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1.
K S Vogel  A M Davies 《Neuron》1991,7(5):819-830
To investigate how the onset of neurotrophic factor dependence in neurons is coordinated with the arrival of their axons in the target field, we have studied the survival of four populations of cranial sensory neurons whose axons reach their common central target field, the hindbrain, at different times. We show that neurons whose axons reach the hindbrain first survive for a short time in culture before responding to brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). Neurons whose axons reach the hindbrain later survive longer before responding to BDNF. These differences in survival, which arise prior to gangliogenesis, may play a role in coordinating trophic interactions for cranial sensory neurons.  相似文献   

2.
The response of embryonic chick nodose ganglion (neural placode-derived) and dorsal root ganglion (neural crest-derived) sensory neurons to the survival and neurite-promoting activity of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) was studied in culture. In dissociated, neuron-enriched cultures established from chick embryos between Day 6 (E6) and Day 12 (E12) of development, both nodose ganglion (NG) and dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons were responsive on laminin-coated culture dishes to BDNF. In the case of NG, BDNF elicited neurite outgrowth from 40 to 50% of the neurons plated at three embryonic ages; E6, E9, and E12. At the same ages, nerve growth factor (NGF) alone or in combination with BDNF, had little or no effect upon neurite outgrowth from NG neurons. The response of NG neurons to BDNF was dose dependent and was sustainable for at least 7 days in culture. Surprisingly, in view of a previous study carried out using polyornithine as a substrate for neuronal cell attachment, on laminin-coated dishes BDNF also sustained survival and neurite outgrowth from a high percentage (60-70%) of DRG neurons taken from E6 embryos. In marked contrast to NG neurons, the combined effect of saturating levels of BDNF and NGF activity on DRG neurons was greater than the effect of either agent alone at all embryonic ages studied. Under similar culture conditions, BDNF did not elicit survival and neurite outgrowth from paravertebral chain sympathetic neurons or parasympathetic ciliary ganglion neurons. We propose that primary sensory neurons, regardless of their embryological origin, are responsive to a "central-target" (CNS) derived neurotrophic factor--BDNF, while they are differentially responsive to "peripheral-target"-derived growth factors, such as NGF, depending on whether the neurons are of neural crest or placodal origin.  相似文献   

3.
4.
To obtain insight into which subpopulations of sensory neurons in dorsal root ganglia are supported by different neurotrophins, we retrogradely labeled cutaneous and muscle afferents in embryonic day 9 chick embryos and followed their survival in neuron-enriched cultures supplemented with either nerve growth factor (NGF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), or neurotrophin-3 (NT-3). We found that NGF is a wide survival factor for subpopulations of both cutaneous and muscle afferents, whereas the survival effects of BDNF and NT-3 are restricted primarily to muscle afferents. We also measured soma size in each neurotrophic factor. These new data show that BDNF- and NT-3–dependent cells appear to be a mixture of two populations of neurons: one small diameter and the other large diameter. In contrast, based on size alone, NGF-dependent cells appear to be a single population of only small-diameter neurons. Thus, BDNF and NT-3 may have some new, previously unreported effects on small-diameter afferent neurons. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), neurturin (NTN) and neublastin/artemin (ART) are distant members of the transforming growth factor beta family, and have been shown to elicit neurotrophic effects upon several classes of peripheral and central neurons. Limited information from in vitro and expression studies has also substantiated a role for GDNF family ligands in mammalian somatosensory neuron development. Here, we show that although dorsal root ganglion (DRG) sensory neurons express GDNF family receptors embryonically, they do not survive in response to their ligands. The regulation of survival emerges postnatally for all GDNF family ligands. GDNF and NTN support distinct subpopulations that can be separated with respect to their expression of GDNF family receptors, whereas ART supports neurons in populations that are also responsive to GDNF or NTN. Sensory neurons that coexpress GDNF family receptors are medium sized, whereas small-caliber nociceptive cells preferentially express a single receptor. In contrast to brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)-dependent neurons, embryonic nerve growth factor (NGF)-dependent nociceptive neurons switch dependency to GDNF, NTN and ART postnatally. Neurons that survive in the presence of neurotrophin 3 (NT3) or neurotrophin 4 (NT4), including proprioceptive afferents, Merkel end organs and D-hair afferents, are also supported by GDNF family ligands neonatally, although at postnatal stages they lose their dependency on GDNF and NTN. At late postnatal stages, ART prevents survival elicited by GDNF and NTN. These data provide new insights on the roles of GDNF family ligands in sensory neuron development.  相似文献   

