Abstract
Complex nervous systems have a modular architecture, whereby reiterative groups of neurons (“modules”) that share certain structural and functional properties are integrated into large neural circuits. Neurons develop from proliferating progenitor cells that, based on their location and time of appearance, are defined by certain genetic programs. Given that genes expressed by a given progenitor play a fundamental role in determining the properties of its lineage (i.e., the neurons descended from that progenitor), one efficient developmental strategy would be to have lineages give rise to the structural modules of the mature nervous system. It is clear that this strategy plays an important role in neural development of many invertebrate animals, notably insects, where the availability of genetic techniques has made it possible to analyze the precise relationship between neuronal origin and differentiation since several decades. Similar techniques, developed more recently in the vertebrate field, reveal that functional modules of the mammalian cerebral cortex are also likely products of developmentally defined lineages. We will review studies that relate cell lineage to circuitry and function from a comparative developmental perspective, aiming at enhancing our understanding of neural progenitors and their lineages, and translating findings acquired in different model systems into a common conceptual framework.
Keywords: mouse, zebrafish, Xenopus, Drosophila, neural progenitor, proliferation, cell lineage, cell fate, circuitry
Introduction
Highly ordered connections of neurons represent the structural basis of the complex brain circuitry controlling animal behavior. Neurons are highly diverse, and a continual effort in the neuroscience community lies in further discerning individual neuronal classes based on a number of molecular, structural, and/or physiological criteria (Darmanis et al. 2015; Tasic et al., 2016; Zhang et al., 2014). Aside from deepening our insight into the diversity of neural cell types, much effort is also directed to identify communalities between groups of neurons that form units of function. Thus, complex nervous systems of vertebrates and invertebrates alike can be subdivided into modules, defined as groups of neurons that share certain structural and functional properties. Modules, such as the anatomically distinct nuclei of the vertebrate brain stem, may differ from each other, each nucleus being defined by a specific population of afferent or efferent fibers. In other cases, modules can be reiterative, consisting of numerically and morphologically similar neuronal clusters, as for example the glomeruli of the olfactory system in vertebrate or insect brains, or the columns of the mammalian cerebral cortex (Chen and Shepherd, 2005; Harzsch and Krieger, 2018; Kaas, 2012).
An important question concerns the role of development during the formation of neuronal modules. Neurons develop from progenitor cells that, based on their location and time of appearance within the neural primordium, are defined by certain genetic programs. It stands to reason that the set of genes expressed by a given progenitor may play a fundamental role in determining the structural and functional phenotype of the neurons descended from that progenitor. Is it possible to relate a brain module, as defined structurally and functionally in the mature brain, to a specific genetically distinct neural progenitor?
In the insect brain, the question can be answered in the positive, as repeatedly reviewed in the recent literature (Boyan and Williams, 2011; Jiang and Reichert, 2014; Lin and Lee, 2012; Spindler and Hartenstein, 2010), and summarized below. Most parts of the insect brain develop from a relatively small number of stem cell-like progenitors, called neuroblasts, which appear early in the embryo, and which each produce an invariant lineage of neurons and/or glia. Insect neural lineages represent structural modules, whereby neurons of a lineage stay in close contact, projecting their axons in one or two compact tracts, and typically forming terminal branches in common brain neuropil compartments (Hartenstein et al., 2008; Ito and Awasaki, 2008; Larsen et al., 2009). We know a lot about the relationship between lineage and brain module in the insect brain because genetic or cellular techniques that label lineages (i.e., “clones”) have been available since several decades (del Valle Rodriguez et al., 2011; Garcia-Bellido and Merriam, 1971; Griffin et al., 2014; Lee and Luo, 2001). For the mammalian brain, clonal techniques that allow one to reconstruct the lineages of individual progenitors at high temporal and spatial resolution have recently been introduced (Bribian et al., 2016; Gao et al., 2014; Zong et al., 2005). As a result of these studies there is a renewed interest in the question of how the progeny of defined neural progenitors relates to modules of the brain. A growing body of evidence supports the notion that functional properties of neurons are dependent on their lineage relationships (He et al., 2015; Li et al., 2012; Ohtsuki et al., 2012; Tarusawa et al., 2016; Yu et al., 2009; 2012).
In the present review we will address a number of questions that focus on the relationship between cell lineage and modular brain architecture in different model systems. How do progenitor cells in different vertebrates and invertebrates divide over the course of neural development? At what time point can we define, in vertebrates, progenitors that give rise to structurally or functionally defined brain modules? How do such progenitors compare to invertebrate neuroblasts? Answers to these questions will contribute to our understanding of how genetic information is able to shape neural circuits and, thereby, animal behavior.
Neural progenitor proliferation and lineages: Drosophila and other invertebrate systems
Neuroblast specification and internalization
At an early stage of embryonic development, concomitant or even preceding gastrulation, a restricted domain within the ectodermal layer, the neuroectoderm, is endowed with the capability to generate neural progenitor cells. This step involves the function of maternal factors and conserved signaling pathways, including Wnt and BMP, which delineate the size and position of the neuroectoderm within the embryo (reviewed in Hartenstein and Stollewerk, 2015; Fig.1A). Subsequently, during the phase called neurulation, neural progenitors are specified within the neurectoderm and then become internalized. In Drosophila and other insects, neural progenitors (neuroblasts) delaminate to form a lose layer of cells in between the ectoderm and mesoderm (Fig.1B, C). Those cells of the neurectoderm that stay within the neuroectoderm maintain the potential to produce more neuroblasts at a later timepoint; once the full complement of neuroblast has become internalized, cells left behind at the surface give rise to part of the epidermis (epidermoblasts). The pattern of neuroblasts is invariant: each neuroblast forms a uniquely identifiable cell that appears at the same time and position in every individual of a given species (Fig.1D, top). Even comparing different insect species, such as Drosophila, grasshopper, and flour beetle, neuroblast patterns are almost identical (Bate, 1976; Biffar and Stollewerk, 2014; Thomas et al., 1984; Fig.1D).
The balance between how many neurectodermal cells delaminate at any given moment as neuroblasts, as well as the precise pattern of these cells, is determined by cell-cell signaling within the neuroectoderm. In the center of this complex genetic mechanism resides the Notch signaling pathway, which allocates the expression of proneural genes (bHLH transcription factors enabling cells to adopt a neural fate) to the delaminating neuroblasts (inset in Fig.1B; for review see Hartenstein and Wodarz, 2013; Huang et al., 2014; Kageyama et al., 2009; Quan and Hassan, 2005). Loss of Notch activity results in a large excess of delaminating neuroblasts at an early time point; activation of the pathway has the opposite effect. At later stages in neural development, the Notch pathway exerts additional effects. Well known among these are the differentiation between the two hemilineages generated by sequential division of neuroblast progeny, called ganglion mother cells (GMCs), and the promotion of self renewal in type 2 neuroblasts (Kumar et al., 2009; Lin et al., 2012; Truman et al., 2010; see below).
