 2006), or IGFs (Jiang et al., 1998).
Radial glia of the developing neocortex (Rakic, 1972) and radial cells in song birds (Alvarez-Buylla and Nottebohm, 1988) use the long basal process to maintain contact with neuronal progeny during early stages of differentiation and migration. Many of the basal processes of B1 cells wrap around chains of neuroblasts (Figure S8). This arrangement may be important for guiding the migration and maturation of young neurons. Recent work suggests that chemorepellants in cerebrospinal fluid and its directional flow contribute to directional migration (Sawamoto et al., 2006). We show here that B1 cells bridge these two compartments and could transfer information from the ventricular surface to the SVZ.
B1 cells maintain a modified ventricular zone in the adult brain
The present results indicate that B1 cells in the adult brain, like radial glia earlier in development, have an apical surface in contact with the ventricle. In adult songbirds (Alvarez-Buylla et al., 1990; Goldman et al., 1996) and reptiles (Garcia-Verdugo et al., 2002) the neural progenitors are also ventricle-contacting radial cells. The present study revealed a novel center-surround pinwheel organization to this mixed VZ, which has ependymal cells in addition to NSCs. Pinwheels were abundant throughout the neurogenic niche, but absent from non-neurogenic ventricular walls. This organization may be fundamental for adult neurogenesis, allowing B1 cells in the core of the pinwheels to: 1) contact the ventricular fluid, which may regulate NSC behavior; 2) share apical junctional complexes (gap and adherens junctions) among themselves and with ependymal cells, likely essential for NSC symmetric and asymmetric division (Chenn and Walsh, 2002; Kosodo et al., 2004); and 3) be exposed to apical signals, like Noggin (Lim et al., 2000; Peretto et al., 2004), that are largely derived from ependymal cells. The VZ and pinwheel organization described here provides basic anatomical information to understand B1 cell regulation. It will be interesting to determine how exogenous growth factor stimulation (Cho et al., 2007) may alter, or mimic, apical-basal polarity.
The pinwheel architecture of the adult VZ may also hold clues about how it is derived from the embryonic VZ. As ependymal cells begin to differentiate from radial glia during perinatal development and their apical surfaces expand, they may restrict the space available for neurogenic radial glia, corralling them into central clusters held together by apical junctional complexes. The maintenance of cell type specific apical junctional complexes between radial glia at the time of ependymal cell differentiation is likely essential for the development of pinwheels in the adult VZ. This scenario suggests that apical junctions between B1 cells are different than those between ependymal cells or between ependymal cells and B1 cells. This is precisely what we observed (Figure 4). Interestingly, a recent study showed that numb and numb-like are required for maintaining radial glial adherens junctions and that numb overexpression results, in a cadherin-dependent manner, in abnormal maintenance of radial glia postnatally (Rasin et al., 2007). Conditional removal of numb from the neonatal SVZ results in severe disorganization of the ependymal layer that is partially repaired by cells that escaped recombination (Kuo et al., 2006). Numb is likely to play important roles in the development of pinwheels, but this process remains to be studied. The pinwheel pattern also suggests a possible role for lateral inhibition by Notch signaling. In the postnatal hippocampal dentate gyrus, Notch is required for GFAP+ stem cell maintenance, and absence of Notch results in neuronal differentiation (Breunig et al., 2007). Similarly in the neonatal VZ, Notch-expressing B1 cells may signal to neighbor ependymal cells during their differentiation, resulting in the formation of pinwheels by lateral inhibition.
Injuries to the ependymal cells can result in scars in the ventricular wall that are largely composed of astrocytes (Del Carmen Gomez-Roldan et al., 2008). Recent work suggests that in the aging mammalian brain a subpopulation of astrocytes can grow multiple cilia (Luo et al., 2008). We have noticed that the number of B1 cells touching the LV decreases significantly with age (ZM and AAB). It will be interesting to determine if B1 cells touching the ventricle transform into ependymal-like cells with age or whether these cells actively participate in ependymal repair.
Progenitor cells have been isolated from regions around the LV in the adult human brain (Pincus et al., 1998). Rare SVZ astrocytes were observed with processes extending towards the ventricle (Sanai et al., 2004). It will be interesting to investigate if these cells in humans have apical ventricular contacts and pinwheel organization. The staining methods described here may facilitate the identification of potential neurogenic regions along the adult human ventricular system.
The persistence of an adult VZ leads us to re-examine the roles of the ventricular and subventricular zones in adult neurogenesis. In the embryo, the ventricular and subventricular compartments are largely distinct: the VZ for stem cells and the SVZ for intermediate progenitors (Noctor et al., 2007a). Similarly, the adult neurogenic niche may be comprised of two compartments, a VZ for B1 cells and an SVZ for intermediate progenitors, or C cells, and neuroblasts, or A cells. The distinction between these compartments in the adult may be less clear due to the apical expansion of ependymal cells. Consistently, we show that the cell body of most B1 cells is pushed back towards the SVZ. This provides a unified hypothesis on the roles of the ventricular and subventricular zones in neurogenic niches of the brain, from embryo to adult. The study shows that contact with the ventricular cavity, being part of an epithelium, and having specialized apical structures are germinal niche properties retained by adult NSCs. It is likely that all of these are fundamental to their function. The en-face imaging methods developed here should facilitate understanding the function of apical structures in adult NSCs.
