Title: Brain development
1Brain development
- Nature and nurture
- From
- The University of Western OntarioDepartment of
Psychology - Psychology 240B Developmental Psychology
- http//www.ssc.uwo.ca/psychology/undergraduate/psy
ch240b-2/
2Outline
- Part 1 Brain development A macroscopic
perspective - Part 2 The development of the cerebral cortex
- Part 3 Nature and nurture
3Part IBrain development A macroscopic
perspective
43-4 Weeks
53-4 Weeks
Neural Groove
63-4 Weeks
Neural Groove
Neural Tube
73-4 Weeks
Neural Groove
Neural Tube
Neuroepithelium
83-4 Weeks
Neural Groove
Neural Tube
Neuroepithelium
Brain
Spinal Chord
95 to 6 Weeks
Nervous system begins to function Hind-, mid-,
and forebrain are now distinguishable
105 to 6 Weeks
115 to 6 Weeks
125 to 6 Weeks
Forebrain
135 to 6 Weeks
Forebrain
Telencephalon
145 to 6 Weeks
Forebrain
Telencephalon
Diencephalon
155 to 6 Weeks
Forebrain
165 to 6 Weeks
Forebrain
Midbrain
175 to 6 Weeks
Forebrain
Midbrain
Hindbrain
187 Weeks
- Neurons forming rapidly
- 1000s per minute
197 Weeks
Division of the halves of the brain visible
14 Weeks
207 Weeks
- Nerve cell generation complete
- Cortex beginning to wrinkle
- Myelinization
6 Months
14 Weeks
217 Weeks
9 Months
5 Months
14 Weeks
227 Weeks
Telencephalon C-shaped growth Cortex Folding
9 Months
5 Months
14 Weeks
237 Weeks
Telencephalon C-shaped growth Cortex Folding
9 Months
5 Months
14 Weeks
249 Months
259 Months
269 Months
Medulla Hindbrain Pons Cerebellum
279 Months
Medulla Hindbrain Pons Cerebellum
289 Months
Medulla Hindbrain Pons Cerebellum
299 Months
Medulla Hindbrain Pons Cerebellum
309 Months
Controls respiration, digestion, circulation,
fine motor control
Medulla Hindbrain Pons Cerebellum
319 Months
Midbrain
329 Months
Basic auditory and visual processing
Midbrain
339 Months
Thalamus
Hypothalamus
Diencephalon
349 Months
Sensory relay station Intersection of CNS and
hormone system
Thalamus
Hypothalamus
Diencephalon
359 Months
Telencephalon? 2 Cerebral hemispheres Forms a
cap over inner brain structures
369 Months
Cross-sectional view
379 Months
Cerebral Hemispheres
Cross-sectional view
389 Months
Cerebral Hemispheres
Thalamus
Hypothalamus
Cross-sectional view
399 Months
As the telencephalon develops, it connects both
with itself, and with the diencephalon
Cross-sectional view
409 Months
As the telencephalon develops, it connects both
with itself, and with the diencephalon
Corpus Callosum
Internal Capsule
Cross-sectional view
419 Months
Hippocampus
Telencephalon
429 Months
Formation of long-term memory
Hippocampus
Telencephalon
439 Months
Thin layer of cells covering both hemispheres
Hippocampus
Cortex
Telencephalon
44Cortex
High-level visual processing
Visual Cortex
45Cortex
Auditory visual processing Receptive language
Visual Cortex
Temporal Cortex
46Cortex
Sensory integration Visual-motor processing
Visual Cortex
Temporal Cortex
Parietal Cortex
47Cortex
Higher-level cognition Motor control Expressive
language
Visual Cortex
Temporal Cortex
Parietal Cortex
Frontal Cortex
48Cortical Development Begins prenatally Continues
into late adolescence
49II The development of the cerebral cortex
50Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
51Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
52Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
Dendrite
53Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
Dendrite
Cell body
54Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
Dendrite
Cell body
Axon
55Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
Dendrite
Cell body
Axon
Synapse
56Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
Dendrite
Cell body
Axon
Synapse
Transmit information through the brain
57Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
Outnumber neurons 101 Nourish, repair,
mylenate neurons Crucial for development
58Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
Outnumber neurons 101 Nourish, repair,
myelinate neurons Crucial for development
59Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
Outnumber neurons 101 Nourish, repair,
myelinate neurons Crucial for development
Eg. Oligodendroglia
60Development of the Cortex
- 2 types of cells
- Neurons
- Glial cells
Outnumber neurons 101 Nourish, repair,
myelinate neurons Crucial for development
618 stages of cortical development
