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1.
Ontogeny of cholinergic neurons in the mouse forebrain   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The development of cholinergic neurons in the mouse forebrain was studied by immunocytochemistry with a monoclonal antibody to choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the rate-limiting enzyme for acetylcholine synthesis. Since this antibody stained dividing cells in ventricular germinal zones as well as differentiating neurons, likely routes of migration could be inferred on the basis of the location of immunoreactive (IR) cells at different gestational ages. Germinal zones for cholinergic cells were observed in all ventricular zones of the forebrain with the ventral zones generating the earliest cells by gestational day 13.5 (GD13.5). On GD14, ChAT IR cells were visible in the germinal zones of the eye, olfactory ventricle, anterior horn, and dorsolateral aspect of the lateral ventricle, lateral ganglionic eminence, ventro- and dorsolateral third ventricle, and in the pineal anlage (epiphysis). ChAT IR neurons continued to develop in these and additional germinal zones on GD15, including the medial, dorsal, and dorsomedial walls of the lateral ventricle, and the medial and dorsal ganglionic eminence. On GD16, ChAT IR neurons were located in the prelimbic, pyriform, and parietal cortices and the lamina terminalis, and a cluster of IR cells was observed in the ventricular zone of the caudatopallial angle. On GD17-18, neurons in the anterior olfactory nucleus, olfactory tubercle, horizontal and vertical nucleus of the diagonal band, and medial septal nucleus stained more darkly and were multipolar, whereas immature bipolar neurons appeared to continue their migration into the hippocampus and along major fiber tracts, such as the corpus callosum, external capsule, fornix and anterior commissure. This study provides a comprehensive view of the zones of origin, probable routes of migration, and final destination of cholinergic neurons in the mouse forebrain.  相似文献   

2.
The distribution of choline acetyltransferase-immunoreactive (ChAT-IR) neurons was studied in the brain of the common marmoset by using immunohistochemistry. ChAT-IR neurons were found in the medial septal nucleus, vertical and horizontal limb nuclei of the diagonal band, the nucleus basalis of Meynert, pedunculopontine nucleus and laterodorsal tegmental nucleus, and also in the striatum, habenula, and brainstem cranial nerve motor nuclei. The organization of ChAT-IR neurons in the basal forebrain, midbrain, and pons is consistent with the Ch1-Ch6 nomenclature introduced by Mesulam et al. ('83). The combination of the retrograde transport of HRP-WGA with ChAT immunohistochemistry revealed the distribution of neurons in the Ch4 cell group projecting to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. The activity of ChAT was highest in limbic cortical structures, such as the hippocampus, and lowest in association areas of the neocortex. Lesions at various loci in the basal forebrain resulted in differential patterns of ChAT loss in the cortex, which suggests some degree of topographical organization of Ch4 projections to the cortical mantle.  相似文献   

