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1.
A glial cell line (XR1 cell line) derived from Xenopus retinal neuroepithelium was examined for neurite outgrowth promoting activity. A monolayer of the XR1 cells serves as an excellent substrate upon which embryonic retinal explants attach and freely elaborate neurites. The XR1 neurite outgrowth promoting activity is not secreted into the medium, but is laid down directly on the substrate where it remains active after lysing the cells by hypoosmotic shock. A polyclonal antiserum raised against membranes of the XR1 cells was effective in blocking neurite outgrowth on XR1 conditioned collagen. It is proposed that the neurite outgrowth promoting factors produced by the XR1 cells are associated with the extracellular matrix and possibly glial specific.  相似文献   

2.
Cell attachment and neurite outgrowth by embryonic neural retinal cells were measured in separate quantitative assays to define differences in substrate preference and to demonstrate developmentally regulated changes in cellular response to different extracellular matrix glycoproteins. Cells attached to laminin, fibronectin, and collagen IV in a concentration-dependent fashion, though fibronectin was less effective for attachment than the other two substrates. Neurite outgrowth was much more extensive on laminin than on fibronectin or collagen IV. These results suggest that different substrates have distinct effects on neuronal differentiation. Neural retinal cell attachment and neurite outgrowth were inhibited on all three substrates by two antibodies, cell substratum attachment antibody (CSAT) and JG22, which recognize a cell surface glycoprotein complex required for cell interactions with several extracellular matrix constituents. In addition, retinal cells grew neurites on substrates coated with the CSAT antibodies. These results suggest that cell surface molecules recognized by this antibody are directly involved in cell attachment and neurite extension. Neural retinal cells from embryos of different ages varied in their capacity to interact with extracellular matrix substrates. Cells of all ages, embryonic day 6 (E6) to E12, attached to collagen IV and CSAT antibody substrates. In contrast, cell attachment to laminin and fibronectin diminished with increasing embryonic age. Age-dependent differences were found in the profile of proteins precipitated by the CSAT antibody, raising the possibility that modifications of these proteins are responsible for the dramatic changes in substrate preference of retinal cells between E6 and E12.  相似文献   

3.
《The Journal of cell biology》1986,103(6):2659-2672
We have compared neurite outgrowth on extracellular matrix (ECM) constituents to outgrowth on glial and muscle cell surfaces. Embryonic chick ciliary ganglion (CG) neurons regenerate neurites rapidly on surfaces coated with laminin (LN), fibronectin (FN), conditioned media (CM) from several non-neuronal cell types that secrete LN, and on intact extracellular matrices. Neurite outgrowth on all of these substrates is blocked by two monoclonal antibodies, CSAT and JG22, that prevent the adhesion of many cells, including neurons, to the ECM constituents LN, FN, and collagen. Neurite outgrowth is inhibited even on mixed LN/poly-D-lysine substrates where neuronal attachment is independent of LN. Therefore, neuronal process outgrowth on extracellular matrices requires the function of neuronal cell surface molecules recognized by these antibodies. The surfaces of cultured astrocytes, Schwann cells, and skeletal myotubes also promote rapid process outgrowth from CG neurons. Neurite outgrowth on these surfaces, though, is not prevented by CSAT or JG22 antibodies. In addition, antibodies to a LN/proteoglycan complex that block neurite outgrowth on several LN-containing CM factors and on an ECM extract failed to inhibit cell surface-stimulated neurite outgrowth. After extraction with a nonionic detergent, Schwann cells and myotubes continue to support rapid neurite outgrowth. However, the activity associated with the detergent insoluble residue is blocked by CSAT and JG22 antibodies. Detergent extraction of astrocytes, in contrast, removes all neurite- promoting activity. These results provide evidence for at least two types of neuronal interactions with cells that promote neurite outgrowth. One involves adhesive proteins present in the ECM and ECM receptors on neurons. The second is mediated through detergent- extractable macromolecules present on non-neuronal cell surfaces and different, uncharacterized receptor(s) on neurons. Schwann cells and skeletal myotubes appear to promote neurite outgrowth by both mechanisms.  相似文献   

