Excellence Program for Higher Education of Hungary(FIKP‐2018, A.A.)
The present paper is the first comparative study on the astroglia of several actinopterygian
species at different phylogenetical positions, teleosts (16 species), and non-teleosts
(3 species), based on the immunohistochemical staining of GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic
protein), the characteristic cytoskeletal intermediary filament protein, and immunohistochemical
marker of astroglia. The question was, how the astroglial architecture reflexes the
high diversity of this largest vertebrate group. The actinopterygian telencephalon
has a so-called 'eversive' development in contrast to the 'evagination' found in sarcopterygii
(including tetrapods). Several brain parts either have no equivalents in tetrapod
vertebrates (e.g., torus longitudinalis, lobus inferior, lobus nervi vagi), or have
rather different shapes (e.g., the cerebellum). GFAP was visualized applying DAKO
polyclonal anti-GFAP serum. The study was focused mainly on the telencephalon (eversion),
tectum (visual orientation), and cerebellum (motor coordination) where the evolutionary
changes were most expected, but the other areas were also investigated. The predominant
astroglial elements were tanycytes (long, thin, fiber-like cells). In the teleost
telencephala a 'fan-shape' re-arrangement of radial glia reflects the eversion. In
bichir, starlet, and gar, in which the eversion is less pronounced, the 'fan-shape'
re-arrangement did not form. In the tectum the radial glial processes were immunostained,
but in Ostariophysi and Euteleostei it did not extend into their deep segments. In
the cerebellum Bergmann-like glia was found in each group, including non-teleosts,
except for Cyprinidae. The vagal lobe was uniquely enlarged and layered in Cyprininae,
and had a corresponding layered astroglial system, which left almost free of GFAP
the zones of sensory and motor neurons. In conclusion, despite the diversity and evolutionary
alterations of Actinopterygii brains, the diversity of the astroglial architecture
is moderate. In contrast to Chondrichthyes and Amniotes; in Actinopterygii true astrocytes
(stellate-shaped extraependymal cells) did not appear during evolution, and the expansion
of GFAP-free areas was limited.