Table 1.
Features | Neurons | Astrocytes |
---|---|---|
Origination | Ectoderm [119] Neuroepithelial Cells and Radial Glial Cells [27] |
Ectoderm [119] Neuroepithelial Cells and Radial Glial Cells[27] |
Excitability | Excitable | Non-excitable |
Connectivity | Highly connected via synapses | Not wired to one another via chemical synapses; albeit gap junctions found [120, 121] |
Differentiation | Terminally differentiate upon maturation | Regional differentiation & become reactive in response to insults |
Proliferative Capacity | Lose mitotic ability in maturation [52] | Maintain proliferative capacity throughout life [26] |
Primary Cilia Markers | AC3 (Figure 1), SSTR3, 5-HT6, & MCHR1 [15] | Arl13B (Figure 1) [15] |
AC3 | Highly expressed in neuronal primary cilia [45] | Faintly expressed in immature astrocyte cilia, few in adult astrocyte cilia [45] |
ARL13B | Faintly expressed in immature neurons, not prominent in mature neurons [45] | Highly expressed in astrocyte primary cilia in the mature brain [45] (Figure 1) |
Cilia Length (Hippocampus) | 5.0–5.91 μm (AC3-positive) [15] | 2.8–3.2 μm (ARL13B-positive) [15] |
Shh Components | Smoothened [17], Patched1 [63], GPR161 [64,56] and Gli transcription factors [63] detected in primary cilia in the neural tube. Presence in primary cilia of mature neurons not shown. | Smoothened and Patched1 detected in primary cilia of astrocytes in the postnatal brain [122] |
Structural Dynamics | Relatively stable | Subject to dynamic change during astrocyte proliferation |
Ciliogenesis | Research confined to embryonic neuronal ciliogenesis; Lack of de novo ciliogenesis in mature neurons |
5 known stages of ciliogenesis in adult astrocytes [53, 54] |
Ciliary Disease Implications | Obesity, cognitive impairment & mental disorders [89] | Astrocytoma/glioblastoma [53, 54] |