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Rat brain glial cells in culture: Effects of brain extracts on the development of oligodendroglia-like cells
Authors:Brigitte Pettmann  Jean-Pierre Delaunoy  Joël Courageot  Ginette Devilliers  Monique Sensenbrenner
Institution:Centre de Neurochimie du CNRS, 11 rue Humann, 67085 Strasbourg Cedex, France
Abstract:Cells dissociated from brains of newborn rats and grown on plastic surfaces develop into a glial culture, composed of at least three morphologically different cell types. The predominating cell type consists of astroglial cells, which form a monolayer. The second cell type, rarely observed, consists of ependymal cells. The third type consists of small cells scattered upon the astroglial layer. After 3 weeks very few of these small cells remain and the glial culture develops into a more homogenous appearance, mainly composed of astroglial cells. The effects of various brain extracts on the development of the small cell type was investigated. The treatment by either rat or chick brain extracts caused an increase in the number of these cells, which were seen to form clusters. Brain extracts from older animals have a stronger effect than brain extracts from younger animals. These data suggest that factors contained in the brain during and after the myelination period influence the development of this cell type in dissociated cultures. The small cells were tentatively identified as oligodendroglial cells by ultrastructural and histochemical criteria. They did not contain acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and did not bind tetanus toxin. Furthermore, they did not contain glial fibrillary acidic (GFA) protein. But carbonic anhydrase II (CAII) was found in them at light and electron-microscopical level. CAII was found to be localized essentially on the plasmic membrane and on the endoplasmic reticulum of these cultured oligodendroglial cells.
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