A multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway incorporating axonal and synaptic growth.

During development, neurons extend axons to different brain areas and produce stereotypical patterns of connections. The mechanisms underlying this process have been intensively studied in the visual system, where retinal neurons form retinotopic maps in the thalamus and superior colliculus. The mec...

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Main Authors: Keith B Godfrey, Stephen J Eglen, Nicholas V Swindale
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-12-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2782179?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-08508eedb4ca47989ac950082341ceb52020-11-25T01:11:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582009-12-01512e100060010.1371/journal.pcbi.1000600A multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway incorporating axonal and synaptic growth.Keith B GodfreyStephen J EglenNicholas V SwindaleDuring development, neurons extend axons to different brain areas and produce stereotypical patterns of connections. The mechanisms underlying this process have been intensively studied in the visual system, where retinal neurons form retinotopic maps in the thalamus and superior colliculus. The mechanisms active in map formation include molecular guidance cues, trophic factor release, spontaneous neural activity, spike-timing dependent plasticity (STDP), synapse creation and retraction, and axon growth, branching and retraction. To investigate how these mechanisms interact, a multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway was produced based on phenomenological approximations of each of these mechanisms. Core assumptions of the model were that the probabilities of axonal branching and synaptic growth are highest where the combined influences of chemoaffinity and trophic factor cues are highest, and that activity-dependent release of trophic factors acts to stabilize synapses. Based on these behaviors, model axons produced morphologically realistic growth patterns and projected to retinotopically correct locations in the colliculus. Findings of the model include that STDP, gradient detection by axonal growth cones and lateral connectivity among collicular neurons were not necessary for refinement, and that the instructive cues for axonal growth appear to be mediated first by molecular guidance and then by neural activity. Although complex, the model appears to be insensitive to variations in how the component developmental mechanisms are implemented. Activity, molecular guidance and the growth and retraction of axons and synapses are common features of neural development, and the findings of this study may have relevance beyond organization in the retinocollicular pathway.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2782179?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Keith B Godfrey
Stephen J Eglen
Nicholas V Swindale
spellingShingle Keith B Godfrey
Stephen J Eglen
Nicholas V Swindale
A multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway incorporating axonal and synaptic growth.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Keith B Godfrey
Stephen J Eglen
Nicholas V Swindale
author_sort Keith B Godfrey
title A multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway incorporating axonal and synaptic growth.
title_short A multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway incorporating axonal and synaptic growth.
title_full A multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway incorporating axonal and synaptic growth.
title_fullStr A multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway incorporating axonal and synaptic growth.
title_full_unstemmed A multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway incorporating axonal and synaptic growth.
title_sort multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway incorporating axonal and synaptic growth.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2009-12-01
description During development, neurons extend axons to different brain areas and produce stereotypical patterns of connections. The mechanisms underlying this process have been intensively studied in the visual system, where retinal neurons form retinotopic maps in the thalamus and superior colliculus. The mechanisms active in map formation include molecular guidance cues, trophic factor release, spontaneous neural activity, spike-timing dependent plasticity (STDP), synapse creation and retraction, and axon growth, branching and retraction. To investigate how these mechanisms interact, a multi-component model of the developing retinocollicular pathway was produced based on phenomenological approximations of each of these mechanisms. Core assumptions of the model were that the probabilities of axonal branching and synaptic growth are highest where the combined influences of chemoaffinity and trophic factor cues are highest, and that activity-dependent release of trophic factors acts to stabilize synapses. Based on these behaviors, model axons produced morphologically realistic growth patterns and projected to retinotopically correct locations in the colliculus. Findings of the model include that STDP, gradient detection by axonal growth cones and lateral connectivity among collicular neurons were not necessary for refinement, and that the instructive cues for axonal growth appear to be mediated first by molecular guidance and then by neural activity. Although complex, the model appears to be insensitive to variations in how the component developmental mechanisms are implemented. Activity, molecular guidance and the growth and retraction of axons and synapses are common features of neural development, and the findings of this study may have relevance beyond organization in the retinocollicular pathway.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2782179?pdf=render
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