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1.
We have examined the relationship between tension, an intrinsic stimulator of axonal elongation, and the culture substrate, an extrinsic regulator of axonal elongation. Chick sensory neurons were cultured on three substrata: (a) plain tissue culture plastic; (b) plastic treated with collagen type IV; and (c) plastic treated with laminin. Calibrated glass needles were used to increase the tension loads on growing neurites. We found that growth cones on all substrata failed to detach when subjected to two to threefold and in some cases 5-10-fold greater tensions than their self-imposed rest tension. We conclude that adhesion to the substrate does not limit the tension exerted by growth cones. These data argue against a "tug-of-war" model for substrate-mediated guidance of growth cones. Neurite elongation was experimentally induced by towing neurites with a force-calibrated glass needle. On all substrata, towed elongation rate was proportional to applied tension above a threshold tension. The proportionality between elongation rate and tension can be regarded as the growth sensitivity of the neurite to tension, i.e., its growth rate per unit tension. On this basis, towed growth on all substrata can be described by the simple linear equation: elongation rate = sensitivity x (applied tension - tension threshold) The numerical values of tension thresholds and neurite sensitivities varied widely among different neurites. On all substrata, thresholds varied from near zero to greater than 200 mudynes, with some tendency for thresholds to cluster between 100 and 150 mudynes. Similarly, the tension sensitivity of neurites varied between 0.5 and 5.0 microns/h/mudyne. The lack of significant differences among sensitivity or threshold values on the various substrata suggest to use that the substratum does not affect the internal "set points" of the neurite for its response to tension. The growth cone of chick sensory neurons is known to pull on its neurite. The simplest cytomechanical model would assume that both growth cone-mediated elongation and towed growth are identical as far as tension input and elongation rate are concerned. We used the equation above and mean values for thresholds and sensitivity from towing experiments to predict the mean growth cone-mediated elongation rate based on mean rest tensions. These predictions are consistent with the observed mean values.  相似文献   

2.
We investigate the mechanical response of PC12 neurites subjected to a drag force imposed by a laminar flow perpendicular to the neurite axis. The curvature of the catenary shape acquired by an initially straight neurite under the action of the drag force provides information on both elongation and tension of the neurite. This method allows us to measure the rest tension and viscoelastic parameters of PC12 neurites and active behavior of neurites. Measurement of oscillations in the strain rate of neurites at constant flow rate provides insight on the response of molecular motors and additional support for the presence of a negative strain-rate sensitivity region in the global mechanical response of PC12 neurites.  相似文献   

3.
Tension and compression in the cytoskeleton of PC 12 neurites   总被引:20,自引:13,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
We report in this article that the retraction of PC 12 neurites, unlike that of other cultured neurons, is due to tension within the neurite. Retraction is rapid and independent of metabolic energy. Transection of one arm of a branched neurite immediately causes the remaining arm to take up a new equilibrium position between attachment points. Similarly, detachment of one growth cone of a cell causes the cell body to move to a new equilibrium position between the remaining neurites. These observations provide direct evidence for the suspension of the cell soma among a network of tensioned neurites. We used retraction as an assay for neurite tension to examine the role of actin filaments and microtubules in neurite support and elongation. Our data suggest that microtubules (MTs) within PC 12 neurites are under compression, supporting tension within the actin network. Treatment of cells with drugs that disrupt actin networks, cytochalasin D or erythro-9-[3-(2-hydroxynonyl)]adenosine eliminates retraction regardless of the absence of MTs, lack of adhesion to the substratum, or integrity of the neurite. Conversely, stimulation of actin polymerization by injection of phalloidin causes retraction of neurites. Treatments that depolymerize MTs, nocodazole or cold, cause retraction of neurites, which suggests that microtubules support this tension, i.e., are under compression. Stabilization of MTs with taxol stabilizes neurites to retraction and under appropriate circumstances can drive neurite extension. Taxol-stimulated neurite extension is augmented by combined treatment with anti-actin drugs. This is consistent with the actin network's normally exerting a force opposite that of MT assembly. Cytochalasin and erythro-9-[3-(2-hydroxynonyl)] adenosine were found to increase slightly the dose of nocodazole required for MT depolymerization. This is consistent with the postulated balance of forces and also suggests that alteration of the compression borne by the microtubules could serve as a local regulator for MT polymerization during neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