Neuroblasts appear in two broad regions of the embryo. The ventral neuroectoderm, stretching out along the trunk ectoderm and numbering approximately 3500 cells, produces the neuroblasts of the ventral nerve cord (Doe, 1992; Hartenstein and Campos-Ortega, 1984; 1985; Hartenstein et al., 1987; Younossi-Hartenstein et al., 1996). The head (procephalic) neurectoderm, comprised of several hundred cells, located in the anterior-dorsal part of the ectoderm, gives rise to neuroblasts that form the brain (Fig.1A). Neuroblasts are organized segmentally, with each segment comprising a set of approximately 60 neuroblasts (30 on each side; Fig.1D). Overall, the ventral neurectoderm generates approximately 750 neuroblasts, and the procephalic neurectoderm 200. Neuroblasts do not delaminate all at once, but form several groups (“neuroblast waves”) which move in sequentially following a tightly controlled pattern.
Neuroblasts produce fixed lineages by asymmetric division
First defined by Whitman (1878, 1887) and described in detail by Wheeler (1891) in embryos of grasshoppers based on histological sections, neuroblasts appear as large pale cells which “bud off” smaller, more strongly labeled cells, the neurons and glia of the embryonic nervous system. The idea that a neuroblast produces a readily identifiable cluster of neurons through a series of asymmetric divisions was introduced through in vitro and in vivo studies (Poulson, 1950; Seecof et al.,1973). The fixed nature of insect neural lineages, i.e., the concept that neuroblasts organize into stereotypic arrays and undergo an invariant number of mitotic divisions, producing neurons with precisely predetermined fates, was demonstrated by later studies (Booker and Truman, 1987; Doe and Goodman, 1985; Goodman and Spitzer, 1979; Taghert et al., 1984).
Neuroblasts have two proliferative phases. The first takes place in the embryo, where most neuroblasts undergo 5–8 divisions, producing 10–16 neurons per lineage (Hartenstein et al., 1987; Larsen et al., 2009). Division is asymmetric, following what has been termed a “stem cell mode” of mitosis. Here, as a result of the positioning and orientation of the mitotic spindle in the dividing cell, the two daughter cells are overtly different in size and location. In contrast, symmetric division refers to a process where the two daughter cells are of equal size, and obtain the same position in relation to the layer they form part of or are located next to. Note that in many cases, there is a third scenario where cell division can appear symmetric at the structural level, but where molecular factors (detectable only by special staining protocols) are distributed unevenly among the progeny. We will in the following refer to this type of division as “molecularly asymmetric”, to distinguish it from the (structurally) asymmetric type.
The asymmetric division of a neuroblast yields one daughter cell that is large and remains in contact with the overlying ectoderm, and a second one that is small, and obtains a position at the basal surface of its larger sibling (Fig.1E, E’). The large daughter cell resumes the proliferative fate of the mother neuroblast, and the other, small daughter cell differentiates as a neuron or glial cell, either following one more division, or directly. Recent works (Baumgardt et al., 2014) showed that the first one of these two modes of division (called “type I”) prevails only during the initial phase of neuroblast mitotic activity. During these type I divisions, the small daughter cell, which is called “ganglion mother cell”, undergoes one more molecularly asymmetric division, generating an “A” daughter neuron and a “B” daughter neuron (Truman et al. 2010; Fig.1E’, F). The cluster of sequentially produced “A” neurons and “B” neurons form their own “A” hemilineage and “B” hemilineage, respectively. After a certain number of divisions (typically 3–4), the neuroblast switches to a “type 0” mode, where the small daughter cell differentiates directly into a neuron (Baumgardt et al., 2014). Within a lineage or hemilineage, neurons are further divided according to birth date into smaller groups, called sublineages (Fig.1F).
In the late embryo, most neuroblasts enter a phase of mitotic quiescence that lasts for approximately 24 hours. Subsequently, they become active again, entering into their secondary, larval phase of neuron/glia production. Over the course of approximately three days, they undergo an estimated 75 rounds of mitosis, generating 150 neurons per lineage (Bello et al., 2008; Larsen et al., 2009). As in the embryo, most larval neuroblast divisions follow the type I pattern, giving birth to series of ganglion mother cells that undergo one more division to produce two hemilineages. It is not known whether, at a late larval stage, neuroblasts enter a phase of type 0 proliferation that omits ganglion mother cells. Secondary hemilineages (and, probably, primary hemilineages as well) typically have different fates, and form their own tract and projection domain. As a result, most lineages described for the ventral nerve cord emit two fibre bundles with different trajectories, corresponding to the two hemilineages (Harris et al., 2015; Truman et al., 2004; see below). In many lineages, particularly those of the brain, one hemilineage undergoes apoptotic cell death, leaving the lineage with only one hemilineage, and one fibre bundle/projection domain.
A subset of 8 neuroblasts, all localized close to the dorso-medial rim of a brain hemisphere, show a mode of proliferation that has been called type II. Here, neuroblasts divide asymmetrically, but yield an intermediate progenitor cell (IMP) which continues to undergo several rounds of asymmetric divisions before generating neurons, akin to what a regular (type I) neuroblast does (Bello et al., 2008; Boone and Doe, 2008; Bowman et al., 2008; Kang and Reichert, 2015; Fig.1F). As a result, lineages of type II neuroblasts are larger than those of type I neuroblasts, numbering 400–500 neurons per lineage. The dichotomous choice of type II neuroblast progeny to self renew or become IPM is also controlled by Notch activity; loss of N causes premature stop in self renewal and conversion to IMPs in these cells (Bowman et al., 2008; Wang et al., 2006).
Early neurogenesis in other invertebrates
The formation of neuronal modules from indvidual, genetically unique stem cells that divide in a fixed pattern, as described for Drosophila above, is a derived feature encountered in only a few invertebrate clades. Among arthropods, it exists in insects and crustaceans (Fig.1E). In other, more basally branching arthropods, like chelicerates and myriapods, the nervous system arises from groups (“pits”) of contiguous neuroectodermal cells that invaginate or ingress (Hartenstein and Stollewerk, 2015; Stollewerk, 2016; Fig.1G). Proliferation occurs mainly prior to invagination of the pits, and there is currently no evidence that individual pits are formed from single (epithelial) cells in a fixed lineage mechanism. Interestingly, regarding their overall number and spatial distribution, the pits bear a striking resemblance to the neuroblasts of insects. Furthermore, the cassette of proneural genes in conjunction with the Notch signaling pathway control the size of pits and its neuronal descendants (Stollewerk, 2016). It is possible that individual pits also form distinct neuronal modules, but this remains to be shown using markers for specific neuronal types. Another open question is how the conceptual framework of sequentially expressed cell fate determinants (transcription factors), as established for Drosophila (see below), translates to the more basal arthropod scenario.