Experimental Procedures
Animals and stereotactic injections
CD1 mice, 2–4 month old (Charles River) and 2 month old Aldh1L-GFP mice: used to study the ventricular surface; 2–4 month old Z/EG mice (Novak et al., 2000): used for adult LV injections; neonatal Z/EG mice used for radial glial targeting were sacrificed at 2–4 months. Striatal targeting of radial glia at P0 was performed as previously described (Merkle et al., 2004). Adult LV injections of 100 nl (in vivo experiments) or 500 nl (in vitro experiments) of adeno-GFAPp:Cre (Ad5 backbone, 1×1012 particles/ml) were performed at stereotactic coordinates (0 AP, 0.9 L, 1.9 D). All animal procedures were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
Wholemount dissection
After cervical dislocation, the brain was extracted fresh in L-15 at 37°C. The LV was dissected from the caudal aspect of the telencephalon and the hippocampus and septum were removed. The dissected lateral wall was fixed in 4% PFA/0.1% TX overnight at 4°C. After staining, the ventricular walls were further dissected from underlying parenchyma as slivers of tissue 200–300 um in thickness and mounted on a slide with mounting media and a coverslip.
Immunostaining and microscopy
Primary and secondary antibodies were incubated in PBS with 0.5% TX and 10% normal goat or donkey serum for 24 hours at 4°C. For immunostaining of structures deeper within the SVZ, antibodies were incubated in PBS with 2% TX and 10% normal goat or donkey serum for 48 hours at 4°C. Primary antibodies: mouse anti-acetylated tubulin (1:1000, Sigma T6793), rabbit anti-γ-tubulin (1:1000, Sigma T5192), mouse anti-γ-tubulin (1:500, Abcam ab11316), goat anti-γ-tubulin (1:200, Santa Cruz sc-7396), mouse anti-β-catenin (1:500, BD Transduction Labs 610153), rabbit anti-β-catenin (1:1000, Sigma C2206), rabbit anti-ZO1 (1:100, Zymed 40–2200), mouse anti-GFAP (1:500, Chemicon MAB3402), mouse IgM anti-vimentin (1:1000, Sigma V-2258), rabbit anti-S100β (1:500, DAKO A5110), mouse anti-nestin (1:200, Chemicon MAB353), rat anti-CD24 (1:500, BD Pharmingen 57436), rat anti-CD133 (1:100, eBioscience 14–1331), chicken anti-GFP (1:500, Aves Labs GFP-1020), rabbit anti-phosphorylated histone H3 (1:500, Upstate 06-570), and rabbit anti-Ki67 (1:500, Vector VP–K451). Secondary antibodies: conjugated to Alexa Fluor dyes (goat or donkey polyclonal, 1:400, Molecular Probes); biotin (goat polyclonal, 1:250, Jackson ImmunoResearch) followed by streptavidin-HRP and diaminobenzidine. Confocal images were taken on a Nikon C1si or Leica SP5.
TEM analysis was performed as described (Doetsch et al., 1997). For reconstruction of type B1 and E2 cells, we cut ~600 serial ultrathin (0.05 um) sections that were placed on Formvar-coated single-slot grids, stained with lead citrate, and examined under a Jeol 100CX EM.
Quantification of cell types
B1, E1, and E2 cells were counted in 4 non-overlapping high power fields (127 × 127 um2) from each of 4 regions (Figure S13). The number of each cell type was divided by the surface area to determine cell density. Data for all 4 regions was combined to determine average density across the entire wholemount.
Adherent NSC cultures
Two days after unilateral injection of 500 nl adeno-GFAPp:Cre into the LV of Z/EG mice, the walls of the contralateral and ipsilateral LVs were dissected separately, dissociated, and used to establish adherent NSC cultures as previously described (Scheffler et al., 2005). After two passages under proliferation conditions, the NSC monolayers were allowed to differentiate for 7 days and fixed.
Supplementary Material
Acknowledgements
Work supported by NIH grant HD-32116, the Sandler Family Supporting Foundation and The John Bowes Stem Cell Fund. Z.M. supported by the Carlos Baldoceda Foundation and UCSF Krevans Fellowship. A.A.-B. holds the Heather and Melanie Muss Endowed Chair. We thank B Barres for Aldh1L-GFP mice and Y-G Han, S Noctor, R Ihrie, J Reiter, W Marshall, and A Javaherian for discussion. We thank K Thorn and the UCSF Nikon Imaging Center for confocal imaging help.
Footnotes
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