Glial Tiling in the Insect Nervous System.

Pogodalla N; Winkler B; Klämbt C

Review article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

The Drosophila nervous system comprises a small number of well characterized glial cell classes. The outer surface of the central nervous system (CNS) is protected by a glial derived blood-brain barrier generated by perineurial and subperineurial glia. All neural stem cells and all neurons are engulfed by cortex glial cells. The inner neuropil region, that harbors all synapses and dendrites, is covered by ensheathing glia and infiltrated by astrocyte-like glial cells. All these glial cells show a tiled organization with an often remarkable plasticity where glial cells of one cell type invade the territory of the neighboring glial cell type upon its ablation. Here, we summarize the different glial tiling patterns and based on the different modes of cell-cell contacts we hypothesize that different molecular mechanisms underlie tiling of the different glial cell types.

Details about the publication

JournalFrontiers in Cellular Neuroscience (Front Cell Neurosci)
Volume16
Page range825695-825695
StatusPublished
Release year2022 (31/12/2022)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.3389/fncel.2022.825695
KeywordsDrosophila nervous system; Glial cell classes; Blood-brain barrier; CNS; Perineurial glia; Subperineurial glia; Cortex glial cells; Neural stem cells; Neurons; Neuropil region; Synapses; Dendrites; Ensheathing glia; Astrocyte-like glial cells; Tiled organization; Glial plasticity; Cell ablation; Glial tiling patterns; Cell-cell contacts; Molecular mechanisms of tiling

Authors from the University of Münster

Klämbt, Christian
Professorship of Neuro- and Behavioral Biology (Prof. Klämbt)