6.
In the developing vertebrate nervous system the survival of neurons becomes dependent on the supply of a neurotrophic factor from their targets when their axons reach these targets. To determine how the onset of neurotrophic factor dependency is coordinated with the arrival of axons in the target field, we have studied the growth and survival of four populations of cranial sensory neurons whose axons have markedly different distances to grow to reach their targets. Axonal growth rate both in vivo and in vitro is related to target distance; neurons with more distant targets grow faster. The onset trophic factor dependency in culture is also related to target distance; neurons with more distant targets survive longer before becoming trophic factor dependent. These data suggest that programmes of growth and survival in early neurons play an important role in coordinating the timing of trophic interactions in the developing nervous system.  相似文献   

7.
Activity-dependent neurotrophic factor (ADNF) is produced by astrocytes in response to neuronal depolarization and, in turn, promotes neuronal survival. A nineamino acid ADNF peptide (ADNF9) exhibits full neurotrophic activity and potently protects cultured embryonic rat hippocampal neurons from oxidative injury and apoptosis. Picomolar concentrations of ADNF9 induced an increase in nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) DNA-binding activity within 1 h of exposure, with a maximum increase of approximately 10-fold by 6 h. Activation of NF-kappaB was correlated with increased resistance of neurons to apoptosis induced by exposure to Fe(2+). The antiapoptotic action of ADNF9 was abolished when NF-kappaB activation was specifically blocked with kappaB decoy DNA. Oxidative stress was attenuated in neurons pretreated with ADNF9, and this effect of ADNF9 was blocked by kappaB decoy DNA, suggesting that ADNF9 suppresses apoptosis by reducing oxidative stress. ADNF9 also prevented neuronal apoptosis following trophic factor withdrawal via an NF-kappaB-mediated mechanism. Thus, NF-kappaB mediates the neuron survival-promoting effects of ADNF9 in experimental models relevant to developmental neuronal death and neurodegenerative disorders.  相似文献   

8.
Nuclear factor kappa beta (NF-kappaB) inhibits apoptosis in sensory, hippocampal, and striatal neurons of the central nervous system. Although several apoptotic stimuli have been shown to activate NF-kappaB in oligodendrocytes, the function of NF-kappaB in this cell type remains unknown. In this study, we introduced plasmids expressing either the p50- or p65-subunit of human NF-kappaB into Central Glia-4 (CG-4)--a rat oligodendrocyte precursor cell line-and determined the influence of NF-kappaB function on tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha)-induced apoptosis. Expression of NF-kappaB markedly prevented CG-4 apoptosis, with p50 being more effective than p65. This anti-apoptotic activity was repressed by IkappaB-alpha, an inhibitor of NF-kappaB. These results imply that NF-kappaB acts as a potent inhibitor of TNF-induced apoptosis in oligodendrocytes.  相似文献   

9.
The isthmo-optic nucleus (ION) of chick embryos is a model system for the study of retrograde trophic signaling in developing CNS neurons. The role of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is well established in this system. Recent work has implicated neurotrophin-4 (NT-4), glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) as additional trophic factors for ION neurons. Here it was examined in vitro and in vivo whether these factors are target-derived trophic factors for the ION in 13- to 16-day-old chick embryos. Unlike BDNF, neither GDNF, NT-4, nor IGF-I increased the survival of ION neurons in dissociated cultures identified by retrograde labeling with the fluorescent tracer DiI. BDNF and IGF-I promoted neurite outgrowth from ION explants, whereas GDNF and NT-4 had no effect. Injections of NT-4, but not GDNF, in the retina decreased the survival of ION neurons and accelerated cell death in the ION. NT-4-like immunoreactivity was present in the retina and the ION. Exogenous, radiolabeled NT-4, but not GDNF or IGF-I, was retrogradely transported from the retina to the ION. NT-4 transport was significantly reduced by coinjection of excess cold nerve growth factor (NGF), indicating that the majority of NT-4 bound to p75 neurotrophin receptors during axonal transport. Binding of NT-4 to chick p75 receptors was confirmed in L-cells, which express chick p75 receptors. These data indicate that GDNF has no direct trophic effects on ION neurons. IGF-I may be an afferent trophic factor for the ION, and NT-4 may act as an antagonist to BDNF, either by competing with BDNF for p75 and/or trkB binding or by signaling cell death via p75.  相似文献   