- Neural proliferation
- Neural migration
- Neural differentiation
- Axonal growth
- Dendritic growth
- Synaptogenesis
- Myelination
- Neuronal death
621. Neural proliferation
- Begins with neural tube closure
631. Neural proliferation
- Begins with neural tube closure
641. Neural proliferation
- Begins with neural tube closure
- New cells born in ventricular layer
651. Neural proliferation
- Begins with neural tube closure
- New cells born in ventricular layer
- 1 mother cell produces 10,000 daughter cells
661. Neural proliferation
- Begins with neural tube closure
- New cells born in ventricular layer
- 1 mother cell produces 10,000 daughter cells
- All neurons (100 billion in total) are produced
pre-natally
671. Neural proliferation
- Begins with neural tube closure
- New cells born in ventricular layer
- 1 mother cell produces 10,000 daughter cells
- All neurons (100 billion in total) are produced
pre-natally - Rate of proliferation extremely high
thousands/minute
682 Cellular migration
- Non-dividing cells migrate from ventricular layer
692 Cellular migration
- Non-dividing cells migrate from ventricular layer
- Creates a radial inside-out pattern of development
702 Cellular migration
- Non-dividing cells migrate from ventricular layer
- Creates a radial inside-out pattern of
development - Importance of radial glial cells
712 Cellular migration
- Non-dividing cells migrate from ventricular layer
- Creates a radial inside-out pattern of
development - Importance of radial glial cells
723. Cellular differentiation
- Migrating cells structurally and functionally
immature
733. Cellular differentiation
- Migrating cells structurally and functionally
immature - Once new cells reach their destination,
particular genes are turned ?growth of axons,
dendrites, and synapses
744. Axonal growth
- Growth occurs at a growth cone
754. Axonal growth
- Growth occurs at a growth cone
Growth cone
764. Axonal growth
- Growth occurs at a growth cone
- Axons have specific targets
- Targets often enormous distances away
- Some axons extend a distance that is 40,000 times
the width of the cell body it is attached to - Finding targets ? ? chemical electrical
gradients, multiple branches
775. Dendritic growth
- Usually begins after migration
- Slow
- Occurs at a growth cone
- Begins prenatally, but continues postnatally
- Overproduction of branches in development and
resultant pruning - Remaining dendrites continue to branch and
lengthen
78Human Brain at Birth
14 Years Old
6 Years Old
78
796. Synaptogenesis
- Takes place as dendrites and axons grow
- Involves the linking together of the billions of
neurons of the brain
806. Synaptogenesis
- Takes place as dendrites and axons grow
- Involves the linking together of the billions of
neurons of the brain - 1 neuron makes up to 1000 synapses with other
neurons - Neurotransmitters and receptors also required
81Overproliferation and pruning
- The number of synapses reaches a maximum at about
2 years of age - After this, pruning begins
- By 16, only half of the original synapses remain
827 Myelinization
- The process whereby glial cells wrap themselves
around axons
837 Myelinization
- The process whereby glial cells wrap themselves
around axons - Increases the speed of neural conduction
847 Myelinization
- The process whereby glial cells wrap themselves
around axons - Increases the speed of neural conduction
- Begins before birth in primary motor and sensory
areas - Continues into adolescence in certain brain
regions (e.g., frontal lobes)
858 Neuronal death
- As many as 50 of neurons created in the first 7
months of life die - Structure of the brain is a product of sculpting
as much as growth
86III Nature and nurture in brain development
87III Nature versus nurture
- The adult brain consists of approximately 1
trillion (surviving) neurons that make close to 1
quadrillion synaptic links - Functionally highly organized, supporting various
perceptual, cognitive and behavioural processes - Perhaps the most complex living system we know
88Question
- Of all the information that is required to
assemble a brain, how much is stored in the
genes? - Nature view argues that most of the information
is stored in the genes - Nurture view brain is structurally and
functionally underspecified by the genes ?
