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Ascorbic Acid in Mesencephalic Cultures: Effects on Dopaminergic Neuron Development
Authors:Henry H Kalir  Catherine Mytilineou
Institution:Department of Neurology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York, 10029.
Abstract:Ascorbic acid exists in high intracellular concentrations in fetal rat brain. In mesencephalic cultures the cellular ascorbic acid content drops sharply to undetectable levels when no ascorbic acid is added to the medium, thus creating a model of scorbutic neuronal tissue and affording the study of ascorbic acid's effects on mesencephalic cell development and function. Cultures treated with 0.2 mM ascorbic acid were compared with controls (scorbutic cultures) by using morphological and biochemical indices. Ascorbic acid cultures at 7 and 14 days in vitro showed a marked increase in glial proliferation on glial fibrillary acidic protein staining and increased neurite growth and number on tyrosine hydroxylase staining. Significantly higher dopamine uptake and levels of dopamine and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid were also observed after 7 and 14 days of ascorbic acid treatment. The capacity to accumulate ascorbic acid and the ability to retain the intracellular ascorbic acid developed gradually as the cultures matured. Ascorbic acid reached the embryonal levels by day 14 in vitro. We conclude that although neuronal cultures can survive and grow in the absence of detectable levels of ascorbic acid, its presence exerts a broad effect on dopamine neuron morphology and biochemical functioning either directly or through increased glial proliferation, or possibly both.
Keywords:Ascorbic acid  Catecholamines  Cell culture  Dopamine  Glia
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