Lecture - Neural Development

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Introduction

Cerebrum development human embryo (week 8, Stage 22)


  1. Understand early neural development.
  2. Understand the formation of the brain; grey and white matter from the neural tube.
  3. Understand the formation of spinal cord.
  4. Understand the role of migration of neurons during neural development.


History - Santiago Ramón y Cajal

Lecture Resources

Movies
Neuralplate 001 icon.jpg
 ‎‎Neural Plate
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Neuraltube 001 icon.jpg
 ‎‎Neural Tube
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Secondary neurulation 01 icon.jpg
 ‎‎Secondary Neurulation
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Mouse neural tube 01 movie icon.jpg
 ‎‎Neural Tube Close
Page | Play
Stage13-CNS-icon.jpg
 ‎‎Stage 13 Neural
Page | Play
Stage22-CNS-icon.jpg
 ‎‎Stage 22 Neural
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Chicken-neural-crest-migration-01.jpg
 ‎‎Neural Crest 1
Page | Play
Mouse cranial neural crest migration 01.jpg
 ‎‎Cranial Neural Crest
Page | Play
Brain fissure development 03.jpg
 ‎‎Sylvian Fissure
Page | Play
Adult human brain tomography.jpg
 ‎‎Adult Brain
Page | Play
References
UNSW Embryology logo
Hill, M.A. (2020). UNSW Embryology (20th ed.) Retrieved March 28, 2024, from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au
Neural Links: ectoderm | neural | neural crest | ventricular | sensory | Stage 22 | gliogenesis | neural fetal | Medicine Lecture - Neural | Lecture - Ectoderm | Lecture - Neural Crest | Lab - Early Neural | neural abnormalities | folic acid | iodine deficiency | Fetal Alcohol Syndrome | neural postnatal | neural examination | Histology | Historic Neural | Category:Neural
Neural Parts: neural | prosencephalon | telencephalon cerebrum | amygdala | hippocampus | basal ganglia | diencephalon | epithalamus | thalamus | hypothalamus‎ | pituitary | pineal | mesencephalon | tectum | rhombencephalon | metencephalon | pons | cerebellum | myelencephalon | medulla oblongata | spinal cord | neural vascular | ventricular | lateral ventricles | third ventricle | cerebral aqueduct | fourth ventricle | central canal | meninges | Category:Ventricular System | Category:Neural
Textbook cover The Developing Human, 9th edn.
Moore, K.L., Persaud, T.V.N. & Torchia, M.G. (2011). The developing human: clinically oriented embryology (9th ed.). Philadelphia: Saunders.
The following chapter links only work with a UNSW connection.
Textbook cover Larsen's human embryology 4th edn.
Schoenwolf, G.C., Bleyl, S.B., Brauer, P.R. & Francis-West, P.H. (2009). Larsen's human embryology (4th ed.). New York; Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone.
The following chapter links only work with a UNSW connection.


Early Brain Structure

Primary Vesicles

CNS primary vesicles.jpg

  • rostral neural tube forms 3 primary brain vesicles (week 4)
  • 3 primary vesicles: prosencephalon (forebrain), mesencephalon (midbrain), rhombencephalon (hindbrain)

Brain Flexures

Rapid growth folds the neural tube forming 3 brain flexures

  • cephalic flexure - pushes mesencephalon upwards
  • cervical flexure - between brain stem and spinal cord
  • pontine flexure - generates 4th ventricle

Stage 13 image 098.jpg

Secondary Vesicles

CNS secondary vesicles.jpg

From the 3 primary vesicles developing to form 5 secondary vesicles

  • prosencephalon- telencephalon (endbrain, forms cerebral hemispheres), diencephalon (betweenbrain, forms optic outgrowth)
  • mesencephalon
  • rhombencephalon- metencephalon (behindbrain), myelencephalon (medullabrain)


Carnegie stage 13 Embryo showing neural tube and brain flexures.

