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Cerebral Cortex 1993; 3:551-566
© Oxford University Press 1993


research-article

Transient Axonal Branching in the Developing Corpus Callosum

Hazim J. Kadhim, Pradeep G. Bhide and Douglas O. Frost

Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital Charlestown, Massachusetts 02129 and Neuroscience Program, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115

During development, there is a transient overproduction of axons in the corpus callosum; this overproduction of axons is due, in part, to a transient excess of neurons that send an axon through the corpus callosum. However, transient axonal branching could also contribute to the developmental overproduction of callosal axons. To investigate this possibility, we filled developing cal-losal axons in the Syrian hamster with the carbocyanine dye 1, 1'-dioctadecyl-3,3,3',3'-tetramethylindocarbocy-anine perchlorate (Dil). Light microscopic analysis showed that, indeed, developing callosal axons branch transiently in the hamster: branching was robust on postnatal day 0 (P0) and P3 (P0 = the first 24 hr after birth), less prominent on P6 and P8, and absent by P11. Immature callosal axons branched before or after crossing the midline and at all rostral-caudal and medial-lateral levels within the corpus callosum. The majority of callosal axon collaterals that were contained within individual 100-µm-thick sections were relatively short (mean = 15.1 µm) but some collaterals extended up to ~135 µm from the main axon trunk before passing out of the section in which they were observed. Nearly all of the collaterals emanated from the main axon trunk; higher-order collaterals were rare. Some callosal axon trunks had multiple collaterals. Branching callosal axons originated from multiple cortical areas, including area 17. Electron microscopic observations indicated that the processes designated as axon collaterals by light microscopic criteria would have been included in electron microscopic counts of developing callosal axons. Some callosal axon trunks and branches had ultrastructural features that suggested they were degenerating.

In cats, developing callosal axons branch on embryonic day 57 (E57; the first 24 hr after conception = E0) and P0. Thus, it is likely that transient branching of immature callosal axons is a generalized feature of mammalian cortical development and that it contributes to the overproduction of callosal axons, albeit perhaps to varying degrees, in multiple species.


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