3.
To characterize the role of NGF in the development of forebrain cholinergic neurons, we established primary cell culture systems to grow these cells under controlled in vitro conditions. Cultures of dissociated cells were prepared from the septal area of fetal (E17) rats, which contained part of the group of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. Cultures were treated either with NGF (100 ng/ml) or with an antiserum against NGF (1:500 dilution). To assess the influence of non-neuronal cells, 2 types of high-density cultures were prepared: mixed neuronal-glial cultures and pure neuronal cultures. Cholinergic neurons were identified using choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) immunocytochemistry and AChE cytochemistry. Receptors for NGF (NGF-R) were located immunocytochemically using monoclonal antibodies against rat NGF-R. We report that, first, NGF-R are exclusively localized on cholinergic neurons in septal cultures. All neurons labeled with antibodies against NGF-R also contained AChE. Twenty-one percent of all AChE-positive neurons were not stained in NGF-R immunocytochemistry (AChE has earlier been shown to be colocalized with ChAT in septal cultures). Second, NGF treatment increases and anti-NGF treatment reduces the number of AChE-positive neurons in cultures of low plating density, suggesting that NGF promotes survival of septal cholinergic neurons in these cultures. In cultures of high plating density, NGF increased the number of NGF-R and ChAT-positive neurons without affecting the number of AChE-positive neurons in these cultures. These results suggest that exogenous NGF is not required for survival of cholinergic neurons in high-density cultures but stimulates the expression of ChAT and NGF-R. Third, NGF stimulates fiber growth of septal cholinergic neurons, as assessed by computerized image analysis of AChE-positive neurons. Fourth, NGF specifically increases ChAT and AChE activities in septal cultures. These NGF-mediated increases in enzyme activities are more pronounced when neurons are grown together with glial cells. In pure neuronal cultures, NGF increased ChAT and AChE activities by 101 and 16%, and in mixed neuronal-glial cultures by 318 and 87%, respectively. Anti-NGF blocked the effects of NGF but failed to reduce ChAT and AChE activities below control levels in cultures of high plating density. Fifth, astrocytes attenuate the expression of ChAT and AChE by septal neurons in the absence of NGF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
NGF is a neurotrophic factor for basal forebrain cholinergic neurons and may serve to counteract the cholinergic deficits that are observed in Alzheimer's disease. Prior to the introduction of clinical trials, it is essential that recombinant human NGF (rhNGF) be produced and that its actions on target cells in the CNS be demonstrated. We prepared rhNGF and examined its actions on fetal rat brain neurons in culture including, in particular, the cholinergic neurons of the basal forebrain. rhNGF was more potent in increasing choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity in septal cultures than NGF purified from mouse salivary glands (mNGF). ED50s of the beta-NGF dimers were 4.9 pM for rhNGF and 12.4 pM for mNGF. The maximal ChAT activity response was achieved at approximately 35 pM with both NGFs and their efficacies were not significantly different. The two NGFs were not additive in effect. Identical to the results with mNGF, rhNGF strongly enhanced the intensity of ChAT immunostaining in septal cultures. Neither rhNGF nor mNGF affected the appearance of the cultures under phase-contrast illumination. Survival of cells at very low plating density on polyornithine/laminin-coated culture dishes was not affected by rhNGF or mNGF. Protein content and the uptake of GABA were also unaffected. At concentrations of up to 10 micrograms/ml, rhNGF did not significantly increase uptake of dopamine into cultures of ventral mesencephalon. We conclude that rhNGF produces potent and selective actions on cholinergic neurons of the basal forebrain as previously shown for mNGF.  相似文献   

5.
The calcium-dependent cytoplasmic PLA2 (cPLA2) is an 85-kDa cytosolic enzyme that has been detected in cytosolic fractions from rat brain. With immunocytochemical methods, this cPLA2 is distributed throughout rat brain. Very dense immunostaining is observed in the superior olivary nucleus, periolivary nucleus, facial motor nucleus and dorsal cochlear nucleus in hindbrain whereas light immunostaining is seen in forebrain and midbrain areas. Assays of cPLA2 activity in forebrain, midbrain and hindbrain show the highest specific activity in the hindbrain. The distribution of cPLA2 coincides with that of protein kinase C activity in rat brain. The presence of cPLA2 and PKC in hindbrain suggests that these enzymes play a central role in neurotransmitter release, long-term potentiation and neuritogenesis in this area under normal conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Nerve growth factor (NGF) is a neuronotrophic protein. Its effects on developing peripheral sensory and sympathetic neurons have been extensively characterized, but it is not clear whether NGF plays a role during the development of central nervous system neurons. To address this point, we examined the effect of NGF on the activity of neurotransmitter enzymes in several brain regions. Intracerebroventricular injections of highly purified mouse NGF had a marked effect on the activity of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), a selective marker of cholinergic neurons. NGF elicited prominent increases in ChAT activity in the basal forebrain of neonatal rats, including the septum and a region which contains neurons of the nucleus basalis and substantia innominata. NGF also increased ChAT activity in the hippocampus and neocortex, terminal regions for the fibers of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. In analogy with the response of developing peripheral neurons, the NGF effect was shown to be selective for basal forebrain cholinergic cells and to be dose-dependent. Furthermore, septal neurons closely resembled sympathetic neurons in the time course of their response to NGF. These observations suggest that endogenous NGF does play a role in the development of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons.  相似文献   