Outside the arthropods, stem-cell like neural progenitors generating fixed lineages have been observed in hirudinea (leeches; Zhang and Weisblat, 2005), and may well exist in other annelids as well. A number of clades, among them rotifers, tardigrades, and nematodes are eutelic, which means that all cells of the body are generated in a fixed lineage pattern. For the nematode C. elegans, proliferation, cell movement and lineage relationships between cells have been reconstructed in detail (Hobert, 2010; Sulston et al., 1983; Wadsworth and Hedgecock, 1992). As described for Drosophila, neurogenesis in C. elegans is controlled by a great diversity of intrinsic determinants that are routed to specific neuronal precursors through asymmetric divisions. However, a mechanism by which the neuroectoderm forms “generic” neuroblasts that produce distinct neuronal modules does not exist. Instead, all the way towards a late stage of proliferation, individual cells generate quite distinct neural (or even non-neural) cell types. Neurons belonging to a functionally characterized class or circuit are not typically related by lineage (Hobert, 2010).
Interestingly, larval forms of urochordates (sea squirts), considered to be the sister group of vertebrates, also possess miniaturized nervous systems generated in a fixed lineage mechanism. The neurectoderm in these animals forms a dorsal neural plate that, similar to that of vertebrates described below, invaginates to form a neural tube (Fig.1H). Around the invagination process (“neurulation”) the neural plate possesses 40–60 cells arranged in a regular, symmetric pattern of orthogonal rows and columns (Nicol and Meinertzhagen, 1988a, b). Following neurulation, cells undergo another 1–4 rounds of structurally symmetric division, forming small clones of neural cells that add up to a total of approximately 350. About half of these cells remain undifferentiated epithelial (ependymal) cells; the remainder differentiates into different types of neurons. Some cases are documented where individual neural progenitors of the neural plate generate clones of like cells; examples are the pressure receptors (“coronet cells”) derived from progenitors a9.33 and a9.37 (Eakin and Kuda, 1971; Nicol and Meinertzhagen, 1991), or the ocellar photoreceptors that descend from the corresponding pair of progenitors (a9.33, a9.37) of the opposite side (Nicol and Meinertzhagen, 1991). However, it is not clear yet (and appears unlikely) if neural lineages of the urochordate tadpole represent structural or functional modules in general.
In summary, comparative embryological and genetic studies suggest that the last common ancestor of bilaterian animals (“Urbilateria”) possessed a proliferative neuroectoderm formed by neural progenitor cells that give rise to the nervous system. Becoming postmitotic, cells delaminate from the neuroepithelium and differentiate into neurons. With increasing complexity animals evolved mechanisms to increase neuron numbers. One mechanism has delaminating cells maintain their mitotic activity, thereby functioning as neural progenitors (neuroblasts, IMPs). Another device serving the same purpose is to invaginate the neuroectoderm, whereby either small domains (“pits”) move inside one by one, or, as seen in the case of chordates, the entire neuroectoderm folds inside the body to become a neural tube. In some instances, the proliferation pattern of neural progenitors within the neurectoderm becomes highly invariant, leading to the production of fixed lineages that form distinct structural/functional modules of the nervous system. Such a mechanism probably evolved multiple times independently; so far it has been described for subclades of arthropods and annelids. To what extent invariant lineages act as structural modules in vertebrates will be discussed below.
Neural progenitor proliferation and lineages: Vertebrates
Formation and growth of the neuroectoderm
The neuroectoderm of vertebrates forms a morphologically distinct domain, called neural plate, in the dorsal ectoderm of the embryo (Fig.2A). In the amphibian Xenopus laevis, direct cell counts yielded approximately 2900 cells (Hartenstein, 1989) for the neural plate, visible in the stage 13 embryo, which puts it in a similar range as Drosophila. For zebrafish, a similar number can be estimated for the neural plate of the two somite-stage embryo, based upon the analysis of cell proliferation by Kimmel and colleagues (Kane and Kimmel, 1993; Kimmel et al., 1994). Interestingly, the neural plate of the E7.5 mouse embryo, despite of the much larger number of neurons eventually produced, may start out with a similar number of cells: cell counts of the E7.5 embryo yielded approximately 8,000 cells for the ectoderm as a whole (Snow, 1977), of which the neuroectoderm can be assumed to account for less than half. As the neural plate invaginates to form the neural tube (Fig.2B, C), its neuroepithelial cells (“neuroepithelial progenitors”) continue to divide symmetrically, resulting in an overall increase in surface area (Fig.2D1). This expansion phase differs significantly among anamniotes (fishes, amphibians) and amniotes (birds, reptiles, mammals). The former hatch as motile larvae at an early, “premature” stage. The first neurons, called primary neurons, are born as early as the neural plate stage, following only a few rounds of mitoses of neuroepithelial progenitors (Hartenstein, 1989; Papan and Campos-Ortega, 1997; 1999; Fig.2D–G). In contrast, in mouse or chicken, the neural primordium increases at a least a thousand fold, to several hundred thousand cells or more, before neurons are born. Thus, in mouse, neuroepithelial progenitors continue to divide symmetrically until stage E10.5 (Fig.2H2) with a cell cycle length of approximately 4–8 hrs (Jiang and Nardelli, 2016; McShane et al., 2015), leaving time for >10 symmetric cell cycles.
Neural proliferation
Neuronal birth (exit from the cell cycle) and cell cycle dynamics in vertebrates are interrelated in a complex pattern. It appears that neuronal birth is generally coupled to the occurrence of asymmetric divisions, which has been studied in detail for zebrafish and mouse. In the former, proliferation and cell fate could be studied directly by live imaging. Studies on spinal cord (Alexandre et al., 2010), forebrain (Dong et al., 2011) and retina (Baye and Link, 2007; Das et al., 2003; Poggi et al., 2005) over the period from 20h after fertilization to hatching (48–72h) demonstrated that individual neuroepithelial progenitors underwent 1–3 rounds of asymmetric divisions, whereby the mitotic spindle is directed perpendicular or at least at a significant tilt to the apical surface (Fig.2D). Accordingly, clones derived from individual neuroepithelial progenitors contained 2–8 cells, which represented a mixture of neurons and progenitors (Fig.2E–G). For spinal cord and forebrain it could be established that the daughter cell that ended up more apically exited the cell cycle and became a neuron, and the more basal cell continued to cycle as a neuroepithelial progenitor (Alexandre et al., 2010; Fig.2D2). This finding was surprising (and may differ from what happens in other vertebrates, including mouse), since it implies that the presumptive neuroepithelial progenitor has to reintegrate into the epithelium, and the cell fated as neuron has to actively exit (delaminate from) the epithelium.