4.
Cultured embryonic heart cells release a powerful inducer of neurite outgrowth into the surrounding medium. The present report demonstrates that these cells also deposit material which induces neurite outgrowth directly onto their culture substratum. Thus, embryonic heart cells condition both the culture medium and the culture substratum with respect to neurite outgrowth. Conditioned substrata were prepared by incubating heart cell monolayers in EDTA until the cells released from the substratum and were discarded. When dissociated neurons from ciliary or sympathetic chain ganglia were plated in fresh medium onto a conditioned substratum, neurite outgrowth was initiated in 80–95% of the neurons within 60 min. The neurite-inducing activity is trypsin sensitive, but is not inactivated by antibodies to the cell attachment protein fibronectin, by the membrane-solubilizing detergent Triton X-100, or by the enzymes collagenase, RNase, or DNase. The factor in conditioned medium which also induces neurite outgrowth depends for its activity on attachment to an artificial polyornithine substratum, under which condition it appears to promote adhesion of neuronal filopodia to the substratum. Thus, neurite outgrowth in these two culture systems occurs only if the substratum is conditioned by the appropriate extracellular materials: conditioned either directly by the deposition of heart cell products or indirectly by the binding of a conditioned medium factor to the polyornithine substratum. These substratum-conditioning factors may be related to those components of the extracellular matrix which support neurite outgrowth in vivo.  相似文献   

5.
P Doherty  J Cohen  F S Walsh 《Neuron》1990,5(2):209-219
We have used monolayers of control 3T3 cells and 3T3 cells transfected with a cDNA encoding human N-CAM as a culture substrate for embryonic chick retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). At embryonic day 6 (E6), but not at E11, RGCs extended longer neurites on monolayers of N-CAM-transfected cells. This loss of RGC responsiveness was not associated with substantial changes in the level of N-CAM expression on RGC growth cones. The neurite outgrowth response from E6 RGCs could be inhibited by removal of N-CAM from the monolayer, by removal of alpha 2-8-linked polysialic acid from neuronal N-CAM, or by antibodies that bind exclusively to chick (neuronal) N-CAM. In contrast, the response was not dependent on neuronal beta 1 integrin function. These data provide substantive evidence for a homophilic binding mechanism directly mediating N-CAM-dependent neurite outgrowth, and suggest that changes in polysialic acid expression on neuronal N-CAM may modulate N-CAM-dependent axonal growth during development.  相似文献   

6.
I have compared central nervous system (CNS) neurite outgrowth on glial and nonglial cells. Monolayers of glial cells (astrocytes and Schwann cells) or nonglial cells (e.g., fibroblasts) were prepared and were shown to be greater than 95% pure as judged by cell type-specific markers. These monolayers were then tested for their ability to support neurite outgrowth from various CNS explants. While CNS neurites grew vigorously on the glial cells, most showed little growth on nonglial cell monolayers. Neurites grew singly or in fine fascicles on the glial cells at rates greater than 0.5 mm/d. The neurite outgrowth on astrocytes was investigated in detail. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy showed that the neurites were closely apposed to the astrocyte surface and that the growth cones were well spread with long filopodia. There was no evidence of significant numbers of explant- derived cells migrating onto the monolayers. Two types of experiments indicated that factors associated with the astrocyte surface were primarily responsible for the vigorous neurite outgrowth seen on these cells: (a) Conditioned media from either astrocytes or fibroblasts had no effect on the pattern of outgrowth on fibroblasts and astrocytes, and conditioned media factors from either cell type did not promote neurite outgrowth when bound to polylysine-coated dishes. (b) When growing CNS neurites encountered a boundary between astrocytes and fibroblasts, they stayed on the astrocytes and did not encroach onto the fibroblasts. These experiments strongly suggest that molecules specific to the surfaces of astrocytes make these cells particularly attractive substrates for CNS neurite outgrowth, and they raise the possibility that similar molecules on embryonic glial cells may play a role in guiding axonal growth during normal CNS development.  相似文献   

7.
We have examined conditions under which aggregates of embryonic chick neural retina will extend neurities in vitro. Trypsin-dispersed cells from 7-day embryonic chick neural retina were aggregated in rotation culture for 8 hr and maintained in serum-free medium on a variety of standard culture substrate. Aggregates extend few neurites on untreated plastic, glass, or collagen substrata. However, pretreatment of these substrata with human plasma fibronectin enhances their capacity to support retinal neurite outgrowth. Aggregates cultured on fibronectin-treated substrata extend long, radially oriented neurites within 36 hr in vitro. The morphology of these neurites is distinct from that seen when aggregates are cultured on polylysine-treated substrata. In the latter case, neurites are highly branched and grow concentrically around the aggregate perimeter. Addition of fibronectin to polylysine-treated substrata stimulates radial neurite outgrowth. Promotion of neurite outgrowth is dependent on the amount of fibronectin bound to the culture substratum and on the pH at which binding occurs. The requirements for fibronectin-mediated neurite outgrowth are more stringent than those previously reported for fibroblast attachment and spreading.  相似文献   