7.
Previous work with psychophysically-based collision methods and pharmacological manipulation suggests a role in medial forebrain bundle (MFB) self-stimulation for neurons lying along the midline between the cerebral hemispheres, in the mid- and/or hindbrain. Also, recently-proposed models of the anatomical substrate for medial forebrain bundle stimulation reward suggest that at least part of the directly-activated axons of this substrate arise from mid- and/or hindbrain somata, bifurcate, and send bilateral projections to the MFB of each hemisphere. Branches of these axons are thought to cross the midline at some point near the ventral tegmental area. This study examines the effects on MFB stimulation reward of lesioning midbrain structures that lie along the midline between hemispheres. In 13 rats, lesions of the median raphe, the decussation of the superior cerebellar peduncle, or the interpeduncular nucleus were all ineffective in altering the stimulation frequency required to maintain half-maximal levels of operant responding for stimulation reward. These results are discussed in terms of implications for recent models of the anatomical substrate for brain stimulation reward.  相似文献   

8.
We have used an antibody to glutaraldehyde fixation complexes of gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA) to stain the developing central nervous system of Xenopus laevis embryos. Neuronal somata, growth cones, axons, and dendrites were found with GABA-like immunoreactivity. Transmission electron microscope (TEM) observations were made of axons and synapses. By observation of the earliest stages of differentiation of neurons, seven classes of putative GABAergic interneurons were discerned. 1) Ascending neurons are first stained in the hindbrain at stage 26 and later extend caudally in the spinal cord. They have ascending ipsilateral axons. 2) Midhindbrain reticulospinal neurons are first stained at stage 25 and develop as a compact group with descending ipsilateral and contralateral axons. 3) Vestibular complex commissural neurons are first stained at stage 29/30 in a dorsal position near the entry of the seventh and eighth cranial nerves. They have ventral commissural axons that descend contralaterally and their somata form a compact mass. 4) Rostral hindbrain commissural neurons are first stained at stage 33/34 just rostral to the entry of the trigeminal nerve. They each have a decussating projection. 5) Rostral midbrain neurons are first stained in the midbrain at stage 29/30 and are later associated with prominent dorsal and ventral commissures. 6) Optic tract and 7) rostral forebrain neurons are found in the forebrain associated with strongly stained axon tracts. The direction of axonal growth from its earliest stages was distinct for each class of hindbrain and spinal cord neuron.  相似文献   

9.
Although it is well known that magnocellular cholinergic basal forebrain neurons are trophically responsive to nerve growth factor (NGF) and contain NGF receptors (NGFr), the exact distribution of forebrain NGFr-immunoreactive neurons and the degree to which cholinergic neurons are colocalized with them have remained in question. In this study we employed a very sensitive double-labelling method and examined in the same tissue section the distribution and cellular features of NGFr-positive and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)-immunolabelled neurons within the rat basal forebrain. Throughout this region the majority of magnocellular basal forebrain neurons were immunoreactive for both NGFr and ChAT. However, a small percentage of neurons in the ventral portion of the vertical limb of the diagonal band of Broca were immunoreactive only for NGFr, whereas a larger population of magnocellular neurons in the substantia innominata exhibited only ChAT immunoreactivity. No NGFr-immunoreactive cells were found associated with ChAT-positive neurons in the striatum, neocortex, or hippocampus, and no single-labelled NGFr-immunoreactive neurons were found outside the basal forebrain area, except for a large number of positive-labelled cells along the ventricular walls of the third ventricle. In addition to its function in maintaining the normal integrity of the basal forebrain and cholinergic, peripheral sympathetic, and neural-crest-derived sensory neurons, NGF may also have a role in the growth of these neurons after damage to the nervous system. To examine this postulate the hippocampus was denervated of its septal input and examined 8 weeks later. Two populations of neurons were found to have undergone collateral sprouting--namely, the midline magnocellular cholinergic neurons of the dorsal hippocampus and the sympathetic noradrenergic neurons of the superior cervical ganglion. Both of these neuronal populations also stained strongly for NGFr. In contrast, the small intrinsic cholinergic neurons of the hippocampus exhibited neither sprouting response nor staining for NGFr. In view of these results, we suggest that the differing sprouting responses demonstrated by these three neuronal populations may be due to their responsiveness to NGF, as indicated by the presence or absence of NGF receptors.  相似文献   

