Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2465935 The Veterinary Journal 2008 22 Pages PDF
Abstract

Although the central nervous system is unable to undergo spontaneous repair and is hostile to the integration of exogenously delivered cells, various examples of adult structural plasticity have been shown to occur. It is now widely accepted that endogenous proliferative activity leading to the production of new neurons exists, at least within two restricted brain sites: the hippocampal dentate gyrus and the forebrain subventricular zone. A substantial insight into spontaneous neurogenesis within these allocortical regions in rodents has been obtained, but less is known regarding its occurrence in other mammalian brain regions. In this review, differences in the structural and temporal characteristics of protracted neurogenesis in mammals will be considered. Attention will be focused on the rabbit cerebrum and cerebellum, where unexpected features of structural plasticity have been found to occur despite the relative closeness of the Orders Lagomorpha and Rodentia.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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