10.
A M Davies  L Minichiello    R Klein 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(18):4482-4489
Neurotrophins promote neuronal survival by signalling through Trk receptor tyrosine kinases: nerve growth factor signals through TrkA, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and neurotrophin (NT)4 through TrkB and NT3 through TrkC. Although studies in some, but not all, cell lines indicate that NT3 can also signal through TrkA and TrkB, it is not known if such signalling can occur in neurons. We show that NT3 can promote the in vitro survival of sensory and sympathetic neurons isolated from embryos that are homozygous for a null mutation in the trkC gene. During the mid-embryonic period, NT3 promoted the survival of as many trigeminal and nodose neurons as the preferred neurotrophins, NGF and BDNF. However, later in development, these neurons lost their ability to respond to NT3. NT3 also promoted the survival of almost all sympathetic neurons, but no decrease in effectiveness was observed during development. Trigeminal neurons from trkC-/- trkA-/- embryos did not respond to NT3 and nodose neurons from trkB-/- embryos likewise failed to respond to NT3. These results show that NT3 can signal through TrkA and TrkB in neurons at certain stages of development and may explain why the phenotype of NT3-/- mice is more severe than that of trkC-/- mice.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract: Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor markedly enhances survival of neonatal dorsal root sensory neurons in vitro, an effect seen even in the presence of anti-nerve growth factor. Furthermore, it increases levels of substance P, inducing more than a sixfold rise that is maximal at 10 ng/ml. At the same dose, it potentiates the action of nerve growth factor on substance P but not on survival. Neither factor increases somatostatin content in neonatal neurons. Although its effect on substance P diminishes with age, glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor dramatically increases somatostatin levels in neurons from adult rats. Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor is therefore the second trophic factor found to promote survival and regulate substance P in neonatal sensory neurons. More significant is that it is the first and sole neurotrophic factor reported to regulate somatostatin in sensory neurons at any age, with its effect restricted to the adult. These results suggest mechanisms for differential regulation of somatostatin versus substance P in nociceptive pathways.  相似文献   

12.
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is known to have important functions in neuronal survival, differentiation, and plasticity. In addition to its role as a survival-promoting factor, BDNF reportedly can enhance neuronal cell death in some cases, for example, the death caused by excitotoxicity or glucose deprivation. The cellular mechanism of the death-enhancing effect of BDNF remains unknown, in contrast to that of its survival-promoting effect. In this work, we found that BDNF markedly accelerated the nitric oxide (NO) donor-induced death of cultured embryonic cortical neurons. BDNF increased the number of cells with nuclear condensation and DNA fragmentation 24 h after treatment with the NO donor, but it did not change the number of those cells 36 h after the treatment. The BDNF-accelerated death of cortical neurons was inhibited by the addition of actinomycin D or cycloheximide. These results suggest that BDNF can accelerate apoptotic cell death elicited by NO donor. TrkB-IgG and K252a blocked the BDNF-induced acceleration of the death, indicating that the death-accelerating effect by BDNF is mediated by TrkB. In addition, the BDNF-accelerated apoptosis was inhibited by the addition of SB202190 and SB203580, specific inhibitors of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), and U0126, a specific inhibitor of MAPK/ERK kinase 1, indicating that the activation of both p38 MAPK and ERK is involved in the signaling cascade of the BDNF-accelerated, NO donor-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is a protein that promotes the survival of neurons. It is widely thought to possess clinical potential for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases, and in recent years, has been found to play a role in the pathogenesis of some tumours. BDNF is thought to bind to its cellular receptors trkB and p75(NTR) primarily by way of solvent-exposed loops on the BDNF dimer. In this paper, we describe our recent progress towards the development of small peptides as mimetics and inhibitors of BDNF. Two classes of peptides were prepared: disulphide-constrained monomeric monocyclic peptides designed to mimic a single solvent-exposed loop; and homo- and heterodimeric bicyclic peptides designed to mimic pairs of loops. Each peptide was examined in cultures of embryonic chick dorsal root ganglion sensory neurons, both alone, and in competition with BDNF. All peptides were found to inhibit BDNF-mediated neuronal survival, while one--a dimeric peptide based on the two loop 4 regions of BDNF--behaved as a partial BDNF-like agonist. The work described in this paper supports the proposed receptor-binding role of loops 1, 2, and 4 of BDNF, and provides valuable steps towards our long-term goal of developing BDNF mimetics and inhibitors for clinical use.  相似文献   