10.
Functional effects of prenatal cocaine exposure may be mediated in part by changes in catecholaminergic development. The present study examined whether cocaine administration influenced fetal brain activity of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the rate-limiting enzyme in catecholamine biosynthesis. Subcutaneous (s.c.) injection of pregnant rats with 40 mg/kg of cocaine HCl daily from gestational day (GD) 8 to GD20 resulted in an 8.7% stimulation of fetal whole-brain TH activity compared to controls. We then switched to a s.c. implantation procedure involving Silastic capsules filled with 80 mg of cocaine base dissolved in polyethylene glycol (PEG). Implantation of 2 such capsules on GD18 produced a 28% increase in fetal TH activity measured only 3 days later on GD21. Subsequent experiments demonstrated that GD14 implantation was equally effective in stimulating fetal TH activity on GD17, but that the enzyme was unaffected in the brains of the treated dams. When cocaine-containing capsules were implanted on GD18, removed on GD21, and the females were allowed to deliver normally, offspring TH activity was still elevated on postnatal day 10 but not later. Finally, the presence of cocaine implants from GD18 to GD21 had no influence on fetal brain neurotransmitter and metabolite concentrations, however, the treated dams exhibited significant reductions in dopamine (DA) and the serotonin metabolite, 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid. We conclude that maternal cocaine implants rapidly but transiently stimulate TH activity in the fetal brain, and that such stimulation prevented the DA depletion observed in the dams.  相似文献   

11.
Lewy bodies (LBs), the pathological hallmark of Lewy body disease (LBD), contain α-synuclein, as well as other proteins. In this study, we examined the relationship of α-synuclein to two rate-limiting enzymes in neurotransmitter synthesis, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT). Double-labeling immunohistochemistry for α-synuclein and TH revealed TH immunoreactivity within LBs in catecholaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra and locus coeruleus, but not within LBs in cholinergic neurons in the pedunculopontine nucleus and nucleus basalis of Meynert. In contrast, ChAT immunoreactivity within LBs was detected in cholinergic, but not within LBs in catecholaminergic neurons. The amygdala was devoid of TH and ChAT positive LBs, although a few Lewy neurites contained ChAT immunoreactivity. Further analysis revealed two distinct patterns of neurotransmitter immunoreactivity within LBs. One pattern had diffuse co-localization of TH or ChAT with α-synuclein as in cortical-type LBs, while the other had intense TH or ChAT immunoreactivity in the LB core surrounded by a peripheral rim of α-synuclein as in brainstem-type LBs. Levels of both TH and ChAT were higher in brainstem-type LBs than in the cytoplasm of the same neuron or in neurons from the same case devoid of LBs. Given the fact that LB-containing neurons have decreases in cytoplasmic TH and ChAT immunoreactivity, these results suggest LBs may disrupt cholinergic and catecholaminergic neurotransmitter production by sequestration of the rate-limiting enzymes for acetylcholine and catecholamine synthesis.  相似文献   