4.
We assessed the mechanical properties of PC-12 neurites by applying a force with calibrated glass needles and measured resulting changes in neurite length and deflection of the needle. We observed a linear relationship between force and length change that was not affected by multiple distensions and were thus able to determine neurite spring constants and initial, nondistended, rest tensions. 81 out of 82 neurites showed positive rest tensions ranging over three orders of magnitude with most values clustering around 30-40 mu dynes. Treatment with cytochalasin D significantly reduced neurite rest tensions to an average compression equal to 14% of the former tension and spring constants to an average of 17% of resting values. Treatment with nocodazole increased neurite rest tensions to an average of 282% of resting values but produced no change in spring constant. These observations suggest a particular type of complementary force interaction underlying axonal shape; the neurite actin network under tension and neurite microtubules under compression. Thermodynamics suggests that microtubule (MT) assembly may be regulated by changes in compressive load. We tested this effect by releasing neurite attachment to a polylysine-coated surface with polyaspartate, thus shifting external compressive support onto internal elements, and measuring the relative change in MT polymerization using quantitative Western blotting. Neurons grown on polylysine or collagen without further treatment had a 1:2 ratio of soluble to polymerized tubulin. When neurites grown on polylysine were treated with 1% polyaspartate for 15-30 min, 80% of neurites retracted, shifting the soluble: polymerized tubulin ratio to 1:1. Polyaspartate treatment of cells grown on collagen, or grown on polylysine but treated with cytochalasin to reduce tension, caused neither retraction nor a change in the soluble:polymerized tubulin ratio. We suggest that the release of adhesion to the dish shifted the compressive load formerly borne by the dish onto Mts causing their partial depolymerization. Our observations are consistent with the possibility that alterations in MT compression during growth cone advance integrates MT assembly with the advance.  相似文献   

5.
Mechanical tension is a robust regulator of axonal development of cultured neurons. We review work from our laboratory, using calibrated glass needles to measure or apply tension to chick sensory neurons, chick forebrain neurons, and rat PC12 cells. We survey direct evidence for two different regimes of tension effects on neurons, a fluid-like growth regime, and a nongrowth, elastic regime. Above a minimum tension threshold, we observe growth effects of tension regulating four phases of axonal development:
  1. Initiation of process outgrowth from the cell body;
  2. Growth cone-mediated elongation of the axon;
  3. Elongation of the axon after synaptogenesis, which normally accommodates the skeletal growth of vertebrates; and
  4. Axonal elimination by retraction.
Significantly, the quantitative relationship between the force and the growth response is suprisingly similar to the simple relationship characteristic of Newtonian fluid mechanical elements: elongation rate is directly proportional to tension (above the threshold), and this robust linear relationship extends from physiological growth rates to far-above-physiological rates. Thus, tension apparently integrates the complex biochemistry of axonal elongation, including cytoskeletal and membrane dynamics, to produce a simple “force input/growth output” relationship. In addition to this fluid-like growth response, peripheral neurons show elastic behaviors at low tensions (below the threshold tension for growth), as do most cell types. Thus, neurites could exert small static forces without diminution for long periods. In addition, axons of peripheral neurons can actively generate modest tensions, presumably similar to muscle contraction, at tensions near zero. The elastic and force-generating capability of neural axons has recently been proposed to play a major role in the morphogenesis of the brain.  相似文献   

6.
Here we asked whether applied mechanical tension would stimulate undifferentiated minor processes of cultured hippocampal neurons to become axons and whether tension could induce a second axon in an already polarized neuron. Experimental tension applied to minor processes produced extensions that demonstrated axonal character, regardless of the presence of an existing axon. Towed neurites showed a high rate of spontaneous growth cone advance and could continue to grow out for 1-3 d after towing. The developmental course of experimental neurites was found to be similar to that of unmanipulated spontaneous axons. Furthermore, the experimentally elongated neurites showed compartmentation of the axonal markers dephospho-tau and L-1 in towed outgrowth after 24 h. Extension of a second axon from an already polarized neuron does not lead to the loss of the spontaneous axon either immediately or after longer term growth. In addition, we were able to initiate neurites de novo that subsequently acquired axonal character even though spontaneous growth cone advance began while the towed neurite was still no longer than its sibling processes. This suggests that tension rather than the achievement of a critical neurite length determined axonal specification.  相似文献   