emerges probabilistically over the course of
development
89Nature View
- (1) Not much is left to chance
90Nature View
- (1) Not much is left to chance
- (2) Brain a collection of genetically-specified
modules
91Nature View
- (1) Not much is left to chance
- (2) Brain a collection of genetically-specified
modules - (3) Each module processes a specific kind of
information works independently of other
modules
92Nature View
- (1) Not much is left to chance
- (2) Brain a collection of genetically-specified
modules - (3) Each module processes a specific kind of
information works independently of other
modules - (4) In evolution modules get added to the
collection
93Nature View
- (1) Not much is left to chance
- (2) Brain a collection of genetically-specified
modules - (3) Each module processes a specific kind of
information works independently of other
modules - (4) In evolution modules get added to the
collection - (5) In development genes that code for modules
are expressed and modules develop according to
these instructions
The grammar genes would be stretches of DNA
that code for proteins that guide, attract, or
glue neurons together into networks that are
necessary to compute the solution to some
grammatical problem.
94The nature view Evidence
- Neurogenesis
- Neuroblasts give rise to a limited number of
daughter cells - Cells have a genetically mediated memory that
allows them to remember how many times they have
divided
95The nature view Evidence
- Genetics and migration
- Mutant or knock-out mice
96The nature view Evidence
- Genetics and migration
- Mutant or knock-out mice
- Cannot produce a class of proteins called cell
adhesion molecules (CAMs) - Migration is disrupted because cells cannot
attach to and migrate along glia
97The nature view Evidence
- Growth of dendrites and axons
- Undeveloped neuron needs to establish basic
polarity which end is which?
98The nature view Evidence
- Growth of dendrites and axons
- Undeveloped neuron needs to establish basic
polarity which end is which? - Involves specific proteins
99The nature view Evidence
- Growth of dendrites and axons
- Undeveloped neuron needs to establish basic
polarity which end is which? - Involves specific proteins
- Axons Affords a sensitivity to chemical signals
emitted by targets
100The nature view Evidence
- Growth of dendrites and axons
- Undeveloped neuron needs to establish basic
polarity which end is which? - Involves specific proteins
- Axons Affords a sensitivity to chemical signals
emitted by targets
101The nature view Evidence
- Formation of synapses
- Knock-out mice
102The nature view Evidence
- Formation of synapses
- Knock-out mice
- Staggered
- Neurons in the cerebellum make contact, but
receptor surface does not develop - Thus, a single gene deletion can interfere with
the formation of synapses in the cerebellum
103The nature view Evidence
- Cell death
- Cells seem to possess death genes
- When expressed, enzymes are produced that
effectively cut-up the DNA, and kill the cell - Similar mechanism may control the timing of
neuronal death
104Nurture view
- (1) Brain organization is emergent and
probabilistic not pre-determined - (2) Genes provide only a broad outline of the
ultimate structural and functional organization
of the brain - (3) Organization emerges in development through
over-production of structure and competition for
survival
105Nurture view
- Gerald Edelman Neural Darwinism
- Overproliferation of structures sensory
experience produce Darwinian-like selection
pressures in development - Structures that prove useful in development win
the competition for survival - The rest are cast off
- (1) Brain organization is emergent and
probabilistic not pre-determined - (2) Genes provide only a broad outline of the
ultimate structural and functional organization
of the brain - (3) Organization emerges in development through
over-production of structure and competition for
survival
106The nurture view Evidence
- Does experience affect developing structures and
functions? - Is the pruning of brain structures systematic?