In the developing telencephalon of the mouse (Florio and Huttner, 2014; Gao et al., 2013; Hartfuss et al., 2001; Jiang and Nardelli, 2016; Kriegstein et al., 2006; Noctor et al., 2004; Sun and Hevner, 2014), asymmetric mitotic activity sets in around E10.5 (Fig.2H3). At this stage, neuroepithelial progenitors start expressing some glial-specific proteins and other molecular markers (e.g., Pax 6; Asami et al., 2011), and are called “apical radial glia” (aRG). Clonal analysis performed on the dorsal telencephalon, which gives rise to the excitatory neurons of the cerebral cortex, indicates that there is a transitory phase between E10 and E12 where symmetric (“proliferative”) and asymmetric (“neurogenic”) divisions occur together. During symmetric division, an aRG generates two daughter aRGs; during asymmetric divisions, only one of the two aRG daughter cells maintains its proliferative fate, whereas the other one loses contact to the apical surface and either exits the cell cycle right away, or continues to divide symmetrically into several neurons. This second type of dividing progenitor (“intermediate progenitor”) no longer forms part of the neuroepithelium, but builds up its own proliferative layer, called the subventricular zone (Fig.2H4). The data for mouse suggest that symmetric versus neurogenic divisions of aRGs are mutually exclusive: once an aRG has entered the asymmetric, neurogenic phase, it continues with this mode of divisions for multiple rounds, generating a progeny of 8–9 cells (Gao et al., 2014). These cells remain in close contact, forming an “ontogenetic column”, a term and concept introduced several decades ago for primate cerebral cortex by Rakic and collaborators (Rakic, 1988; see below).
Proliferation of intermediate progenitors in the developing mouse telencephalon is limited to a single mitosis before exiting the cell cycle; in larger species of mammals, including primates, an extended phase of proliferation of intermediate progenitors is thought to account for the large increase in cortical thickness and cell number (Betizeau et al., 2013; Fietz et al., 2010; Martinez-Cerdeno et al., 2012). Correspondingly, the ontogenetic column in these larger mammals can be expected to be much bigger than the 8–9 cells established for mouse. Aside from the increased number of divisions of intermediate progenitors, another layer of complexity is added to the process of corticogenesis in larger mammals which, typically, have a folded (gyrencephalic) cerebral cortex: the subventricular zone splits into two, an inner and outer subventricular zone (iSVZ, oSVZ). The oSVZ is populated by former apical radial glial cells that have lost contact to the ventricular surface, but still project a long process towards the basal (pial) surface (“basal radial glia”; Fig.2I). At the same time, the apical radial glia of the ventricular layer becomes “truncated”, losing contact to the pial surface (Fig.2I). Subsequently, radial glia of the oSVZ proliferate actively, increasing their own number and generating cortical neurons predominantly destined to populate the superficial cortical layers. Formation of the oSVZ is thought to be essential for the tangential spread of cortical neurons underlying the formation of gyri (Kriegstein et al., 2006; Nowakowski et al., 2016; Reillo et al., 2011).
The evolution of corticogenesis among vertebrates is depicted in a way, illustrated in Fig.2J (from Cardenas and Borrell, 2019), that assumes as a starting point a scenario where postmitotic neural precursor cells move out of the ventricular layer and differentiate as neurons (“direct neurogenesis”; Fig.2J1). A subventricular zone, consisting of proliferating intermediate progenitors, is absent. This mode of neurogenesis in general, and of corticogenesis in particular, is encountered in fishes, amphibians, and reptiles. It is thought that neurons populating the simple telencephalic cortex in these animals show characteristics of the deep layer neurons of the mammalian neocortex (Cardenas and Borrell, 2019). Beginnning with birds one encounters subventricular intermediate progenitors that form neurons after a few rounds of division (“indirect neurogenesis”; Fig.2J2). The same mode of cortex formation persists in many mammalian taxa, including rodents (Fig.2J3). Here, apical radial glia and intermediate progenitors undergo a prolonged phase of proliferation, giving rise to neurons that assemble into multiple layers. In larger mammals there appears a second stratum of intermediate progenitors, constituting the outer subventricular zone, which allows for the generation of much larger numbers of neurons of preferentially outer layer identity, and the folding of the cortex into gyri and sulci (Fig.2J4).
Proneural genes and Notch signaling in vertebrate neurogenesis
The pattern of asymmetric divisions in vertebrate neurogenesis, that is, the timing and spatial distribution of cells that withdraw from the cell cycle and differentiate, is controlled by similar molecular mechanisms as those discovered in Drosophila. Homologs of the bHLH proneural genes, as well as components of the Notch signaling pathway, appear in a complex pattern in the proliferating neuroepithelium of the brain and spinal cord. Proneural genes are among the first in a long cascade of determinants that provide cells with the potential to express particular neural or glial fates (Bertrand et al., 2002; Castro and Guillemot, 2011; Chitnis, 1999; Huang et al., 2014; Kageyama et al., 1995). Notch signaling becomes active in the course of asymmetric divisions, when the fate switch of either remaining a neuroepithelial progenitor (radial glia) or becoming a postmitotic neuron/glia is executed (Dong et al., 2012; Gaiano and Fishell, 2002; Yoon and Gaiano, 2005; Yoon et al., 2008). As a result of the asymmetric division, Notch activity becomes concentrated in one of the daughters, which remains the epithelial progenitor (Fig.2H2/3, inset). Lowering of Notch activity in the sibling cell (the postmitotic neuron, or the delaminated intermediate progenitor) is accompanied by neural differentiation. Inhibition of the Notch pathway at any stage in neurogenesis results in an increased number of neurons produced at that stage, and concomitant loss of neuroepithelial progenitors, with the effect that later formed neurons are decreased in number.
Neural progenitor proliferation and the specification of neuronal fate
Drosophila neuroblasts express intrinsic determinants of cell fate in spatially and temporally restricted manner
Vertebrates and invertebrates alike express systems of intrinsic determinants that influence profoundly the development of neural progenitors forming at different positions within the neuroectoderm. These determinants (which molecularly, for the most part, represent transcriptional regulators) subdivide the neuroectoderm into a “mosaic” with many different domains, each one characterized by a unique genetic identity. In Drosophila, beginning at the blastoderm stage, members of different classes of homeobox transcription factors are expressed within the neuroectoderm in discrete transverse and longitudinal zones (Akam, 1987; Harding et al., 1985; Urbach and Technau, 2004; Fig.3A, B). Expression continues in the neuroblasts that delaminate from within these zones, and the progeny (lineage) of the neuroblasts. For example, neuroblasts delaminating from within a medial neurectodermal domain that expresses the homeobox gene ventral nerve cord defective (vnd), or an anterior domain defined by orthodenticle (otd), will continue to express these and many other genes once inside the embryo (Hirth et al., 1995; Zhao et al., 2007; Younossi-Hartenstein et al., 1997; Fig.3A, B). In this manner, the neuroectodermal mosaic of expression domains of transcription factors results in a pattern of genetically uniquely specified neuroblasts. With the advance of molecular techniques it was possible to identify a host of transcription factors whose differential expression provides each neuroblast and their progeny with a unique genetic code (Doe, 1992; Skeath and Thor, 2003; Urbach and Technau, 2004). The early expressed code of transcription factors specifies lineage identity; modifying this code by genetic means transforms the fate of the entire lineage (Sen et al., 2014; see below).