7.
Mechanical tension is a potent stimulator of axonal growth rate, which is also stimulated by osmotic dilution. We wished to determine the relationship, if any, between osmotic stimulation and tensile regulation of axonal growth. We used calibrated glass needles to apply constant force to elongate axons of cultured chick sensory neurons. We find that a neurite being pulled at a constant force will grow 50–300% faster following a 50% dilution of inorganic ions in the culture medium. That is, osmotic dilution appears to cause axons to increase their sensitivity to applied tensions. Experimental interventions suggest that this effect is not mediated by dilution of extracellular calcium, or to osmotic stimulation of adenylate cyclase, or to osmotic stimulation of mechanosensitive ion channels. Rather, experiments measuring the static tension normally borne by neurites suggest a direct mechanical effect on the cytoskeletal proteins of the neurite shaft. Our results are consistent with a formal thermodynamic model for axonal growth in which removing a compressive load on axonal microtubules promotes their assembly, thus promoting axonal elongation.  相似文献   

8.
The neuronal protein 25 (NP25), a member of the calponin (CaP) protein family, has previously been identified as neuron-specific protein in the adult rat brain. Here, we show an early onset of NP25 expression in the chick embryo neural tube. NP25 represents, together with NeuroM, one of the earliest markers for postmitotic neurons. To elucidate its function in the developing nervous system, NP25 was overexpressed in E5 and E9 sensory neurons, E7 sympathetic neurons and PC12 cells that show different endogenous NP25 expression levels. Whereas E5 and E9 sensory neurons and PC12 cells, which express low endogenous levels of NP25, responded by enhanced neurite outgrowth, a reduction of neurite length was observed in sympathetic neurons, which already express high endogenous levels of NP25. Knockdown of NP25 in sensory neurons using NP25 siRNA resulted in shorter neurites, whereas reduction of NP25 expression in sympathetic neurons led to increased neurite length. These results suggest a dynamic function for NP25 in the regulation of neurite growth, with an optimal level of NP25 required for maximal growth.  相似文献   

9.
Neurite extension and retraction are very important processes in the formation of neuronal networks. A strategy for fostering axonal regrowth/regeneration of injured adult neurons is attractive therapeutically for various diseases such as traumatic brain injury, stroke and Alzheimer's disease. The Rho family of small GTPases, including Rac and Cdc42 have been shown to be involved in promoting neurite outgrowth. On the other hand, activation of RhoA induces collapse of growth cone and retraction of neurites. Rho‐associated kinase (ROCK) an effector molecule of RhoA, is downstream of a number of axonal outgrowth and growth cone collapse inhibition mechanisms. In the present study, we sought to identify the role of ROCK in neurite outgrowth in PC12 cells. Y27632, a specific inhibitor of ROCK, induced a robust increase in neurite outgrowth in these cells within 24–48 h as visualized by phase contrast microscopy. Staining with FITC‐tubulin or phalloidin show extended neurites in PC12 cells treated with Y27632, comparable to that with 100 ng/mL of NGF. Assessment of other biochemical markers of neurite outgrowth such as GAP43, neurofilament and tyrosine hydroxylase phosphorylation further indicates that inhibition of ROCK in PC12 cells causes differentiation of these cells to a neuronal phenotype.  相似文献   