- Do developing brain regions competitively
interact?
107Hubel Weisel
The nurture view Evidence
- Raised kittens but deprived them of visual
stimulation to both eyes (binocular deprivation) - No abnormality in the retina or thalamus
- Gross abnormality in visual cortex
- Disrupted protein production caused fewer and
shorter dendrite to develop, as well as 70 fewer
synapses - Effects only occur early in development, but
persist into adulthood - Example Surgery on congenital cataracts in adult
humans
108Hubel Weisel
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired
109Hubel Weisel
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired - One effect Monocular deprivation disrupted the
establishment of ocular dominance columns
110The nurture view Evidence
Development of mammalian visual system
Adult structure
Cortex
Thalamus
Eyes/Retinas
111The nurture view Evidence
Development of mammalian visual system
Adult structure
Cortex
Thalamus
Eyes/Retinas
112Hubel Weisel
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired - Sensory input competes for available cortex
- With input from one eye eliminated, no
competition - Therefore, input from uncovered eye assumes
control of available visual cortex and disrupts
the establishment of ocular dominance columns
113Hubel Weisel
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired - Sensory input competes for available cortex
- With input from one eye eliminated, no
competition - Therefore, input from uncovered eye assumes
control of available visual cortex and disrupts
the establishment of ocular dominance columns
Findings point to the importance of stimulation
from the environment
114Kratz, Spear, Smith
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired
115Kratz, Spear, Smith
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired - A second effect Residual function of the
deprived eye competitively inhibited by strong
eye
116Kratz, Spear, Smith
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired - A second effect Residual function of the
deprived eye competitively inhibited by strong
eye - Deprived one of experience and then removed
strong eye
117Kratz, Spear, Smith
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired - A second effect Residual function of the
deprived eye competitively inhibited by strong
eye - Deprived one of experience and then removed
strong eye - Prior to surgery, stimulation of deprived eye
elicited activity in only 6 of cortical neurons
118Kratz, Spear, Smith
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired - A second effect Residual function of the
deprived eye competitively inhibited by strong
eye - Deprived one of experience and then removed
strong eye - Prior to surgery, stimulation of deprived eye
elicited activity in only 6 of cortical neurons
After surgery? 31
119Kratz, Spear, Smith
The nurture view Evidence
- Early monocular deprivation
- After restoring stimulation, vision in this eye
is severely impaired - A second effect Residual function of the
deprived eye competitively inhibited by normal
eye - Deprived one of experience and then removed
normal eye - Prior to surgery, stimulation of deprived eye
elicited activity in only 6 of cortical neurons
After surgery? 31
Findings point to the importance of competitive
interaction between developing brain regions
120Impoverished Environments
The nurture view Evidence
- Animal raised in impoverished environments have
brains that are 10 to 20 smaller than animal
raised in normal environments. Why?
121Impoverished Environments
The nurture view Evidence
- Animal raised in impoverished environments have
brains that are 10 to 20 smaller than animal
raised in normal environments. Why? - Decreased glial cell density
- Fewer dendritic spines
- Fewer synapses
- Smaller synapses
122 Sor
The nurture view Evidence
- Cortical surgery
- Severed connection between optic nerve and the
occipital cortex as well as the connection
between auditory nerve and auditory cortex - Reconnected optic nerve to auditory cortex
- Animals developed functionally adequate vision
123The nurture view Evidence
- Daphnia A crustacean easily cloned
- Simple nervous system consisting of several
hundred neurons - Connection patterns can be studied directly
- Genetically identical individuals show different
patterns of neuronal connectivity
124Nurture view Summary
- Order in the brain is not highly specified by the
genes - Instead, structures and functions emerge
probabilistically in development through the
combined influence of initial over-production of
structure, neural competition, and experience