Axon overproduction and elimination in the corpus callosum of the developing rhesus monkey

AS LaMantia, P Rakic - Journal of Neuroscience, 1990 - Soc Neuroscience
Journal of Neuroscience, 1990Soc Neuroscience
We have studied the cytological and quantitative aspects of axon addition and elimination in
the corpus callosum of the developing rhesus monkey. Electron microscopic analysis
reveals that during fetal development the number of callosal axons increases from 4 million
at embryonic day 65 (E65) to 188 million at birth (E 165). Thus, the number of callosal axons
in newborn monkeys exceeds the number present in the adult (an average of 56 million;
LaMantia and Rakic, 1990a) by at least 3.5 times. Although there is some variability among …
We have studied the cytological and quantitative aspects of axon addition and elimination in the corpus callosum of the developing rhesus monkey. Electron microscopic analysis reveals that during fetal development the number of callosal axons increases from 4 million at embryonic day 65 (E65) to 188 million at birth (E 165). Thus, the number of callosal axons in newborn monkeys exceeds the number present in the adult (an average of 56 million; LaMantia and Rakic, 1990a) by at least 3.5 times. Although there is some variability among the 11 fetal and newborn monkeys examined, there appears to be a progressive increase in the total number of callosal axons from midgestation through birth. The presence and numbers of growth cones from E65 through birth suggests that axon addition occurs exclusively during this period. There is no ultrastructural or quantitative indication of postnatal axon addition. After birth, about 70% of the axons in the callosum are eliminated in 2 phases. During the first phase, which includes the first 3 postnatal weeks, approximately 80 million axons are lost at an estimated rate of 4.4 million/d or 50/sec. During the second phase, which continues for the following 3 months, an additional 50 million axons are eliminated at a rate of 0.5 million/d or 5/sec until the adult value is reached. A discontinuous distribution of different classes of axons along the anterior-posterior axis of the tract reminiscent of the pattern seen in the adult is detectable before the onset of the first phase of axon elimination. Since the basic topography and terminal field patterns of callosal projections are well established before birth in all regions of the monkey cortex examined so far (Goldman-Rakic et al., 1983; Killackey and Chalupa, 1986; Dehay et al., 1988; Schwartz and Goldman-Rakic, 1990), we conclude that the massive postnatal elimination of callosal axons described here is unlikely to play a significant role in the development of discretely patterned callosal projection zones or their columnar terminations. The coincidence of axon elimination and the increase in synaptic density throughout the primate cerebral cortex during the first 6 postnatal months (Rakic et al., 1986), however, suggests that supernumerary axons may be lost during a process that results in the local proliferation of synapses from a subset of initial interhemispheric projections.
Soc Neuroscience