15.
Analyses of single and double mutants of members of the neurotrophin family and their receptors are reviewed. These data demonstrate that the two neurotrophins, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and neurotrophin 3 (NT-3), and their high-affinity receptors trkB and trkC, are the sole support for the developing afferent innervation of the ear. Neurotrophins are first expressed in the otocyst around the time afferent sensory neurons become postmitotic. They are crucial for the survival of certain topologically distinct populations of sensory neurons. BDNF supports all sensory neurons to the semicircular canals, most sensory neurons to the saccule and utricle, and many sensory neurons to the apex and middle turn of the cochlea. In contrast, NT-3 supports few sensory neurons to the utricle and saccule, all sensory neurons to the basal turn of the cochlea and most sensory neurons to the middle and apical turn. Some topologically restricted effects reflect the pattern of neurotrophin distribution as revealed by in situ hybridization (e.g., loss of all innervation to the semicircular canal sensory epithelia in BDNF or trkB mutants). However, other topologically restricted effects cannot be explained on the basis of current knowledge of neurotrophin or neurotrophin receptor distribution. Data on mutants also support the notion that BDNF may play a role in neonatal plastic reorganization of the pattern of innervation in the ear and possibly the brainstem. In contrast, data obtained thus far on the ability of neurotrophins to rescue adult sensory neuron after insults to cochlear hair cells are less compelling. The ear is a model system to test the interactions of the two neurotrophins, BDNF and NT-3, with their two high-affinity receptors, trkB and trkC.  相似文献   

16.
To date, the neurotrophic factor requirements of developing sensory neurons have been studied using heterogeneous populations of neurons that innervate a wide variety of different sensory structures. To ascertain the particular neurotrophic factor requirements of different kinds of sensory neurons and to determine whether these requirements are related to the type of sensory receptors innervated, it is necessary to study homogeneous preparations of functionally distinct sensory neurons. For this reason I have studied the influence of a soluble extract of skeletal muscle on the survival and growth of proprioceptive neurons isolated from the trigeminal mesencephalic nucleus (TMN) of the embryonic chick. Explants of the TMN and dissociated glia-free cultures of TMN neurons were established from chick embryos of 10 to 18 days incubation (E10 to E18). Skeletal muscle extract prepared from E18 chick pectoral muscle and enriched for neurotrophic activity by ammonium sulfate fractionation promoted marked neurite outgrowth from explants and substantial survival in dissociated cultures established during the period of natural neuronal death in the TMN. In these latter cultures 70 to 80% of the neurons survived and grew in the presence of the extract compared with less than 2% in control cultures. At later ages, following the period of natural neuronal death, these effects were less marked. The neurotrophic activity of extracts prepared from muscle of different ages increased steadily from E10 to E20 (the oldest muscle studied). The active factor is heat labile, trypsin sensitive, and non-dialyzable, it is neither functionally nor immunochemically related to NGF and it has negligible neurotrophic effect on the predominantly cutaneous sensory neuron population of the trigeminal ganglion. These findings demonstrate that skeletal muscle contains a neurotrophic factor which supports the survival and growth of proprioceptive neurons and suggest that this factor has some specificity among functionally distinct kinds of sensory neurons.  相似文献   