8.
The extracellular matrix protein, tenascin, appears in a restricted pattern during organ morphogenesis. Here we studied the expression of tenascin along developing peripheral nerves in chick embryos and tested its activity as a substrate for cultured neurons. Motor axons grow out through the tenascin-rich, anterior part of the sclerotome. Shortly after, tenascin surrounds axon fascicles of ventral roots. At the limb levels, outgrowing axons accumulate in the tenascin-containing girdle region forming a plexus. In the limb, tenascin first appears in bracket-like structures that surround the precartilage cell condensations of the femur and humerus, respectively. These regions coincide with the channels along which axons first grow in from the girdle plexus to form the limb nerves. Later, the major tenascin staining is associated with the cartilage and tendon primordia, and not with the limb nerves. We used tenascin as a substrate for cultured neural explants and single cells in order to test for its function in neurite outgrowth. Dissociated embryonic neurons of various types attached to mixed polylysine/tenascin substrates and sprouted rapidly after a lag of several hours. Outgrowth was inhibited and neurites were detached by anti-tenascin antibodies. On substrates coated with tenascin alone, neurite outgrowth was achieved from 3 day spinal cord explants. Whereas growth cones were well spread and rapidly moving, the neurites were poorly attached, straight and rarely branched. We speculate that in vivo tenascin allows axonal outgrowth, but inhibits branching and supports fasciculation of newly formed axons.  相似文献   

9.
The role of cell adhesion molecules in neurite outgrowth on Müller cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The roles of neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), L1, N-cadherin, and integrin in neurite outgrowth on various substrates were studied. Antibodies against these cell surface molecules were added to explants of chick retina and the neurites from retinal ganglion cells were examined for effects of the antibodies on neurite length and fasciculation. On laminin, an anti-integrin antibody completely inhibited neurite outgrowth. The same antibody did not inhibit neurite outgrowth on polylysine or Müller cells. Antibodies to NCAM, L1, and N-cadherin did not significantly inhibit neurite outgrowth on laminin but produced significant inhibition on Müller cells. The inhibition of neurite outgrowth on glia by anti-L1 antibodies supports the hypothesis that L1 is capable of acting in a heterophilic binding mechanism. On laminin, both anti-N-cadherin and anti-L1 caused defasciculation of neurites from retinal ganglion cells, while anti-NCAM did not. None of these antibodies produced defasciculation on Müller cells. The results indicate that these three cell adhesion molecules may be very important in interactions with glia as axons grow from the retina to the tectum and may be less important in axon-axon interactions along this pathway. No evidence was found supporting the role of integrins in axon growth on Müller cells.  相似文献   

10.
The influence of J1/tenascin adsorbed to polyornithine-conditioned plastic (substrate-bound J1/tenascin) and J1/tenascin present in the culture medium (soluble J1/tenascin) on neurite outgrowth was studied with cultured single cells from hippocampus and mesencephalon of embryonic rats. Neurons at low density grew well on J1/tenascin substrates and extended neurites that were approximately 40% longer than on the polyornithine control substrate after 24 h in vitro. The neurite outgrowth promoting effect of substrate bound J1/tenascin was largely abolished in the presence of mAb J1/tn2, but not by mAb J1/tn1. In contrast to the neurite growth-promoting effects of substrate bound J1/tenascin, neurite outgrowth on polyornithine, laminin, fibronectin, or J1/tenascin as substrates was inhibited by addition of soluble J1/tenascin to the cultures. Neither of the two mAbs neutralized the neurite outgrowth-inhibitory properties of soluble J1/tenascin. In contrast to their opposite effects on neurite outgrowth, both substrate-bound and soluble J1/tenascin reduced spreading of the neuronal cell bodies, suggesting that the neurite outgrowth-promoting and antispreading effects are mediated by two different sites on the molecule. This was further supported by the inability of the mAb J1/tn2 to neutralize the antispreading effect. The J1/tn2 epitope localizes to a fibronectin type III homology domain that is presumably distinct from the putative Tn68 cell-binding domain of chicken tenascin for fibroblasts, as shown by electronmicroscopic localization of antibody binding sites. We infer from these experiments that J1/tenascin contains a neurite outgrowth promoting domain that is distinguishable from the cell-binding site and presumably not involved in the inhibition of neurite outgrowth or cell spreading. Our observations support the notion that J1/tenascin is a multifunctional extracellular matrix molecule.  相似文献   