10.
Addition of the bioactive phospholipid lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) or a thrombin receptor-activating peptide (TRP) to serum-starved N1E-115 or NG108-15 neuronal cells causes rapid growth cone collapse, neurite retraction, and transient rounding of the cell body. These shape changes appear to be driven by receptor-mediated contraction of the cortical actomyosin system independent of classic second messengers. Treatment of the cells with Clostridium botulinum C3 exoenzyme, which ADP-ribosylates and thereby inactivates the Rho small GTP-binding protein, inhibits LPA- and TRP-induced force generation and subsequent shape changes. C3 also inhibits LPA-induced neurite retraction in PC12 cells. Biochemical analysis reveals that the ADP-ribosylated substrate is RhoA. Prolonged C3 treatment of cells maintained in 10% serum induces the phenotype of serum-starved cells, with initial cell flattening being followed by neurite outgrowth; such C3-differentiated cells fail to retract their neurites in response to agonists. We conclude that RhoA is essential for receptor-mediated force generation and ensuing neurite retraction in N1E-115 and PC12 cells, and that inactivation of RhoA by ADP-ribosylation abolishes actomyosin contractility and promotes neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

11.
Several groups have shown that PC12 will extend microtubule-containing neurites on extracellular matrix (ECM) with no lag period in the absence of nerve growth factor. This is in contrast to nerve growth factor (NGF)-induced neurite outgrowth that occurs with a lag period of several days. During this lag period, increased synthesis or activation of assembly-promoting microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) occurs and is apparently required for neurite extension. We investigated the growth and microtubule (MT) content of PC12 neurites grown on ECM in the presence or absence of inhibitors of neurite outgrowth. On ECM, neurites of cells with or without prior exposure to NGF contain a normal density of MTs, but frequently contain unusual loops of MTs in their termini that may indicate increased MT assembly. On ECM, neurites extend from PC12 cells in the presence of 10 microM LiCl at significantly higher frequency than on polylysine. On other substrates, LiCl inhibits neurite outgrowth, apparently by inhibiting phosphorylation of particular MAPs (Burstein, D. E., P. J. Seeley, and L. A. Greene. 1985. J. Cell Biol. 101:862-870). Although 35-45% of 60 Li(+)-neurites examined were found to contain a normal array of MTs, 25-30% were found to have a MT density approximately 15% of normal. The remaining 30% of these neurites were found to be nearly devoid of MTs, containing only occasional, ambiguous, short tubular elements. We also found that neurites would extend on ECM in the presence of the microtubule depolymerizing drug, nocodazole. At 0.1 micrograms/ml nocodazole, cells on ECM produce neurites that contain a normal density of MTs. This is in contrast to the lack of neurite outgrowth and retraction of extant neurites that this dose produces in cells grown on polylysine. At 0.2 microgram/ml nocodazole, neurites again grew out in substantial number and four of five neurites examined ultrastructurally were found to be completely devoid of microtubules. We interpret these results by postulating that growth on ECM relieves the need for MTs to serve as compressive supports for neurite tension (Dennerll, T. J., H. C. Joshi, U. L. Steel, R. E. Buxbaum, and S. R. Heidemann. 1988. J. Cell Biol. 107:665). Because compression destabilizes MTs and favors disassembly, this would tend to increase MT assembly relative to other conditions, as we found. Additionally, if MTs are not needed as compressive supports, neurites could grow out in their absence, as we also observed.  相似文献   

12.
Rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells respond to the binding of nerve growth factor (NGF) and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) by extending neurites in a manner resembling sympathetic neurons. This response requires cell attachment to an appropriate substratum (Fujii et al., J. Neurosci., 2:1157, 1982); attachment factors which function in this capacity include the adhesive proteins fibronectin and laminin. Incubating PC12 cells with a polyclonal antiserum directed against a putative 140-kDa fibroblast cell surface fibronectin receptor (anti-gp140) perturbed spreading but not attachment of the cells to fibronectin and laminin substrates. However, in the presence of anti-gp 140 or its Fab fragments, NGF-stimulated neurite outgrowth was dramatically reduced. The antibody also caused a retraction of previously extended neurites. SDS-PAGE analysis of immunoprecipitates of PC12 cells surface labeled with 125I identified a prominent 120-140-kDa band, suggesting that the site of anti-gp140 action in PC12 cells is also through a fibronectin receptor.  相似文献   

