Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/45519
Title: S100 immunoreactive glial cells in the forebrain and midbrain of the lizard Gallotia galloti during ontogeny
Authors: Romero-Alemán, María del Mar 
Monzón-Mayor, Maximina 
Yanes, Carmen 
Arbelo-Galván, Juan Francisco
Lang, Dirk
Renau-Piqueras, Jaime
Negrín-Martínez, Ciro
Keywords: Myelin Basic-Protein
Rat Optic-Nerve
Immunohistochemical Localization
Visual-Cortex
S-100 Protein, et al
Issue Date: 2003
Publisher: 0022-3034
Journal: Journal of Neurobiology 
Abstract: We identified S100 immunoreactive cells in the brain of the lizard Gallotia galloti during ontogeny using immunohistochemical techniques for light and electron microscopy. In double labeling experiments with antibodies specific for S100A1 and S100B (anti-S100) and proliferative cell nuclear antigen (anti-PCNA), myelin basic protein (anti-MBP), phosphorylated neurofilaments (SMI-31), glial fibrillary acidic protein (anti-GFAP), or glutamine synthetase (anti-GS), we detected S100-like immunoreactivity in glial cells but never in neurons. Restricted areas of the ventricular zone were stained in the hypothalamus from E32 to postnatal stages, and in the telencephalon at E35, E36, and in adults. S100 immunoreactivity was observed predominantly in scattered PCNA-negative cells that increased in number from E35 to the adult stage in the myelinated tracts of the brain and had the appearance of oligodendrocytes. Quantitative analysis revealed that all of the S100-positive glial cells were GFAP-negative, whereas most of the S100-positive glial cells were GS-positive. Ultrastructurally, most of these S100-positive/GS-positive glial cells resembled oligodendrocytes of light and medium electron density. In adult lizards, a small subpopulation of astrocyte-like cells was also stained in the pretectum. We conclude that in the lizard S100 can be considered a marker of a subpopulation of oligodendrocytes rather than of astrocytes, as is the case in mammals. The S100-positive subpopulation of oligodendrocytes in the lizard could represent cells actively involved in the process of myelination during development and in the maintenance of myelin sheaths in the adult. (C) 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/45519
ISSN: 0022-3034
DOI: 10.1002/neu.10258
Source: Journal of Neurobiology[ISSN 0022-3034],v. 57, p. 54-66
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