11.
Components of the extracellular matrix are believed to guide both nerve cells and neurites to their targets during embryogenesis and, therefore, might be useful for controlling regeneration of nervous tissue in adults. To study the influence of extracellular conditions on neurite outgrowth and cell motility, PC12 cells were suspended in three-dimensional gels containing (i) collagen (0.4 to 2 mg/mL), (ii) collagen (1 mg/mL) with added fibronectin or laminin (1 to 100 mug/mL), and (iii) agarose (7 mg/mL) with added collagen (0.001 to 1 mg/mL). Neurite outgrwoth was stimulated with nerve growth factor (NGF) and both the extent of neurite outgrowth ad cell aggregation were quantitated over 10 to 12 days in culture. The extent of neurite outgrowth was greatest at the lowest collagen concentration tested (0.4 mg/mL) and decreased with increasing concentration. The addition of laminin or fibronectin altered the extent of neurite outgrowth in collagen gels, but the differences were small. Although no neurite growth was observed in pure agarose gels, considerable neurite outgrowth occurred with the addition of small amounts (>/=0.01 mg/mL) of collagen. Mean aggregate size increased more quickly in gels with lower concentrations of collagen. For cells in 1.0 mg/mL collagen, a four- to fivefold increase in aggregate volume was seen between days 2 and 10 o the culture period, whereas the increase in DNA content during this same period was less than twofold, suggesting that the cells were aggregating, not multiplying. These results suggest that the composition of the matrix supporting nerve cells has a significant effect on both neurite outgrowth and cell motility. (c) 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
Sensory neurons were dissociated from lumbar dorsal root ganglia of embryonic chick and put into culture, either directly or after removing non-neuronal cells by density gradient centrifugation. The cells were grown on culture substrata of various kinds in medium containing nerve growth factor (NGF). After 24 h the cultures were fixed, mounted and analysed. Lengths of neurites were measured, and the numbers of primary processes formed at the cell body and of growth cones were counted. From these values, the rates of growth cone advance and frequency of growth cone branching were calculated. Neuronal outgrowths increased strikingly in length and complexity with embryonic age; there was a 3.5-fold increase in total neurite length and a 3-fold increase in the number of growth cones when neurons from 15-day embryos (E15) were compared with those from 8-day embryos (E8) grown on the same substratum (glass). Growth was markedly greater on surfaces prepared with laminin or conditioned medium compared with plain glass or air-dried collagen. When E15 neurons grown on glass were compared with those grown on laminin, for example, a 2.5-fold increase in total neurite length and a 3-fold increase in the number of growth cones was observed. Calculations showed that a major factor in these changes was an increase in the frequency of growth cone branching. The number of initial processes emanating from the cell body changed with age, but not with the different substrata tested. Non-neuronal cells when present in low numbers and in contact with neurons did not appear to influence neuronal geometry in a systematic way. Our results document the fact that both external factors (in this case, the nature of the culture substratum) and intrinsic factors (stage of development of the neuron) can influence the geometry of neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

13.
Retinal ganglion neurons extend axons that grow along astroglial cell surfaces in the developing optic pathway. To identify the molecules that may mediate axon extension in vivo, antibodies to neuronal cell surface proteins were tested for their effects on neurite outgrowth by embryonic chick retinal neurons cultured on astrocyte monolayers. Neurite outgrowth by retinal neurons from embryonic day 7 (E7) and E11 chick embryos depended on the function of a calcium-dependent cell adhesion molecule (N-cadherin) and beta 1-class integrin extracellular matrix receptors. The inhibitory effects of either antibody on process extension could not be accounted for by a reduction in the attachment of neurons to astrocytes. The role of a third cell adhesion molecule, NCAM, changed during development. Anti-NCAM had no detectable inhibitory effects on neurite outgrowth by E7 retinal neurons. In contrast, E11 retinal neurite outgrowth was strongly dependent on NCAM function. Thus, N-cadherin, integrins, and NCAM are likely to regulate axon extension in the optic pathway, and their relative importance varies with developmental age.  相似文献   