12.
Nerve growth factor (NGF), a well-characterized target-derived growth factor, has been postulated to promote neuronal differentiation and survival of the basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. In the present paper, we demonstrate that a developmental change in NGF action occurs in postnatal rat basal forebrain cholinergic neurons in culture. Firstly, NGF acts as maturation factor by increasing choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity and acts later as a survival factor. In dissociated cell cultures of septal neurons from early postnatal (P1-4) rats, ChAT activities were increased by the addition of NGF. That is, ChAT activities in P1 septal cells cultured for 7 days was increased 4-fold in the presence of NGF at a concentration of 100 ng/ml. However, the number of the acetylcholinesterase (AChE)-positive neurons was not significantly different between these groups. In contrast, septal neurons from P8 to P14 rats showed different responses to NGF. Although the P14 septal neurons in culture for 7 days without NGF lost about half of the ChAT activity during a 7-day cultivation, cells cultured with NGF retained the activity at the initial level. The number of AChE-positive neurons counted in cultures with NGF was much greater than the number without NGF. These results suggest that, during the early postnatal days, the action of NGF on the septal cholinergic neurons in culture changes from induction of ChAT activity to the promotion of cholinergic neuronal cell survival. During this developmental period in vivo, septal neurons are terminating their projections to the hippocampal formation. Similar NGF-regulated changes in cholinergic neurons were observed in cultured postnatal neurons from vertical limb of diagonal band. An analogy has been pointed out between the neuronal death of the basal forebrain cholinergic neurons and a similar neuronal death in senile dementia, especially Alzheimer's type. The work reported here might present a possibility that NGF could play a role in preventing the loss of the basal forebrain cholinergic neurons in this disease.  相似文献   

13.
The well-documented role of nerve growth factor (NGF) in the function of cholinergic neurons in the mammalian basal forebrain can be regarded as a paradigm for the action of trophic substances on CNS neurons. Although several growth factors have been identified in recent years, the specificities and importance of such factors for the development of the nervous system are still unknown. In the present study it has been tested whether NGF affects the group of pedunculopontine cholinergic neurons. This population, which has been described in detail only recently, is located more caudally than but resembles, in some aspects, the basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. The cell bodies are located in the metencephalic pedunculopontine and dorsolateral tegmental nuclei. Similar to the forebrain cholinergic neurons, they are medium to large in size and ascend centrally with long axons. Projection areas are widespread throughout the mesencephalon and diencephalon. Dissociated pontine and septal cells of fetal rat brain (embryo ages E14 to E17) were grown in culture for 7 to 14 days in the presence or absence of NGF. Furthermore, a possible action of retinoic acid and ciliary neuronotrophic factor (CNTF) on cholinergic neurons of both the basal forebrain and the pontine area were tested. Differentiation of cultured cholinergic neurons was assessed by biochemical determination of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity and by immunocytochemical staining for ChAT. NGF in concentrations of 1 to 1,000 ng/ml medium increased the number of immunostained cells and the staining intensity in ChAT immunocytochemistry and enhanced ChAT activity by at least 100% above control levels in septal cultures, thus confirming earlier results. In marked contrast, the same concentrations of NGF failed to influence ChAT activity or immunocytochemical staining in cultures of the pontine area. Retinoic acid (10(-8) M to 10(-5) M) and CNTF (0.2 and 2.0 ng/ml, corresponding to 1 and 10 trophic units, as defined in the ciliary ganglion cell assay) failed to enhance ChAT activity in either culture system and did not potentiate the NGF-mediated increase of ChAT activity in septal cultures. Our results, which indicate that pedunculopontine cholinergic neurons do not respond to NGF during development, are in line with those of NGF-receptor visualization studies that failed to demonstrate such receptors on cholinergic pontine cells in postnatal and adult rats. The findings further underline the specificity of NGF action in the central nervous system and, in particular, do not support the idea of transmitter-specific neurotrophic factors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
Septal cholinergic neurons project to the hippocampus and release acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter involved in learning and memory. The enzyme choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) is responsible for synthesizing acetylcholine. Promoting ChAT activity and acetylcholine release can lead to new treatments for neurodegenerative diseases with cholinergic deficits, such as Alzheimer's disease. We present evidence that the synthetic molecule C3d, which is a peptide mimetic of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM), promotes ChAT activity in cultures of rat embryonic septal neurons. Our data demonstrate that ChAT activity triggered by C3d is dependent on the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) and the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. C3d did not affect the number of cholinergic neurons in culture, indicating that NCAM homophilic binding enhances ChAT activity, without affecting cholinergic cell survival. In conclusion, the NCAM mimetic peptide C3d promotes ChAT activity in septal neurons through FGFR and MAPK. These findings are relevant to the design of new strategies aimed at stimulating cholinergic function and improving cognition in disorders such as Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