17.
Mammalian nerve growth factor (NGF) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) are members of a protein family with perfectly conserved domains arranged around the cysteine residues thought to stabilize an invariant three-dimensional scaffold in addition to distinct sequence motifs that convey different neuronal functions. To study their structural and functional conservation during evolution, we have compared NGF and BDNF from a lower vertebrate, the teleost fish Xiphophorus, with the mammalian homologues. Genomic clones encoding fish NGF and BDNF were isolated by cross-hybridization using probes from the cloned mammalian factors. Fish NGF and BDNF were expressed by means of recombinant vaccinia viruses, purified, and their neuronal survival specificities for different classes of neurons were found to mirror those of the mammalian factors. The half-maximal survival concentration for chick sensory neurons was 60 pg/ml for both fish and mammalian purified recombinant BDNF. However, the activity of recombinant fish NGF on both chick sensory and sympathetic neurons was 6 ng/ml, 75-fold lower than that of mouse NGF. The different functional conservation of NGF and BDNF is also reflected in their structures. The DNA-deduced amino acid sequences of processed mature fish NGF and BDNF showed, compared to mouse, 63% and 90% identity, respectively, indicating that NGF had reached an optimized structure later than BDNF. The retrograde extrapolation of these data indicates that NGF and BDNF evolved at strikingly different rates from a common ancestral gene about 600 million years ago. By RNA gel blot analysis NGF mRNA was detected during late embryonic development; BDNF was present in adult brain.  相似文献   

18.
Shp2, a protein tyrosine phosphatase possessing SH2 domains, is utilized in the intracellular signaling of various growth factors. Shp2 is highly expressed in the CNS. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a member of the neurotrophin family, which also shows high levels of expression in the CNS, exerts neurotrophic and neuromodulatory effects in CNS neurons. We examined how BDNF utilizes Shp2 in its signaling pathway in cultured cerebral cortical neurons. We found that BDNF stimulated coprecipitation of several tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins with anti-Shp2 antibody and that Grb2 and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) were coprecipitated with anti-Shp2 antibody in response to BDNF. In addition, both anti-Grb2 and anti-PI3-K antibodies coprecipitated Shp2 in response to BDNF. The BDNF-stimulated coprecipitation of the tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins, Grb2, and PI3-K with anti-Shp2 antibody was completely inhibited by K252a, an inhibitor of TrkB receptor tyrosine kinase. This BDNF-stimulated Shp2 signaling was markedly sustained as well as BDNF-induced phosphorylation of TrkB and mitogen-activated protein kinases. In PC12 cells stably expressing TrkB, both BDNF and nerve growth factor stimulated Shp2 signaling similarly to that by BDNF in cultured cortical neurons. These results indicated that Shp2 shows cross-talk with various signaling molecules including Grb2 and PI3-K in BDNF-induced signaling and that Shp2 may be involved in the regulation of various actions of BDNF in CNS neurons.  相似文献   

19.
Neural stem cells proliferate in vitro and form neurospheres in the presence of epidermal growth factor (EGF), and are capable of differentiating into both neurons and glia when exposed to a substrate. We hypothesize that specific neurotrophic factors induce differentiation of stem cells from different central nervous system (CNS) regions into particular fates. We investigated differentiation of stem cells from the postnatal mouse hippocampus in culture using the following trophic factors (20 ng/mL): brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) and glial-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF). Without trophic factors, 32% of stem cells differentiated into neurons by 4 days in vitro (DIV), decreasing to 10% by 14 DIV. Addition of BDNF (starting at either day 0 or day 3) significantly increased neuron survival (31–43% by 14 DIV) and differentiation. Morphologically, many well-differentiated neurons resembled hippocampal pyramidal neurons. 5′-Bromodeoxyuridine labeling demonstrated that the pyramidal-like neurons originated from stem cells which had proliferated in EGF-containing cultures. However, similar application of NT-3 and GDNF did not exert such a differentiating effect. Addition of BDNF to stem cells from the postnatal cerebellum, midbrain, and striatum did not induce these neuronal phenotypes, though similar application to cortical stem cells yielded pyramidal-like neurons. Thus, BDNF supports survival of hippocampal stem cell-derived neurons and also can induce differentiation of these cells into pyramidal-like neurons. The presence of pyramidal neurons in BDNF-treated hippocampal and cortical stem cell cultures, but not in striatal, cerebellar, and midbrain stem cell cultures, suggests that stem cells from different CNS regions differentiate into region-specific phenotypic neurons when stimulated with an appropriate neurotrophic factor. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 35: 395–425, 1998  相似文献   

20.
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