The Cellular Composition and Glia –Neuron Ratio in the Spinal Cord of a Human and a Nonhuman Primate: Comparison With Other Species and Brain Regions

ABSTRACT The cellular composition of brains shows largely conserved, gradual evolutionary trends between species. In the primate spinal cord, however, the glia–neuron ratio was reported to be greatly increased over that in the rodent spinal cord. Here, we re‐examined the cellular composition of the spinal cord of one human and one nonhuman primate species by employing two different counting methods, the isotropic fractionator and stereology. We also determined whether segmental differences in cellular composition, possibly reflecting increased fine motor control of the upper extremities, may explain a sharply increased glia–neuron ratio in primates. In the cynomolgus monkey spinal cord, the isotropic fractionator and stereology yielded 206–275 million cells, of which 13.3–25.1% were neurons (28–69 million). Stereological estimates yielded 21.1% endothelial cells and 65.5% glial cells (glia–neuron ratio of 4.9–5.6). In human spinal cords, the isotropic fractionator and stereology generated estimates of 1.5–1.7 billion cells and 197–222 million neurons (13.4% neurons, 12.2% endothelial cells, 74.8% glial cells), and a glia–neuron ratio of 5.6–7.1, with estimates of neuron numbers in the human spinal cord based on morphological criteria. The non‐neuronal to neuron ratios in human and cynomolgus monkey spinal cords were 6.5 and 3.2, respectively, suggesting that previous reports overestimated this ratio. We did not find significant segmental differences ...
Source: The Anatomical Record Part A: Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology - Category: Molecular Biology Authors: Tags: Full Length Article Source Type: research