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Temporal changes in embryonic nerve cell recognition: correlate with cholinergic development in aggregate cultures
Authors:G Ramirez  N W Seeds
Institution:1. Centro de Biología Molecular (CSIC-UAM), Velazquez 144, Madrid 6, Spain;2. Department of Biophysics and Genetics, University of Colorado Medical Center, Denver, Colorado 80262 USA
Abstract:Chick embryo retina and optic tectum cells can be dissociated into single cells and then reaggregated in suspension cultures to give highly organized and differentiated aggregates. These aggregates show a degree of cholinergic differentiation that is characteristic of each cell type; the low activity of choline acetyltransferase in the optic tectum aggregates probably reflects the condition of natural deafferentation inherent in the culture situation. It is possible, in this respect, to study the retina-tectum interaction in vitro by preparing coaggregates including both types of cells. When coaggregates are prepared from tectum and retina cells of the same developmental age, the activity of choline acetyltransferase measured in the coaggregates is consistently higher than would be expected from the simple addition of the activities of the component cells, pointing to some kind of metabolic synergism between retinal and tectal cells. As for acetylcholinesterase, this synergism occurs only under special circumstances, and it is generally less marked. No synergism was observed when retina and tectum cells of different developmental age were coaggregated, suggesting the existence of a temporal control of neuronal interaction specificity. On the other hand, the synergism is only observed between neuronal systems that are known to establish synaptic connections during normal in vivo development: No interaction could be detected when either retinal or tectal cells were combined with telencephalon, cerebellum, or liver cells. Experimental evidence is presented suggesting that the retina-tectum interaction depends on intimate cell-cell contact, and it is not mediated by freely diffusible molecules. Neurotransmission-related metabolic studies in coaggregates seem to offer a promising tool to study recognition-interaction phenomena in groups of neurons establishing synaptic links during development.
Keywords:To whom all correspondence should be addressed  
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