Genoarchitecture of the extended amygdala in zebra finch, and expression of FoxP2 in cell corridors of different genetic profile

Author

Vicario Andrade, Alba

Mendoza, Ezequiel

Abellán Ródenas, Antonio

Scharff, Constance

Medina Hernández, Loreta Mª

Publication date

2016-05-20T08:32:01Z

2016



Abstract

We used a battery of genes encoding transcription factors (Pax6, Islet1, Nkx2.1, Lhx6, Lhx5, Lhx9, FoxP2) and neuropeptides to study the extended amygdala in developing zebra finches. We identified different components of the central extended amygdala comparable to those found in mice and chickens, including the intercalated amygdalar cells, the central amygdala, and the lateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis. Many cells likely originate in the dorsal striatal domain, ventral striatal domain, or the pallidal domain, as is the case in mice and chickens. Moreover, a cell subpopulation of the central extended amygdala appears to originate in the prethalamic eminence. As a general principle, these different cells with specific genetic profiles and embryonic origin form separate or partially intermingled cell corridors along the extended amygdala, which may be involved in different functional pathways. In addition, we identified the medial amygdala of the zebra finch. Like in the chickens and mice, it is located in the subpallium and is rich in cells of pallido-preoptic origin, containing minor subpopulations of immigrant cells from the ventral pallium, alar hypothalamus and prethalamic eminence. We also proposed that the medial bed nucleus of the stria terminalis is composed of several parallel cell corridors with different genetic profile and embryonic origin: preoptic, pallidal, hypothalamic, and prethalamic. Several of these cell corridors with distinct origin express FoxP2, a transcription factor implicated in synaptic plasticity. Our results pave the way for studies using zebra finches to understand the neural basis of social behavior, in which the extended amygdala is involved.


Supported by a grant to L.M. from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity (MINECO) and Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER): Grant No. BFU2012- 33029 and BFU2015-68537-R. A.V. had a predoctoral fellowship from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Fellowship No. BES-2010-038400), and a short period fellowship for a stay abroad (Fellowship No. EEBB-I-13-07340). CS acknowledges funding from Excellence Cluster Neurocure and the DFG/SFB665 Developmental Disturbances of the Nervous System.

Document Type

article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Intercalated amygdalar cells; Bed nucleus of the stria terminalis; Prethalamic eminence; Nucleus taeniae

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Related items

MICINN/PN2008-2011/BFU2012-33029

MINECO/PN2013-2016/BFU2015-68537-R

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1007/s00429-016-1229-6

Brain Structure and Function, 2017, vol. 222, núm. 1, p. 481-514

Rights

cc-by, (c) Vicario et al., 2016

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/

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