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Secretion of nerve growth factor in cultures of glial cells and neurons derived from different regions of the mouse brain

✍ Scribed by R. Houlgatte; M. Mallat; P. Brachet; A. Prochiantz


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1989
Tongue
English
Weight
892 KB
Volume
24
Category
Article
ISSN
0360-4012

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✦ Synopsis


The regional ability of central neurons and glial cells to produce nerve growth factor (NGF) was studied in vitro. NGF secretion was compared in cultures of perinatal astrocytes or embryonic neurons that were derived from various mouse brain structures. No regional differences were detected among cultures of post-natal day 2 glial cells of hippocampal, cortical, striatal, or mesencephalic origin. In all cases, levels of NGF released by the cells were very similar. They were closely correlated to the growth rate as shown by the fact that exponentially growing cells produced relatively more factor than did confluent cells, a finding in agreement with previous observations. Unlike growth-phase cells, primary astrocytes immediately plated at high cell density did not secrete any assayable factor before the 7th day of culture. Levels of NGF found during the following days remained low. In contrast, striking differences were observed among cultures of embryonic neurons. NGF was found in relatively large amounts in cultures of embryonic day 17 or 19 striatal neurons, whereas media conditioned by neurons from the mesencephalon, cortex, or septum contained much less factor. Amounts of NGF assayed in cultures of hippocampal neurons varied with the time of sampling of this brain structure. Levels of factor were significantly higher in media conditioned by embryonic day 19 neurons than in media of embryonic day 17 neurons. However, amounts of NGF found in supernatants of hippocampal neurons remained smaller than those present in cultures of striatal nerve cells. Altogether, the results suggest that, in addition to astrocytes, central neurons may also synthesize and secrete NGF in vitro and that this phenomenum is dependent on both the origin and the developmental stage of the neuronal population.


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