14.
In animal models, transplantation of bone marrow stromal cells (MSC) into the spinal cord following injury enhances axonal regeneration and promotes functional recovery. How these improvements come about is currently unclear. We have examined the interaction of MSC with neurons, using an established in vitro model of nerve growth, in the presence of substrate-bound extracellular molecules that are thought to inhibit axonal regeneration, i.e., neural proteoglycans (CSPG), myelin associated glycoprotein (MAG) and Nogo-A. Each of these molecules repelled neurite outgrowth from dorsal root ganglia (DRG) in a concentration-dependent manner. However, these nerve-inhibitory effects were much reduced in MSC/DRG co-cultures. Video microscopy demonstrated that MSC acted as “cellular bridges” and also “towed” neurites over the nerve-inhibitory substrates. Whereas conditioned medium from MSC cultures stimulated DRG neurite outgrowth over type I collagen, it did not promote outgrowth over CSPG, MAG or Nogo-A. These findings suggest that MSC transplantation may promote axonal regeneration both by stimulating nerve growth via secreted factors and also by reducing the nerve-inhibitory effects of the extracellular molecules present.  相似文献   

15.
Growth and guidance behavior of Xenopus embryonic (ER) (optic vesicle stage 25/26) and regenerating retinal fibers (stage 47/50 newly regenerating NR, and actively regenerating RR, respectively) have been studied in vitro on a variety of substrates in serum-free media. RR retinas receive a prior conditioning lesion 12-14 days before explantation while NR retinas are explanted immediately after axotomy. The substrates include plastic (UN), polylysine (PL), polyornithine (PO), laminin (LM), fibronectin (FN), and collagen type I (CO). Two kinds of experimental situations were tested, one in which substrates were derivatized to plastic as a planar surface, while the second involved the addition of a substrate as a soluble supplement to dishes derivatized with PL. A neurite growth index (NGI), based on density of neurite outgrowth and axon lengths, is determined for each fiber type on all substrates. Embryonic and regenerating fibers are phenotypically different fiber types; each displays a specific "substrate preference profile" (SPP), reflecting differential growth on each substrate. ER neurites grow equally well on all planar substrates, including plastic, but do not grow on CO (SPP, LM = FN = PL = PO = UN greater than CO). Both NR and RR neurites show distinct substrate preferences, but RR neurites grow more vigorously (SPP, LM greater than CO greater than PL = PO greater than FN). In media supplemented with LM, FN or CO, the SPPs showed little change but the neurite bundle patterns were qualitatively different. Only regenerating neurites display clockwise growth in laminin (LM) and fibronectin (FN)-supplemented media. Under no conditions do embryonic fibers exhibit this pattern which suggests that embryonic and regenerating retinal fibers also differ in cytoskeletal organization. Evidence of intrinsic growth differences in vitro suggest that embryonic and regenerating retinal fibers may not respond to identical guidance cues during in vivo development and regeneration of retinotectal connections.  相似文献   

16.
Integrins are major receptors used by cells to interact with extracellular matrices. In this paper, we identify the first ligands for the beta 8 family of integrins, presenting evidence that integrin heterodimers containing the beta 8 subunit mediate interactions of chick sensory neurons with laminin-1, collagen IV, and fibronectin. A polyclonal antibody, anti-beta 8-Ex, was prepared to a bacterial fusion protein expressing an extracellular portion of the chicken beta 8 subunit. In nonreducing conditions, this antibody immunoprecipitated from surface-labeled embryonic dorsal root ganglia neurons a M(r) 100 k protein, the expected M(r) of the beta 8 subunit, and putative alpha subunit(s) of M(r) 120 k. Affinity-purified anti-beta 8-Ex strongly inhibited sensory neurite outgrowth on laminin-1, collagen IV, and fibronectin-coated substrata. Binding sites were identified in a heat-resistant domain in laminin-1 and in the carboxyl terminal, 40-kDa fibronectin fragment. On substrates coated with the carboxyl terminal fragment of fibronectin, antibodies to beta 1 and beta 8 were only partially effective alone, but were completely effective in combination, at inhibiting neurite outgrowth. Results thus indicate that the integrin beta 8 subunit in association with one or more alpha subunits forms an important set of extracellular matrix receptors on sensory neurons.  相似文献   

