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Fetal calf serum-mediated inhibition of neurite growth from ciliary ganglion neurons in vitro

โœ Scribed by G. E. Davis; S. D. Skaper; M. Manthorpe; G. Moonen; S. Varon


Book ID
102909464
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1984
Tongue
English
Weight
947 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0360-4012

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โœฆ Synopsis


Embryonic chick ciliary ganglion (CG) neurons cultured in fetal calf serumcontaining medium have been previously reported to extend neurites on polyornithine (PORN) substrata precoated with a neurite-promoting factor (PNPF) from rat schwannoma-conditioned medium. On PORN substrata alone, however, no neuritic growth occurred. This was interpreted as evidence that PORN was an incompetent substratum for ciliary neuritic growth. In this study, we now find that an untreated PORN substratum allows neuritic growth in serum-free defined medium. When PNPF was added to PORN, a more rapid and extensive neuritic response occurred. After 5 hr of culture, a 60% neuritic response occurred on PNPFIPORN, whereas no neurons initiated neurites until 10-12 hr on PORN. The inhibitory effect of fetal calf serum noted above on PORN could be obtained in part by pretreating the substratum with serum for 1 hr. Maximal inhibitory effects in the PORN pretreatment were achieved after 30 min and were not further improved by treatments up to 4 hr. Bovine serum albumin was also found to inhibit neurite growth on PORN to about 60% of the inhibition obtained by an equivalent amount of serum protein. Fetal calf serum was shown to cause a 15% reduction in the percentage of neurons bearing neurites after its addition to 18-hr serum-free PORN cultures and to cause statistically significant reductions in neurite lengths measured 2 hr later.


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Identification of a potent neurotrophic
โœ Toshiyuki Motoike; Klaus Unsicker ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1999 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 190 KB ๐Ÿ‘ 1 views

When fetal calf serum (FCS) alone is used as a trophic support for cultured chicken parasympathetic ciliary ganglionic (cCG) neurons, it does not show any survival-promoting effects on these neurons. When FCS is applied to heparin-affinity chromatography, however, potent survival-promoting activity