13.
A machine was constructed, called a Cell Puller, that allows the steady advance or withdrawal of a microelectrode at very slow speeds—up to 170 μm/hr. Specially prepared microelectrodes held in the Cell Puller were placed in cultures of dissociated chick sensory ganglion neurons in such a way that growth cones attached to their tips. Movements of the microelectrodes, at speeds up to about 100 μm/hr, then resulted in the elongation of the neurites for up to 24 hr and for increases in length up to 960 μm; more rapid towing failed to cause extensive neurite elongation. Estimates of neurite diameter before and after “towing” indicated that a net increase in neurite volume had occurred. Furthermore, long neurites could be produced by towing from previously rounded neuronal cell bodies confined to small adhesive “islands” on a nonadhesive substratum. Neurites produced by microelectrode towing had a normal appearance, showed rapid saltatory movements of internal organelles and were capable of resuming growth on the substratum. Electron microscopy of bundles of neurites produced in this way from explanted dorsal root ganglia showed an ultrastructure typical of cultured neurites, with abundant longitudinally aligned microtubules and neurofilaments. These experiments demonstrate that neurites can grow in response to mechanical tension under tissue culture conditions. It is proposed that they do so also in normal development, the tension in this case being supplied initially by the locomotory activity of the growth cones and subsequently by the morphogenetic movements of the surrounding tissues.  相似文献   

14.
The phenomenon of growth cone (GC) and neurite retraction resulting from a rapid incrase in concentration of the trophic molecule NGF was studied. Neurite outgrowth from explants of 8-d chick embryo dorsal root ganglia was achieved at very low NGF concentrations with heart conditioned medium during overnight culture. Quickly incrasing the NGF concentration in the growth medium dramatically affected GC and neurite morphology: the majority of GCs and neurites collapsed and retracted towards the cell body over a course of approximately 2-5 min. Retraction was elicited by increasing NGF levels from 0 to 0.05 ng/ml to as little as 0.5 ng/ml but did not occur if the NGF concentration during the initial overnight culture period exceeded 0.8 ng/ml, regardless of how much the concentration was elevated. Similar concentration changes of cytochrome c or insulin did nt result in retraction. Neurites that had been separated from their cell bodies by cutting close to their exit from the explant still retracted when NGF levels were raised. Cytochalasin B reversible inhibits retraction, whereas colchicine allows retraction to occur. Observation of cell- substratum adhesion during retraction revealed that some adhesion points remain during retraction and that they correspond to the ends of NGF leels and that it may involve microfilaments in the neurite cytoskeleton. The NGF concentration changes that elicit neurite retraction suggest that a primary event in retraction may be increased occupancy of a high-affinity NGF receptor on neurites.  相似文献   

15.
The outgrowth of neurites from rat PC12 cells stimulated by combined treatment of nerve growth factor (NGF) with cAMP is significantly more rapid and extensive than the outgrowth induced by either factor alone. We have compared the responses of PC12 cells under three different growth conditions, NGF alone, cAMP alone, and combined treatment, with respect to surface morphology, rapidity of neurite outgrowth, and stability of neurite microtubules, to understand the synergistic action of NGF and cAMP on PC12. Surface events at early times in these growth conditions varied, suggesting divergent pathways of action of NGF and cAMP. This suggestion is strongly supported by the finding that cells exposed to saturating levels of dibutyryl cAMP without substantial neurite outgrowth initiated neurites within 5 min of NGF. This response has been adopted as a convenient assay for NGF. Neurites that regenerated in the three growth conditions showed marked differences in stability to treatments that depolymerize microtubules. The results indicate that microtubules in cells treated with both NGF and cAMP are significantly more stable than in either growth factor alone. We suggest that a shift of the assembly equilibrium favoring tubulin assembly is a necessary prerequisite for the initiation of neurites by PC12.  相似文献   

16.
Sensory neurons from 8- to 11-day chick embryos were cultured on polyornithine-treated coverslips, fixed with glutaraldehyde, and stained for immunofluorescent localization of actin. Actin was distributed in a fibrous form in the growth cones, extending into filopodia and lamellipodial expansions of the growth cone margin. Often, these actin fibers were located at sites of linear adhesions to the glass substratum, as viewed by interference reflection optics. Our antisera to myosin did not recognize myosin in glutaraldehyde-fixed cells, and paraformaldehyde, which preserves the antigenicity of myosin, did not fix embryonic neurons well. Thus, myosin was localized in NGF-stimulated PC12 cells, whose morphology is better preserved by paraformaldehyde. Within the growth cones of PC12 neurites, actin and myosin are distributed into fibrous arrays which resemble the actin fibers seen in the growth cones of sensory neurons. Thus, actomyosin-like contractile forces may be exerted in neurite growth cones. These forces may act in concert with cell-substratum adhesive bonds to move the growth cone across the substratum or move organelles within the growth cone.  相似文献   