Neural Tube Development
Neural Tube Primary Vesicles Secondary Vesicles Adult Structures
week 3 week 4 week 5 adult
neural plate
neural groove
neural tube

Brain
prosencephalon (forebrain) telencephalon Rhinencephalon, Amygdala, hippocampus, cerebrum (cortex), hypothalamus‎, pituitary | Basal Ganglia, lateral ventricles
diencephalon epithalamus, thalamus, Subthalamus, pineal, posterior commissure, pretectum, third ventricle
mesencephalon (midbrain) mesencephalon tectum, Cerebral peduncle, cerebral aqueduct, pons
rhombencephalon (hindbrain) metencephalon cerebellum
myelencephalon medulla oblongata, isthmus
spinal cord, pyramidal decussation, central canal

Keith1902 fig167.jpg

Historic figure showing the parts derived from the walls of the fore-brain. (After Wilhelm His (1831-1904))

Rhombomeres

  • Hindbrain - Rhombomeres represent the crania-caudal segmentation of the neural tube at the levee lot the hindbrain.
  • Historic - Identified morphologically as identifiable regions.
  • Modern - Represent the different expression levels of Hox genes and levels of neural crest migration.
Stage11 historic-Atwell1930-2.jpg Hindbrain neural crest migration.jpg
Historic image of embryonic rhombomeres Hindbrain neural crest migration

Proposed Hox protein classification.jpg

Hox-proteins crania-caudal expression (species comparison)

Neural Layers

  • Ventricular Germinal Zone (VGZ) - mitosis at the ventricular luminal surface, produces early-generated macroneurons
  • Subventricular Zone (SVZ) - mitosis away from the ventricular surface, produces later-generated microneurons and glia

Brain

Stage 22 image 150.jpg Stage 22 image 151.jpg
Human Embryo developing head cross section (Week 8, Stage 22) Detail of developing cortex (shown in blue box)
  • Neural progenitor cells migrate from the ventricular layer along radial glia.
  • Cortex layers develops inside (first) outside (last)
  • Glial progenitor cells develop later from the same ventricular stem cells.

Spinal Cord

Stage 13 image 057.jpg Stage 22 image 176.jpg
Stage 13 Stage 22

Ventricular Development

Human Embryo (week 8, Stage 22) ventricular system
  • The ventricular system develops from the single cavity formed from the hollow neural tube.
  • This fluid-filled space is separated from the amnion following fusion of the neural tube and closure of neuropores.
  • At different regions sites within the wall (floor of lateral ventricle and roof of the third and fourth ventricles) differentiate to form choroid plexus a modified vascular structure which will produce Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
  • choroid plexus is a modified vascular structure which will produce Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)
Human Fetus (week 10) showing choroid plexus and early ventricular system

Stage 11 - appearance of the optic ventricle. The neural groove/tube space is initially filled with amniotic fluid.

Stage 12 - closure of the caudal neuropore, onset of the ventricular system and separates the ependymal from the amniotic fluid.

Stage 13 - cavity of the telencephalon medium is visible.

Stage 14 - cerebral hemispheres and lateral ventricles begin, rhomboid fossa becomes apparent.

Stage 15 - medial and lateral ventricular eminences cause indentations in the lateral ventricle

Stage 16 - hypothalamic sulcus is evident.

Stages 17-18 - interventricular foramina are becoming relatively smaller, and cellular accumulations indicate the future choroid villi of the fourth and lateral ventricles.

Stage 18 - areae membranaceae rostralis and caudalis are visible in the roof of the fourth ventricle, and the paraphysis is appearing.

Stage 19 - choroid villi are visible in the fourth ventricle, and a mesencephalic evagination (blindsack) is visible

Stage 20 - choroid villi are visible in the lateral ventricle.

Stage 21 - olfactory ventricle is visible.

Stages 21-23 - lateral ventricle has become C-shaped (anterior and inferior horns visible). Recesses develop in the third ventricle (optic, infundibular, pineal).