The phenotypic differences among different sublineages that are born during specific time intervals are also likely based on genetic factors activated sequentially as neuroblasts undergo asymmetric cell divisions. For example, during their primary phase of proliferation, Drosophila neuroblasts sequentially express the factors Hunchback (Hb), Kruppel (Kr), Nubbin (Nub), Castor (Cas) and Grainyhead (Grh; Brody and Odenwald, 2005; Pearson and Doe, 2004; Fig.3C). The secondary phase of proliferation that takes place in the larva is divided into an early period, characterized by the expression of the transcription factor Chinmo, from a late period where neuroblast switch to the expression of the Broad protein (Doe, 2006; Syed et al., 2017). Numerous additional transcription factors, as well as RNA-binding proteins have been identified which are expressed in distinct temporal patterns during the larval (secondary) phase of neuroblast proliferation (Doe, 2017; Sullivan et al., 2019; Syed et al., 2017). It is thought that the transcriptional code manifested during a certain time window of neuroblast proliferation endows the sublineage produced during this phase with its own characteristic structural and functional characteristics (Kao and Lee, 2010; Kohwi and Doe, 2013; Li et al., 2013).
Intrinsic determinants of neural fate in vertebrates
As described for Drosophila, the vertebrate neuroectoderm (i.e., the neural plate followed by the neural tube) is divided by the expression of intrinsic determinants of specific neural fates into distinct transverse and longitudinal domains. Expression domains are delineated by global and local signaling events, involving, among others, the Shh, BMP, Wnt pathways. By the time when neurogenic divisions start to occur (e.g., around stage E10 in mouse embryos), these signals have specified within the neural tube a stable pattern of expression domains of numerous transcription factors, many of which have homologies to factors expressed in a similar pattern in Drosophila (Briscoe et al., 2000; Dessaud et al., 2008; Graham et al., 1989; Jessell, 2000; Fig.3D). For example, the homeobox genes Nkx2.2 (homolog of the Drosophila gene vnd; see above) and Nkx6.1 are expressed close to the ventral midline under the influence of high levels of the Shh morphogen (Briscoe et al., 1999; Sander et al., 2000; Fig.3D, E). Further laterally, other transcription factors, including Irx3, Gsh1/2 (homologs of Drosophila ind), and Msx1/2 (homologs of Drosophila msh) are activated under the input of BMP signaling (Illes et al., 2009; Ramos and Robert, 2005; Winterbottom et al., 2010). Inhibitory interactions between these factors delineate small columnar expression domains with different progenitor fates. For example, domain MN, generating progenitors of motor neurons and oligodendrocytes, is defined by high levels of Nkx6.1 and low levels of Nkx2.2 and Irx3 (Fig.3E). In vitro culture of individual Nkx6.1-positive progenitors taken at E9.5 or E10 produced clones of less than 20 to several hundred cells that, in many cases, maintained expression of individual intrinsic markers (Agalliu and Schieren, 2009). This finding and many other studies indicate that at the time point when progenitors enter the phase of neurogenic divisions, the expression of intrinsic determinants sets the fate of the lineage these cells give rise to.
Research on the anterior neural tube, in particular the forebrain vesicle that gives rise to the cerebral cortex, also documented the role of early expressed transcriptional regulators in later neural fate. Morphogen gradients (e.g. BMP, EGF, FGF, and Wnt), followed by regional expression of various transcription factors (e.g. COUP-TF1, Emx2), pattern the anterior neuroectoderm into a “mosaic” where contiguous aRGCs express distinct combinations of fate determinants, and genes specific to distinct pools of aRGCs have been linked to the types of neurons these progenitors give rise to (Azzarelli et al., 2015; Rubenstein et al., 1999; Takahashi and Liu, 2006). There is also mounting evidence to suggest that cortical neurons with different structural fates (e.g., projections to different cortical or subcortical target regions) are generated in a sequential manner under the control of transcription factors regulated by intrinsic programs within the progenitors (Britanova et al., 2008; Chen et al., 2005a, b; Hanashima et al., 2004; Molyneaux et al., 2005; 2007; Okano and Temple, 2009; Shen et al., 2006). Similar to the Drosophila Hb-Kr-Nub-Cas-Grh cassette, these factors control the fate of neuron populations born during these different time periods. For example, the factors Fezf1 and Fezf2 are expressed at an early stage in progenitors and remain on in deep layer corticofugal neurons (Chen et al., 2005a; Eckler and Chen, 2014; Greig et al., 2013; Molyneaux et al., 2005). By contrast, Cut-like homeobox 1 and 2 (Cux1 and Cux2), as well as Satb2, appear at later stages and specify cells of superficial layers, including the callosal neurons (Britanova et al., 2008; Weiss and Nieto, 2019).
Lineages as structural and functional units: Drosophila
Neuroblasts generate lineages with discrete anatomical features
Neural lineages in Drosophila form highly stereotyped anatomical units, such that neurons which derive from a single neuroblast remain in close proximity, with their axons and dendrites forming coherent bundles that innervate discrete neuropil domains. Most lineages have been mapped anatomically at a high level of resolution (Cardona et al., 2010; Ito et al., 2013; Lovick et al., 2013; Pereanu and Hartenstein, 2006; Truman et al., 2004; Wong et al., 2013; Yu et al., 2013). One can picture the fly brain as a mosaic of structural/functional modules (the lineages) which, in large part, are genetically specified at an early stage of development (Fig.4A). Some of the well-studied examples of neural lineages in the Drosophila brain briefly discussed in the following include those which form the olfactory center, called antennal lobe, the central complex, and the ventral nerve cord.
The fly olfactory system is formed by olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) whose somata and dendrites are located in sensilla that are subjected to chemical stimuli from the external world, and whose axons terminate in the antennal lobe, the primary olfactory processing compartment in the central brain. Each ORN expresses a single odorant receptor gene (out of approximately 50), and neurons which share a given receptor converge onto a single glomerulus in the antennal lobe (Wilson, 2013). Information is received from ORNs by an anatomically stereotyped population of olfactory projection neurons, which exhibit dendrites in the antennal lobe and axonal outputs in the mushroom body calyx and/or the lateral horn, two higher-order brain structures (Fig.4A). Projection neurons are members of four paired lineages, generated from neuroblasts BAlc/ALl1, BAmv3/ALad1, BAla1/ALv, and lastly, BAlp4/ALlv1 (Das et al., 2008; 2010; 2013; Lai et al., 2008; Lin et al., 2010; 2012; Yu et al., 2010). (Note that for the adult Drosophila brain, two different designations (e.g., “BAlc” and “ALl1”) exist for many lineages; the first is based on the analysis of Wong et al., 2013, which uses the nomenclature introduced for brain lineages identified by their characteristic axon tracts that remain detectable throughout development (Cardona et al., 2009; Hartenstein et al., 2015; Lovick et al., 2013; Pereanu and Hartenstein, 2006). The second system of lineage designations was launched by Ito et al. (2013) and Yu et al. (2013) specifically for the lineages (“clonal units”) of the adult brain, based on their relationship to neuropil compartments). Antennal lobe projection neurons belonging to different lineages form discrete classes in terms of dendritic arborization and axonal projection. For example, the lineage BAmv3/ALad1 includes uni-glomerular neurons, whose dendrites are restricted to a single glomerulus, and project via the medial antennal lobe tract to the mushroom body calyx and the lateral horn (Fig.4A, inset; B). Lineage BAla1/ALv generates neurons with widely branching multiglomerular dendrites, and axons that exclusively target the lateral horn via a different tract, the medio-lateral antennal lobe tract (Fig.4A, inset).