17.
The rat adrenal pheochromocytoma PC12 cell line is one of the traditional models for the study of neurite outgrowth and growth cone behavior. To clarify to what extent PC12 neurite terminals can be compared to neuronal growth cones, we have analyzed their morphology and protein distribution in fixed PC12 cells by immunocytochemistry. Our results show that that PC12 cells display a special kind of neurite terminal that includes a varicosity in close association with a growth cone. This hybrid terminal, or “varicone”, is characterized by the expression of specific markers not typically present in neuronal growth cones. For example, we show that calpain-2 is a specific marker of varicones and can be detected even before the neurite develops. Our data also shows that a fraction of PC12 neurites end in regular growth cones, which we have compared to hippocampal neurites as a control. We also report the extraordinary incidence of varicones in the literature referred to as “growth cones”. In summary, we provide evidence of two different kinds of neurite terminals in PC12 cells, including a PC12-specific terminal, which implies that care must be taken when using them as a model for neuronal growth cones or neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

18.
This report describes the influence of neurite fasciculation on two aspects of nerve growth from chick spinal ganglia in vitro: the inhibition of outgrowth by high concentrations of nerve growth factor (NGF) and the preferential growth of neurites toward a capillary tube containing NGF. These studies involved a comparison of cultures of single cells, cell aggregates, and intact ganglia and the use of antibodies against the nerve cell adhesion molecule (CAM) to perturb fasciculation under a variety of conditions. The inhibition of outgrowth, which was observed with ganglia and aggregates but not with single cells, was correlated with a thickening of neurite fascicles. In accord with this observation, anti-CAM, which diminishes fasciculation by inhibiting side-to-side interactions between individual neurites, also partially reversed the inhibition of neurite outgrowth at high NGF concentrations. On the basis of these and other studies, we consider the possibility that neurite bundling causes an increase in the elastic tension of a fascicle without a compensatory increase in its adhesion to substratum. It is proposed that this imbalance could inhibit neurites from growing out from a ganglion and even result in retraction of preexisting outgrowth. In the analysis of NGF-directed growth, it was found that a capillary source of NGF produced a steep but transient NGF gradient that subsided before most neurites had emerged from the ganglion. Nevertheless, the presence of a single NGF capillary caused a dramatic and persistent asymmetry in the outgrowth of neurites from ganglia or cell aggregates. In contrast, processes of individual cells did not appear to orient themselves toward the capillary. The most revealing finding was that anti-CAM antibodies caused a decrease in the asymmetry of neurite outgrowth. These results suggest that side-to-side interactions among neurites can influence the guidance of nerve bundles by sustaining and amplifying an initial directional signal.  相似文献   

19.
Neuroserpin is a serine protease inhibitor widely expressed in the developing and adult nervous systems and implicated in the regulation of proteases involved in processes such as synaptic plasticity, neuronal migration and axogenesis. We have analysed the effect of neuroserpin on growth factor-induced neurite outgrowth in PC12 cells. We show that small changes in neuroserpin expression result in changes to the number of cells extending neurites and total neurite length following NGF treatment. Increased expression of neuroserpin resulted in a decrease in the number of cells extending neurites and a reduction in total free neurite length whereas reduced levels of neuroserpin led to a small increase in the number of neurite extending cells and a significant increase in total free neurite length compared to the parent cell line. Neuroserpin also altered the response of PC12 cells to bFGF and EGF treatment. Neuroserpin was localised to dense cored secretory vesicles in PC12 cells but was unable to complex with its likely enzyme target, tissue plasminogen activator at the acidic pH found in these vesicles. These data suggest that modulation of neuroserpin levels at the extending neurite growth cone may play an important role in regulating axonal growth.  相似文献   

20.
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