Hippocampal Astrocytes in Migrating and Wintering Semipalmated Sandpiper Calidris pusilla

Seasonal migratory birds return to the same breeding and wintering grounds year after year, and migratory long-distance shorebirds are good examples of this. These tasks require learning and long-term spatial memory abilities that are integrated into a navigational system for repeatedly locating bre...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in neuroanatomy 2018-01, Vol.11, p.126-126
Hauptverfasser: Carvalho-Paulo, Dario, de Morais Magalhães, Nara G, de Almeida Miranda, Diego, Diniz, Daniel G, Henrique, Ediely P, Moraes, Isis A M, Pereira, Patrick D C, de Melo, Mauro A D, de Lima, Camila M, de Oliveira, Marcus A, Guerreiro-Diniz, Cristovam, Sherry, David F, Diniz, Cristovam W P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Seasonal migratory birds return to the same breeding and wintering grounds year after year, and migratory long-distance shorebirds are good examples of this. These tasks require learning and long-term spatial memory abilities that are integrated into a navigational system for repeatedly locating breeding, wintering, and stopover sites. Previous investigations focused on the neurobiological basis of hippocampal plasticity and numerical estimates of hippocampal neurogenesis in birds but only a few studies investigated potential contributions of glial cells to hippocampal-dependent tasks related to migration. Here we hypothesized that the astrocytes of migrating and wintering birds may exhibit significant morphological and numerical differences connected to the long-distance flight. We used as a model the semipalmated sandpiper , that migrates from northern Canada and Alaska to South America. Before the transatlantic non-stop long-distance component of their flight, the birds make a stopover at the Bay of Fundy in Canada. To test our hypothesis, we estimated total numbers and compared the three-dimensional (3-D) morphological features of adult astrocytes captured in the Bay of Fundy ( = 249 cells) with those from birds captured in the coastal region of Bragança, Brazil, during the wintering period ( = 250 cells). Optical fractionator was used to estimate the number of astrocytes and for 3-D reconstructions we used hierarchical cluster analysis. Both morphological phenotypes showed reduced morphological complexity after the long-distance non-stop flight, but the reduction in complexity was much greater in Type I than in Type II astrocytes. Coherently, we also found a significant reduction in the total number of astrocytes after the transatlantic flight. Taken together these findings suggest that the long-distance non-stop flight altered significantly the astrocytes population and that morphologically distinct astrocytes may play different physiological roles during migration.
ISSN:1662-5129
1662-5129
DOI:10.3389/fnana.2017.00126