Experimental evidence supports the idea that intrinsic genetic programs act at an early stage to establish the type of neuron a given neuroblast will generate. For example, the homeobox gene orthodenticle (otd) is normally expressed in a pair of adjacent progenitors, those of lineage BAmv3/ALad1 and its neighbor, BAmv1/LALv1, whose neurons innervate the central complex (Fig.4A–C). If otd is specifically eliminated in BAmv1/LALv1, the fate of the entire lineage (in the order of 100 neurons) of this neuroblast is homeotically transformed into that of the neighboring BAmv3/ALad1; Sen et al., 2014). Thus, in these mutant brains, dendritic and axonal arborization, as well as transmitter phenotype of BAmv1/LALv1 neurons are absent, and replaced by supernumerary axons/dendrites of the BAmv3/ALad1 class.
Lineages or hemilineages can be divided into smaller building blocks
The above discussed studies clearly demonstrate that neurons forming part of lineages share certain fundamental functional and anatomical characters. In addition, within a given lineage, smaller sets of neurons defined by different birth date (sublineages) frequently differ in detail. For example, the lineage BAmv3/ALad1 introduced above includes uni-glomerular neurons, whose dendrites are restricted to a single glomerulus. Within this overall pattern, neurons born at different time points target different glomeruli. In other words, BAmv3/ALad1, as a whole lineage, innervates the neuropil volume constituting the antennal lobe; individual neurons of BAmv3/ALad1 subdivide this volume into smaller units, the glomeruli (Berck et al., 2017; Jefferis et al., 2001; 2004; Ramaekers et al., 2005; Yu et al., 2010).
A similar “tiling” behavior has been demonstrated for neurons of lineage DALv2/EBa1, which forms the ring (R-) neurons of the central complex (Fig.4D–G). The central complex, a higher order brain center important for visually-guided behaviors, has become a heavily studied brain structure with the lineage concept in mind (Boyan and Liu, 2014; Boyan and Reichert, 2011; Boyan and Williams, 2011; Boyan et al., 2017; Omoto et al., 2017; 2018; Lovick et al., 2017; Sullivan et al., 2019; Yang et al., 2013). It consists of four compartments, the protocerebral bridge (PB), fan-shaped body (FB), noduli (NO), and ellipsoid body (EB; Fig.4A). Lineage DALv2 R-neurons have a circular axon that branches within the torus-shaped ellipsoid body (Fig.4D–G). Individual R-neurons differ in regard to the position of their axon within the ellipsoid body. Early born R-neurons have axons located closer to the periphery (outer ring neurons, OR), and receive input from DALcl1/AOTUv3 d in the superior bulb (Fig.4D, F); later born R neurons are targeted by DALcl2/AOTUv4 d in the inferior bulb, and extend axons towards the center of the ellipsoid body (inner ring neurons, IR; Omoto et al., 2017; 2018; Fig.4D, G).
Four type II lineages, DM1–4, generate the large number of so-called columnar neurons that interconnect the neuropils of the central complex in a topologically highly ordered manner. More than 10 subclasses of columnar neurons have been distinguished (Hanesch et al., 1989; Wolff and Rubin, 2015). Among these are the P-EG neurons (connect the protocerebral bridge with the ellipsoid body and the gall, a major output domain of the central complex), the P-FR neurons (protocerebral bridege, fan-shaped body, rubus), P-EN neurons (protocerebral bridge, ellipsoid body, noduli) and P-FN neurons (protocerebral bridge, fan-shaped body, noduli; Fig.4I). The four classes represent sublineages of the DM1–4 Type II neuroblasts. P-FR and E-PG are the descendants of intermediate progenitors born around 24h and 32h after larval hatching, respectively; P-EN and P-FN are formed by one progenitor born at around 42h (Sullivan et al., 2019; Fig.4J). As explained above (see Fig.1F), intermediate progenitors, just like regular Type I neuroblasts, generate series of neurons in a strict temporal order, and different transcription factors, expressed during different time windows, specify neuronal fate. P-FR and E-PG are born during late divisions of their respective progenitors, defined by the expression of Eyeless (Ey); by contrast P-EN and P-FN descend from early progenitor divisions, which express Dichaete (D; Fig.4J). Ey is absolutely required to promote the P-FR anf E-PG, and at the same time inhibit P-EN and P-FN (Sullivan et al., 2019). Loss of ey results in the absence of E-PG neurons and ectopic P-EN cells.
Hemilineages and sublineages as functional modules
The significance of clonal relationships in the construction of functional circuitry has been assessed in different regions of the Drosophila CNS. Two lineages forming part of a pathway (the anterior visual pathway or AVP) that conducts visual input from the optic lobe to the central complex illustrate the principle that many lineages form functional neuronal classes defined by discrete response properties. The AVP begins with neurons located in the medulla of the optic lobe; from here, visual information reaches the anterior optic tubercle (AOTU), followed by the bulb (BU) and, finally, the ellipsoid body (EB) of the central complex (Fig.4D). Two discrete hemilineages, DALcl1/AOTUv3 d and DALcl2/AOTUv4 d, produce the neurons that connect the anterior optic tubercle with the bulb (Fig.4D, H). Neuroanatomical analysis and two-photon calcium imaging revealed that DALcl1 d and DALcl2 d form two parallel channels with different functional properties. DALcl1 d neurons possess small, retinotopically ordered receptive fields, and preferentially respond to bright objects presented to the ipsilateral eye. In contrast, DALcl2 d neurons possess, large overlapping receptive fields; they are excited by bright objects presented to the contralateral eye, and inhibited as the stimulus moves into the ipsilateral field (Fig.4D’). In a similar manner, the previously mentioned sublineages of neuroblasts DM1–4, including PF-R, E-PG, P-EN, and P-FN, also subserve distinct functions. For example, E-PGs are required in navigation behavior (Giraldo et al., 2018; Green et al., 2017); elimination of these cells, resulting from a loss of ey-expression, abolishes the flies’ ability to orient relative to bright focal stimuli (“virtual sun”), leaving other aspects of motor control intact (Sullivan et al., 2019).