17.
The neurotransmitter serotonin has been shown to inhibit neurite outgrowth in specific identified neurons isolated from adult Helisoma. While in vivo experiments on Helisoma embryos have supported the hypothesis that endogenous serotonin regulates neurite outgrowth during embryonic development, direct effects of serotonin on embryonic neurons have not been measured. In the present study, cultures of dissociated embryonic neurons were used to test the direct actions of serotonin on developing embryonic neurons. Serotonin arrested neurite outgrowth in a significant percentage of elongating neurites in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, analysis of neurons with stable, nonelongating neurites revealed a novel response. Serotonin caused the reinitiation of neurite outgrowth in a significant percentage of nonelongating neurites. The arrestment of outgrowth and reinitiation of outgrowth occurred in similar percentages of elongating and nonelongating neurites, respectively. Parallel experiments on cultures of dissociated adult neurons were carried out to determine whether serotonin could also induce both inhibitory and stimulatory responses in adult cells. Serotonin arrested neurite outgrowth in a similar percentage of neurites to that observed in cultures of embryonic neurons. In contrast, serotonin did not reinitiate neurite outgrowth in a significant percentage of adult neurites. These data support the hypothesis that serotonin regulates neurite outgrowth in developing embryonic neurons. Furthermore, only some of these regulatory effects appear to be conserved from embryonic to adult neurons.  相似文献   

18.
Both L1 and N-CAM are present on optic axons early in the developing mouse retina and optic nerve. In in vitro assays on substrates of purified cell adhesion molecules cells derived from E13 mouse retinae showed vigorous neurite extension on L1 but not on N-CAM. Although retinal neurons on N-CAM showed only limited attachment to the substrate, they were able to form lamellipodia immediately around the cell perimeter. In contrast, similarly derived cortical cells showed extensive neurite outgrowth on both substrates. Under these culture conditions, nearly all of the L1 and N-CAM present in the cell membrane appeared to be sequestered on the lower surface of the growth cones and neurites, indicating that most of these cell adhesion molecules were involved in homophilic interactions. Our results suggest differential roles for L1 and N-CAM in intitiation and establishment of the optic pathway. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

19.
PTPmu regulates N-cadherin-dependent neurite outgrowth   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5       下载免费PDF全文
Cell adhesion is critical to the establishment of proper connections in the nervous system. Some receptor-type protein tyrosine phosphatases (RPTPs) have adhesion molecule-like extracellular segments with intracellular tyrosine phosphatase domains that may transduce signals in response to adhesion. PTPmu is a RPTP that mediates cell aggregation and is expressed at high levels in the nervous system. In this study, we demonstrate that PTPmu promotes neurite outgrowth of retinal ganglion cells when used as a culture substrate. In addition, PTPmu was found in a complex with N-cadherin in retinal cells. To determine the physiological significance of the association between PTPmu and N-cadherin, the expression level and enzymatic activity of PTPmu were perturbed in retinal explant cultures. Downregulation of PTPmu expression through antisense techniques resulted in a significant decrease in neurite outgrowth on an N-cadherin substrate, whereas there was no effect on laminin or L1-dependent neurite outgrowth. The overexpression of a catalytically inactive form of PTPmu significantly decreased neurite outgrowth on N-cadherin. These data indicate that PTPmu specifically regulates signals required for neurites to extend on an N-cadherin substrate, implicating reversible tyrosine phosphorylation in the control of N-cadherin function. Together, these results suggest that PTPmu plays a dual role in the regulation of neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

20.
Mature retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) do not normally regenerate severed axons after optic nerve injury and show only little neurite outgrowth in culture. However, RGCs can be transformed into an active regenerative state after lens injury (LI) enabling these neurons to regrow axons in vitro and in vivo. In the current study we investigated the role of CK1δ and CK1ε activity in neurite outgrowth of LI stimulated RGCs and nerve growth factor (NGF) stimulated PC12 cells, respectively. In both cell types CK1δ and ε were localized in granular particles aligned at microtubules in neurites and growth cones. Although LI treatment did not measurably affect the expression of CK1δ and ε, it significantly elevated the specific kinase activity in the retina. Similarly, CK1δ/ε specific kinase activity was also elevated in NGF treated PC12 cells compared with untreated controls. Neurite extension in PC12 cells was associated with a change in the activity of CK1δ C-terminal targeting kinases, suggesting that activity of these kinases might be necessary for neurite outgrowth. Pharmacological inactivation of CK1δ and ε markedly compromised neurite outgrowth of both, PC12 cells and LI stimulated RGCs in a concentration dependent manner. These data provide evidence for a so far unknown, but essential role of CK1 isoforms in neurite growth.  相似文献   

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