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Developmental Changes in the NGF Content in the Brain of Young,Growing, Low-Birth-Weight Rats
Authors:Sakamoto  Hideo  Kuzuya  Hiroshi  Tamaru  Masao  Sugimoto  Sukeo  Shimizu  Jun  Fukushima  Minoru  Yazaki  Takehiko  Yamazaki  Toshio  Nagata  Yutaka
Affiliation:(1) Division of Molecular Biology, Institute for Comprehensive Medical Science, Fujita Health University, Toyoake, Aichi, 470–11, Japan;(2) Department of Information Science, Faculty of Medical Engineering, Suzuka University of Medical Science and Technology, Suzuka, Mie, 510–02, Japan;(3) Research Group for Human Behavior Science, Institute for Comprehensive Medical Science, Fujita Health University, Japan;(4) Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, School of Medicine, Fujita Health University, Japan;(5) Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Fujita Health University, Japan;(6) Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Fujita Health University, Japan
Abstract:The NGF content in each region of the brain of four-week-old rats was ranked in the decreasing order of cerebral cortex, hippocampus, cerebellum, midbrain/diencephalon, and pons/medulla ob-longata, and the NGF concentration, in the decreasing order of hippocampus, cerebral cortex, cerebellum, midbrain/diencephalon, and pons/medulla oblongata in both AFD and SFD groups. The NGF content and concentration in the cerebral cortex were about the same value at each age between those in the AFD and SFD groups. Those in the hippocampus were a little higher in the SFD group than in the AFD group at the ages of three and four weeks, unlike those in the other regions, where the values for the cerebellum, midbrain/diencephalon and pons/medulla oblongata tended to be somewhat higher in the AFD group than in the SFD group. The NGF concentrations in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex increased with growth: the concentration in the hippocampus at four weeks of age was about 4-fold of that at one week in the AFD group and about 5.7-fold of that at one week in the SFD group; and likewise the concentration in the cerebral cortex at four weeks of age was about 5.3-fold in the AFD group and about 7-fold in the SFD group. The NGF concentrations in the cerebellum decreased, and those in midbrain/diencephalon and pons/medulla oblongata hardly changed with growth in either AFD or SFD group. From these results NGF may have stronger implications for the neuronal growth in the hippocampus compared with those in the lower brain regions of the SFD rats.
Keywords:Nerve growth factor  low-birth-weight rat  developmental change  brain
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