Another prominent example of hemilineages representing functional modules is that of the ventral nerve cord (VNC), the analog of the vertebrate spinal cord. Like the brain, the VNC is comprised of neurons that for the most part arise during the secondary phase of neuroblast proliferation. Secondary neuroblasts and their lineages have been mapped from the larval to adult stage (Shepherd et al., 2016; Truman et al., 2004). As they form the majority of VNC interneurons, interacting with sensory afferents from the body and motorneuron efferents controling the muscles, Harris et al. (2015) hypothesized that lineally organized neuronal ensembles would also be functionally organized to somehow coordinate locomotor behaviors. Utilizing a novel suite of genetic tools, they were able to stably and specifically label individual hemilineages in the fly VNC and document their anatomical characteristics (Fig.4K). In addition to simple labeling, they expressed a heat-sensitive ion channel in specific hemilineages and assessed the behavioral consequence of targeted activation of these neurons. Interestingly, hemilineage-specific activation led to a stereotyped behavioral response, the type and complexity of which correlated with the projection location and spatial distribution of hemilineage neurites (Harris et al., 2015; Fig.4K–M).
Lineages as structural and functional modules: Vertebrates
What role, if any, do developmentally defined lineages play in defining anatomical modules in the mature brain of vertebrates? Neural progenitors of vertebrates remain part of the neurectoderm throughout their proliferatory history. For a long period, their mode of division is symmetric, resulting in an exponential growth of the size of the neurectoderm (see above). The number of neural progenitors is not invariant and, at least in the mammalian system, very large. The first question that arises when studying clones of cells derived from individual neural progenitors is at what stage the given progenitor was labeled. Early induction, during the phase of symmetric division of neural progenitors, must invariably lead to large, heterogenous clones distributed widely over the brain (McCarthy et al., 2001; Price and Thurlow, 1988; Walsh and Cepko, 1988; 1992). But at what time point in the life of a neural progenitor does it make sense to expect this cell to constitute a discrete founder of a structural or functional module, akin to a neuroblast in the fly? Recent work focusing on mouse cerebral cortex development has brought us closer to address this question (Gao et al., 2014). Thus, as described above, clones of cells generated during the neurogenic phase of proliferation form radial columns of contiguous cells, called “ontogenetic columns”. Experimental data support the idea that neurons belonging to such ontogenetic columns become indeed anatomically and functionally closely connected in the mature cortex. Before reviewing these data, a brief discussion of the term and concept of a “cortical column” will be helpful.
Anatomically and functionally defined columns in the mammalian cortex
Quite different entities within the mammalian cerebral cortex have been called columns. In the anatomical sense, the term can refer to “microcolumns”, which are visible on histological stains of mammalian brain slices as radially oriented, linear arrays of 50–80μm diameter. Quantitative studies of human brain estimated that microcolumns contain an average of 11 neurons (Jones, 2000; Rockland, 2010; Fig.5A). On the other hand, much larger groupings of cortical neurons are referred to as columns, including the ocular dominance columns in the visual cortex, or the whisker-specific barrels in the somatosensory cortex (Feldmeyer et al., 2013; Lang et al., 2011; Lübke and Feldmeyer, 2007; Fig.5B). These “macrocolumns”, which are almost ten times larger in diameter than the microcolumns, often correspond to physiologically detectable modules in the cortex. As early as the 1950’s, Vernon Mountcastle suggested that the mammalian cortex exhibits a columnar organization; these so-called “cortical columns” were proposed to behave as the elementary computational unit of the brain (Mountcastle et al., 1955). Evidence that cortical columns operate as functional units were supported by the studies of Hubel and Wiesel in the cat visual cortex, who observed that neurons located within a given column were similarly tuned, that is, responded to the same or similar stimulus (Hubel and Wiesel, 1962; 1968).
Anatomically, macrocolumns are not as clearly defined as microcolumns. Typically, adjacent macrocolumns are not rigidly separated, but interdigitate, or blend into each other. Dendritic arborizations of a neuron located within a given, functionally defined macrocolumn cross column boundaries into neigboring territories (Fig.5B). Also axonal input may cross column boundaries. Significantly, as in the case of the well studied somatosensory columns in the rodent or primate cortex, one type of input (e.g., thalamocortical afferents) may be highly localized and confined to a column (Fig.5B, arrow), whereas a second type maybe much more divergent, crossing column boundaries (Lang et al., 2010; Lübke and Feldmeyer, 2007; Fig.5B, arrowheads). These complications have led to numerous ongoing debates concerning the question “what is a column” [see, for discussion, previous reviews by Herculano-Houzel et al. (2008), Rakic (2008), Rockland (2010), among others].
Microcolumns as developmentally defined ontogenetic columns
The studies of mammalian brain development discussed in the previous section demonstrated that progenitors of the neocortex located in the ventricular zone divide asymmetrically and “bud” off cells which migrate apically or vertically along long processes made by the radial glial cells to their final destination where they differentiate, eventually distributing into the six cortical layers (Rakic 1971, 1972). Neurons which derive from a single progenitor appear to form vertical columns, called ontogenetic column, which could be retained even into the adult (Rakic, 1988). This concept is referred to as the radial unit hypothesis; it posits that a radial glial cell (neural progenitor) not only sequentially generates neurons, but also serves to guide neurons out of the VZ along long processes. Neurons migrate radially and minimally laterally, forming vertical columns extending the depth of the cortex and its six layers. Neurons end up in cortical layers in an inside-out fashion, with cells born first lying in deeper layers, and neurons born later in more superficial layers (reviewed in McConnell, 1988; Rakic, 1974; 1978, 1988).
Early attempts of experimental clonal analysis, mainly based on retroviral labeling of random, sparse assemblies of individual progenitor cells contributed numerous new insights into the gradual acquisition of cell fate, but were not able to provide support for the concept of ontogenetic columns or the radial unit hypothesis. These studies (e.g., Luskin et al., 1988; Price and Thurlow, 1988; Walsh and Cepko, 1992; Tan et al., 1998) yielded clones of different cell numbers and distributions; in many cases, neurons were distributed widely along the horizontal plane, casting doubt on the idea that progeny of an individual radial glial progenitor should remain together. However, early studies lacked in spatial and temporal resolution, and did not conceptually distinguish between pyramidal neurons and local interneurons that, as we know now, originate from completely different locations and follow different proliferatory and migratory patterns (Fig.2H1; see also below). Only more recently developed techniques, among them MADM (Mosaic Analysis with Double Markers; Hippenmeyer et al., 2010; Zong et al., 2005; Gao et al., 2014), were able to precisely define the time point and type of progenitor in which the genetic label was activated, and visualized for the first time the ontogenetic column in mouse cortex. These studies confirmed the earlier radial unit hypothesis, showing that radial glial progenitors from E10.5 onward generated clones of neurons that initially migrated along the glial process of origin, and then stayed together as a radial column (Fig5.C, D).
