(Purkinje cell labeled at center top) . These
cells are some of the largest
neurons in the human
brain (
Betz cells being the largest), with an intricately elaborate
dendritic arbor, characterized by a large number of
dendritic spines. Purkinje cells are found within the
Purkinje layer in the
cerebellum. Purkinje cells are aligned like
dominos stacked one in front of the other. Their large dendritic arbors form nearly
two-dimensional layers through which
parallel fibers from the deeper-layers pass. These parallel fibers make relatively weaker
excitatory (
glutamatergic) synapses to spines in the Purkinje cell dendrite, whereas
climbing fibers originating from the
inferior olivary nucleus in the
medulla provide very powerful excitatory input to the proximal dendrites and cell soma. Parallel fibers pass
orthogonally through the Purkinje neuron's dendritic arbor, with up to 200,000 parallel fibers forming a
Granule-cell-Purkinje-cell synapse with a single Purkinje cell. Each adult Purkinje cell receives approximately 500 climbing fiber synapses, all originating from a single climbing fiber from the inferior olive. This has led to the notion that a "highly conserved one-to-one relationship renders Purkinje dendrites into a single computational compartment". However, multi-innervation has now been found that "occurs" in mice among the subset of Purkinje cells with multiple primary dendrites, a dendritic motif that is uncommon in rodents but "predominant" in humans. Both basket and stellate cells (found in the cerebellar
molecular layer) provide
inhibitory (GABAergic) input to the Purkinje cell, with basket cells synapsing on the Purkinje cell axon initial segment and stellate cells onto the dendrites. Purkinje cells send inhibitory projections to the deep cerebellar nuclei, and constitute the sole output of all
motor coordination in the cerebellar cortex.
Molecular The
Purkinje layer of the cerebellum, which contains the cell bodies of the Purkinje cells and
Bergmann glia, express a large number of unique genes. Purkinje-specific gene markers were also proposed by comparing the transcriptome of Purkinje-deficient mice with that of wild-type mice. One illustrative example is the Purkinje cell protein 4 (
PCP4) in
knockout mice, which exhibit impaired locomotor learning and markedly altered
synaptic plasticity in Purkinje neurons. PCP4 accelerates both the association and dissociation of
calcium (Ca2+) with
calmodulin (CaM) in the cytoplasm of Purkinje cells, and its absence impairs the physiology of these neurons.
Development Mammalian embryonic research has detailed the neurogenic origins of Purkinje cells. During early development Purkinje cells arise in the ventricular zone in the neural tube, the nervous system´s precursor in the embryo. All cerebellar neurons derive from germinal neuroepithelia from the ventricular zone. Purkinje cells are specifically generated from progenitors in the ventricular neuroepithelium of the embryonic cerebellar primordium. The first cells generated from the cerebellar primordium form a cap over a diamond-shaped cavity of the developing brain called the fourth ventricle forming the two cerebellar hemispheres. The Purkinje cells that develop later are those of the cerebellum's center-lying section called the vermis. They develop in the cerebellar primordium that covers the fourth ventricle and below a fissure-like region called the isthmus of the developing brain. Purkinje cells migrate toward the outer surface of the cerebellar cortex and form the Purkinje cell layer. Purkinje cells are born during the earliest stages of cerebellar neurogenesis. Neurogenin2, together with neurogenin1, are transiently expressed in restricted domains of the ventricular neuroepithelium during the time-window of Purkinje cell genesis. This spatio-temporal distribution pattern suggests that neurogenins are involved in the specification of phenotypically heterogeneous Purkinje cell subsets, ultimately responsible for constructing the framework of the cerebellar topography. There is evidence in mice and humans that
bone marrow cells either fuse with or generate cerebellar Purkinje cells, and it is possible that bone marrow cells, either by direct generation or by cell fusion, could play a role in repair of central nervous system damage. Further evidence points yet towards the possibility of a common
stem cell ancestor among Purkinje neurons,
B-lymphocytes and
aldosterone-producing
cells of the human
adrenal cortex. == Function ==