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. 1978 Jul 21;150(3):467-86.
doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(78)90814-4.

Neuronal differentiation in somatosensory cortex of the rat. I. Relationship to synaptogenesis in the first postnatal week

Neuronal differentiation in somatosensory cortex of the rat. I. Relationship to synaptogenesis in the first postnatal week

D A Kristt. Brain Res. .

Abstract

Newborn (P-0 and P-1) through 6-day-old (P-6) rats were studied using light microscopic (Golgi) and ultrastructural methods. Previous studies demonstrated that early-formed synapses are concentrated at specific cortical depths, i.e. in strata. The present study shows that the synaptic stratum in the marginal zone corresponds to a dense fiber plexus and few somata (Cajal-Retzius cells). Axons in this zone almost exclusively form synapses on distal branches of dendrites originating in deeper lamina. In newborn neocortex there is a second synaptic stratum located deep to the cortical plate. It contains numerous axosomatic and axoproximal dendritic synapses as well as the most highly differentiated somata and proximal dendrites. By age P-6 there are 3 synaptic strata; one each in the marginal zone, cortical plate and 'subplate' layers. For all 3 strata a neuron's most differentiated dendrites are directed towards, traverse or run within, the nearest synaptic stratum. We conclude that, throughout the first postnatal week, the most mature dendrites of a given neuron generally occur at depths where synapse density is highest. At P-0 the most mature somata are similarly related to synaptic density.

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