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XB-ART-29590
Dev Biol 1984 Sep 01;1051:102-14.
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The genesis and differentiation of neurons in a frog parasympathetic ganglion.

Heathcote RD , Sargent PB .


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The cellular mechanisms that underlie formation of an autonomic ganglion have been investigated by studying the formation of the cardiac ganglion of the frog. Analysis of the genesis of neurons with [3H]thymidine autoradiography revealed that neuronal precursors do not divide via a "stem cell lineage" but rather divide exponentially, such that both daughter cells either re-enter the mitotic cycle or differentiate. Neurogenesis in this autonomic ganglion is prolonged, beginning during the second day after fertilization and continuing for at least 2 weeks. The use of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) as a neuronal marker showed that differentiated neurons start condensing in their target 1.5 days after the first neurons are born. Neurons accumulate, concomitant with neurogenesis, at a constant rate of approximately six neurons per day. Transplantation and organ culture demonstrated that immature neurons are present well before definitive expression of the mature phenotype and that their initial expression does not depend upon maintained contact by preganglionic axons.

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Species referenced: Xenopus
Genes referenced: ache