Ontogenetic columns as functional units
When combining single progenitor lineage tracing with physiological characterization of clonally-related sister neurons the functional role of lineage, at least for excitatory cortical neurons, become apparent. Li et al. (2012) turned to the mouse visual cortex; their method allowed them to identify GFP-labelled, clonally-related sister neuron pairs. Injection of calcium indicator dye near the labeled pair allowed them to optically record the activity of this pair, along with unlabeled, presumably non-sister neighboring neurons, using two-photon excitation microscopy. By presenting the mice with a wide-field grating visual stimulus with different orientations, they found that clonally-related sister neurons prefer similarly oriented visual stimuli, a correlation that was not observed between clonally-related and unrelated neurons (Li et al., 2012; Fig.5E). Similarly, Kondo et al. (2016) noted that neurons with similar orientation preference were clustered vertically in a volume that corresponded to part of a microcolumn.
The similar tuning properties of sister cortical neurons makes sense considering the results of other studies, showing that clonally-related neurons exhibit preferential chemical synaptic interactions (Yu et al., 2009), a property dependent upon transient electrical coupling via gap junctions during early development (Li et al., 2012; Yu et al., 2012). Lineage-specific electrical communication enhances the synchronous firing of these neurons, which is thought to underlie the preferential synaptic wiring observed later in development (Fig.5F). Transcriptional regulation of cell adhesion genes, or birthdate-dependent migration and “inside-out” patterning, may also contribute to connectivity between clonally-related neurons (He et al., 2015; Lv et al., 2019; Tarusawa et al., 2016). Thus, a framework for the role of lineage in sculpting vertebrate brain circuits has emerged; clonally-related sister neurons from a given progenitor talk to each other early and often, growing radially into a column to process information as a group.
Does lineage play a role in sculpting every neural circuit? In the case of GABAergic interneurons of the cortex, the answer seems debatable. Most cortical interneurons derive from the medial ganglion eminence and preoptic area, which migrate tangentially to populate multiple laminae of the cortex (reviewed in Batista-Brito and Fishell, 2009; Fig.2H1). Brown et al. (2011) and Ciceri et al. (2013) suggested that clonally-related interneurons tend to form non-random, spatially-discrete clusters, with both intralaminar and interlaminar distributions. Clonally related interneurons are electrically coupled, but show no preferential connections via chemical synapses (Zhang et al., 2017; Fig.5G). However, related interneurons do establish chemical synapses to shared sets of pyramidal neurons (Fig.5H). Other studies challenged the assertion of clustering, suggesting that there does not seem to be a clear relationship between lineage and the spatial distribution of cortical interneurons (Harwell et al., 2015; Mayer et al., 2015). The discrepancy may lie in the methodology; the former utilized selective and stable fluorescent labeling of individual progenitors and their progeny, whereas the latter utilized retrovirus-based barcoded libraries as a readout. Although follow up rebuttals from each group acknowledge certain shared conclusions and advantages and/or disadvantages of their respective approaches (Mayer et al., 2016; Sultan et al., 2016), the debate seemingly continues.
Conclusion: Ontogenetic modules in vertebrates and Drosophila
The picture that emerges in vertebrate brain development is that cortical macrocolumns are composite structures that contain hundreds of ontogenetically specified microcolumns (Fig.5I). The defining feature of a macrocolumn is functional and anatomical, but not lineage-related. Considering the example of the macrocolumns outlined by the barrels in the rodent somatosensory cortex, it is the pool of trigeminal and thalamic afferents innervated by one whisker that determines the size/cell number of one cortical barrel, and not a predetermined set of lineages within the cortex (Jhaveri et al., 1991; Killackey and Belford, 1979; Schlaggar and O’Leary, 1993; 1994; Senft and Woolsey, 1991; Fig.4E). Likewise, the size of visual cortical columns depends on afferents from the geniculate nucleus (Hubermann, 2007; Penn and Shatz, 1999). The macrocolumn (in sensory cortical domains) could be considered then as a functional module, comprising the circuitry required to process the sensory input from a discrete set of spatially or functionally related afferents. Towards this end, afferents invading the developing cortex recruit a relatively large number of small, contiguous ontogenetic modules to become part of the macrocolumn. Ontogenetic columns may provide “conveniently sized” packages of highly interconnected neurons, which may subserve discrete subroutines within the overall operation of the macrocolumn.
In contrast, ontogenetic modules formed by lineages in the Drosophila brain are much larger, relative to overall brain size, compared to vertebrate microcolumns. The entire (central) brain of Drosophila is formed by lineages/sublineages that number in the hundreds, rather than the millions or even billions that stand for microcolumns of the mammalian cortex. Drosophila lineages/sublineages are also much more different from each other anatomically and functionally than the relatively homogenous microcolumns, as discussed for DALcl1 and DALcl2 (see section 3 above) which innervate largely non-overlapping dendritic and axonal territories, and include neurons that are tuned to completely different visual stimuli (Omoto et al., 2017). It should be noted that modular structures that are not controlled by lineage descent also exist in invertebrates; a notable example is the Drosophila compound eye, which is formed by strictly invariant units (ommatidia) whose cellular components are assembled by a cascade of cell-cell interactions (Treisman, 2013).
The comparison between the vertebrate and insect mode of building ontogenetic modules reveals several fundamental differences, one of them being the time point in development at which a genetic switch seals the fate of neurons generated by a given progenitor cell, molding these neurons into a coherent structural/functional module. In Drosophila, this time point is early, occurring right with the birth of the progenitor (neuroblast) from the neurectoderm, thus giving the progenitor many divisions to produce a relatively large module. In vertebrate (considering mouse cortical development) the corresponding time point is much later. Initially, neural progenitors within the neurectoderm undergo many rounds of symmetric divisions, in which progeny does not appear to be bound together by intrinsically expressed genetic factors. Only following the onset of asymmetric, neurogenic divisions does the formation of ontogenetic modules set in, and that stage the progenitor produces only a small number of neurons, from 8 or so in mouse to possibly a few hundreds in larger mammals, where intermediate progenitors multiply the progeny of an asymmetrically dividing progenitor (Gao et al., 2013). Once more detail has come to light, it will be informative to compare the principles of how brain circuits are wired, and how they function, under the conditions exemplified by mammalian cortex and Drosophila central brain.
Highlights.
Cell lineages are developmentally-genetically and anatomically-functionally defined modules of the brain
Progenitors of lineages (neuroblasts) in insects are formed at an early stage
Insect neuroblasts produce a relative small number of large, diverse lineages
Progenitors of lineages (radial glia) in vertebrates are formed late after a phase of symmetric amplifying divisions
Vertebrate neural progenitors generate a large number of small lineages
Footnotes
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