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Histological characterization and development of mesial surface sulci in the human brain at 13-15 gestational weeks through high-resolution histology.

Richa Verma | Jaikishan Jayakumar | Rebecca Folkerth | Paul R Manger | Mihail Bota | Moitrayee Majumder | Karthika Pandurangan | Stephen Savoia | Srinivasa Karthik | Ramdayalan Kumarasami | Jayaraj Joseph | G Rohini | Sudha Vasudevan | Chitra Srinivasan | S Lata | E Harish Kumar | Rajeswaran Rangasami | Jayaraman Kumutha | S Suresh | Goran Šimić | Partha P Mitra | Mohanasankar Sivaprakasam
The Journal of comparative neurology | 2024

Cellular-level anatomical data from early fetal brain are sparse yet critical to the understanding of neurodevelopmental disorders. We characterize the organization of the human cerebral cortex between 13 and 15 gestational weeks using high-resolution whole-brain histological data sets complimented with multimodal imaging. We observed the heretofore underrecognized, reproducible presence of infolds on the mesial surface of the cerebral hemispheres. Of note at this stage, when most of the cerebrum is occupied by lateral ventricles and the corpus callosum is incompletely developed, we postulate that these mesial infolds represent the primordial stage of cingulate, callosal, and calcarine sulci, features of mesial cortical development. Our observations are based on the multimodal approach and further include histological three-dimensional reconstruction that highlights the importance of the plane of sectioning. We describe the laminar organization of the developing cortical mantle, including these infolds from the marginal to ventricular zone, with Nissl, hematoxylin and eosin, and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) immunohistochemistry. Despite the absence of major sulci on the dorsal surface, the boundaries among the orbital, frontal, parietal, and occipital cortex were very well demarcated, primarily by the cytoarchitecture differences in the organization of the subplate (SP) and intermediate zone (IZ) in these locations. The parietal region has the thickest cortical plate (CP), SP, and IZ, whereas the orbital region shows the thinnest CP and reveals an extra cell-sparse layer above the bilaminar SP. The subcortical structures show intensely GFAP-immunolabeled soma, absent in the cerebral mantle. Our findings establish a normative neurodevelopment baseline at the early stage.

Pubmed ID: 38591638 RIS Download

Associated grants

  • Agency: The Pratiksha Trust,
  • Agency: Office of the Principal Scientific Adviser, Government of India,

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GFAP (E4L7M) XP® Rabbit mAb (antibody)

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Goat anti-rabbit IgG, pAb (HRP conjugate) (antibody)

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MATLAB (software resource)

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Multi paradigm numerical computing environment and fourth generation programming language developed by MathWorks. Allows matrix manipulations, plotting of functions and data, implementation of algorithms, creation of user interfaces, and interfacing with programs written in other languages, including C, C++, Java, Fortran and Python. Used to explore and visualize ideas and collaborate across disciplines including signal and image processing, communications, control systems, and computational finance.

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Fiji (software resource)

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Software package as distribution of ImageJ and ImageJ2 together with Java, Java3D and plugins organized into coherent menu structure. Used to assist research in life sciences.

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GFAP (E4L7M) XP® Rabbit mAb (antibody)

RRID:AB_2799963

This monoclonal targets GFAP

View all literature mentions