Data from O'Rahilly R, Müller F., 1990[1]

Fetal Neural

Neural-development.jpg

Timeline of events in Human Neural Development

Brain ventricles and ganglia development 03.jpg

Brain fissure development 02.jpg

Gray0654.jpg Gray0655.jpg Gray0658.jpg
Human brain at three months (median sagittal section) Human brain at four months (inferior surface) Human brain at five months (outer surface)

During the fetal period there is ongoing growth in size, weight and surface area of the brain and spinal cord. Microscopically there is ongoing: cell migration, extension of processes, cell death and glial cell development.

Cortical maturation (sulcation and gyration) and vascularization of the lateral surface of the brain starts with the insular cortex (insula, insulary cortex or insular lobe) region during the fetal period. This cerebral cortex region in the adult brain lies deep within the lateral sulcus between the temporal lobe and the parietal lobe.

  • sulcation - The process of brain growth in the second to third trimester which forms sulci, grooves or folds visible on fetal brain surface as gyri grow (gyration). Abnormalities of these processes can lead to a smooth brain (lissencephaly).
  • gyration - The development of surface folds on the brain (singular, gyrus)

Insular Gyral and Sulcal Development

  • 13-17 gestational weeks - appearance of the first sulcus
  • 18-19 gestational weeks - development of the periinsular sulci
  • 20-22 gestational weeks - central sulci and opercularization of the insula
  • 24-26 gestational weeks - covering of the posterior insula
  • 27-28 gestational weeks - closure of the laeteral sulcus (Sylvian fissure or lateral fissure)

(Data from[2])

  • Between 29-41 weeks volumes of: total brain, cerebral gray matter, unmyelinated white matter, myelinated, and cerebrospinal fluid (from MRI)
    • grey matter- mainly neuronal cell bodies; white matter- mainly neural processes and glia.
  • total brain tissue volume increased linearly over this period at a rate of 22 ml/week.
  • Total grey matter also showed a linear increase in relative intracranial volume of approximately 1.4% or 15 ml/week.
  • The rapid increase in total grey matter is mainly due to a fourfold increase in cortical grey matter.
  • Quantification of extracerebral and intraventricular CSF was found to change only minimally.

(Text - modified from [3])


Neural development will continue after birth with substantial glial development, growth, death and reorganization occuring during the postnatally.


Links: Neural System - Fetal | Neuroscience - Regional specification of the developing brain

Thyroid System and Neural Development

Human thyroid system and neural development.jpg

Timeline of human thyroid system and brain development from conception to birth.[4] (Estimation of neurogenesis adapted from Bayer et al.[5])

Links: Endocrine - Thyroid Development


References

  1. <pubmed>2285038</pubmed>
  2. <pubmed>17962979</pubmed>
  3. <pubmed>9485064</pubmed>
  4. <pubmed>12060827</pubmed>
  5. <pubmed>8361683</pubmed>

Movies

Computed Tomography

Mouse CT E11.5 movie-icon.jpg Adult human brain movie icon.jpg
Mouse E11.5 microCT scan Human Adult Brain


Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Human Embryo
Brain fissure development 03.jpg
Neural Sylvian Fissure

Historic Embryology

Historic Disclaimer - information about historic embryology pages 
Mark Hill.jpg
Pages where the terms "Historic" (textbooks, papers, people, recommendations) appear on this site, and sections within pages where this disclaimer appears, indicate that the content and scientific understanding are specific to the time of publication. This means that while some scientific descriptions are still accurate, the terminology and interpretation of the developmental mechanisms reflect the understanding at the time of original publication and those of the preceding periods, these terms, interpretations and recommendations may not reflect our current scientific understanding.     (More? Embryology History | Historic Embryology Papers)


Images

Bailey, F.R. and Miller, A.M. (1921). Text-Book of Embryology. New York: William Wood and Co.

The nervous system

Gray, Henry. Anatomy of the Human Body. Philadelphia: Lea & Febiger, 1918.




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Cite this page: Hill, M.A. (2024, March 28) Embryology Lecture - Neural Development. Retrieved from https://embryology.med.unsw.edu.au/embryology/index.php/Lecture_-_Neural_Development

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