Live imaging of adult neural stem cell behavior in the intact and injured zebrafish brain

Barbosa JS, Sanchez-Gonzalez R, Di Giaimo R, Baumgart EV, Theis FJ, Goetz M, Ninkovic J (2015)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2015

Journal

Book Volume: 348

Pages Range: 789-793

Journal Issue: 6236

DOI: 10.1126/science.aaa2729

Abstract

Adult neural stem cells are the source for restoring injured brain tissue. We used repetitive imaging to follow single stem cells in the intact and injured adult zebrafish telencephalon in vivo and found that neurons are generated by both direct conversions of stem cells into postmitotic neurons and via intermediate progenitors amplifying the neuronal output. We observed an imbalance of direct conversion consuming the stem cells and asymmetric and symmetric self-renewing divisions, leading to depletion of stem cells over time. After brain injury, neuronal progenitors are recruited to the injury site. These progenitors are generated by symmetric divisions that deplete the pool of stem cells, a mode of neurogenesis absent in the intact telencephalon. Our analysis revealed changes in the behavior of stem cells underlying generation of additional neurons during regeneration.

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How to cite

APA:

Barbosa, J.S., Sanchez-Gonzalez, R., Di Giaimo, R., Baumgart, E.V., Theis, F.J., Goetz, M., & Ninkovic, J. (2015). Live imaging of adult neural stem cell behavior in the intact and injured zebrafish brain. Science, 348(6236), 789-793. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aaa2729

MLA:

Barbosa, Joana S., et al. "Live imaging of adult neural stem cell behavior in the intact and injured zebrafish brain." Science 348.6236 (2015): 789-793.

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