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Immunolocalization and quantitation of a novel nerve terminal protein in spinal cord development

โœ Scribed by L. M. Cabalka; T. C. Ritchie; J. D. Coulter


Book ID
102808721
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
970 KB
Volume
295
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9967

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โœฆ Synopsis


In the adult spinal cord, the neuron-specific protein NT75 is located in nerve terminals synapsing in the superficial laminae of the dorsal horn. The present study examines the occurrence of NT75 in the developing rat spinal cord. NT75 immunoreactivity is detectable in primary afferent axons at the dorsal root entry zone on embryonic day 15. Subsequently, staining of presumptive nerve terminals appears in the deeper laminae of the dorsal horn, expanding into the superficial laminae during the first postnatal week. NT75 staining also appears in developing corticospinal tract axons in the brainstem at birth, and a t lumbosacral levels by postnatal day 5. As NT75-positive nerve terminals approach the adult distribution, staining of primary afferent and corticospinal axons decreases, becoming undetectable by postnatal day 30. Dense transient staining of presumed nerve terminals in the ventral horn is also apparent during early postnatal development. Quantitative analysis of developing spinal cord shows a low level of NT75 immunoreactivity a t birth. NT75 activity then increases substantially, reaching values by the third and fourth postnatal weeks up to 2.5 times that seen in adults. The occurrence of NT75 immunoreactivity correlates with the reported time course of synaptic development in the spinal cord. In addition, the results suggest that NT75 immunoreactivity is maintained a t high levels in the nerve terminals of certain neural pathways into adulthood, whereas in other systems NT75 immunoreactivity may be detectable only during development.


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