15.
The topographical distribution of cholinergic cell bodies has been studied in the rat brain and spinal cord by choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)-immunohistochemistry and acetylcholinesterase (AChE)-pharmacohistochemistry using diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP). The ChAT-containing cells and the cells that stained intensely for AChE 4-8 hr after DFP were mapped in detail on an atlas of the forebrain (telencephalon, diencephalon) hindbrain (mesencephalon, rhombencephalon) and cervical cord (C2, C6). Striking similarities were observed between ChAT-positive cells and neuronal soma that stained intensely for AChE both in terms of cytoarchitectural characteristics, and with respect to the distribution of the labelled cells in many areas of the central nervous system (CNS). In the forebrain these areas include the caudatoputamen, nucleus accumbens, medial septum, nucleus of the diagonal band, magnocellular preoptic nucleus and nucleus basalis magnocellularis. In contrast, a marked discrepancy was observed in the hypothalamus and ventral thalamus where there were many neurons that stained intensely for AChE, but where there was an absence of ChAT-positive cells. No cholinergic perikarya were detected in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, amygdala and dorsal diencephalon by either histochemical procedure. In the hindbrain, all the motoneurons constituting the well-established cranial nerve nuclei (III-VII, IX-XII) contained ChAT and exhibited intense staining for AChE. Further, a close correspondence was observed in the distribution of labeled neurons obtained by the two histochemical procedures in the midbrain and pontine tegmentum, including the laterodorsal tegmental nucleus, some areas in the caudal pontine and bulbar reticular formation, and the central gray of the closed medulla oblongata. On the other hand, AChE-intense cells were found in the nucleus raphe magnus, ventral part of gigantocellular reticular nucleus, and flocculus of the cerebellum, where ChAT-positive cells were rarely observed. According to both techniques, no positive cells were seen in the cerebellar nuclei, the pontine nuclei, or the nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis. Large ventral horn motoneurons and, occasionally, cells in the intermediomedial zone of the cervical cord displayed ChAT-immunoreactivity and intense AChE staining. On the other hand, AChE-intense cells were detected in the dorsal portion of the lateral funiculus, but immunoreactive cells were not found in any portion of the spinal cord white matter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
In the central nervous system, nerve growth factor (NGF) affects basal forebrain cholinergic neurons during early development and in the adult mammalian brain. These neurons are located in medial septum, diagonal band of Broca, and nucleus basalis of Meynert. While the effects of NGF on the development of septal cholinergic neurons are well documented, only little is known about the influence of NGF on development of cholinergic neurons in the nucleus basalis. In addition to the basal forebrain cholinergic neurons, there are cholinergic interneurons in the corpus striatum, which form an anatomically and functionally distinct population of cholinergic neurons. These striatal interneurons have been reported to respond to NGF during early development; however, it is not known whether the effects of NGF on their development are similar to those on septal cholinergic neurons. We prepared cultures of dissociated cells from fetal rat septum, striatum, and nucleus basalis and investigated the development of cholinergic neurons localized in these three different areas in the presence or absence of NGF. We now report that, first, cholinergic neurons of striatum and nucleus basalis develop a more extensive fiber network and contain more acetylcholinesterase (AChE) per neuron than do cholinergic neurons of septum. The amount of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) per cholinergic neuron is approximately the same in all three culture types when grown in the absence of NGF. Second, NGF treatment increases and anti-NGF treatment decreases the number of AChE-positive neurons in cultures of low plating density, suggesting that NGF is able to promote survival of cholinergic neurons of all three areas studied. Third, NGF increases the total length of fibers and the number of branching points of cholinergic neurons in septal cultures but not in cultures of striatum and nucleus basalis. Fourth, NGF treatment increases AChE activity in septal but not in nucleus basalis or striatal cultures, suggesting that AChE activity reflects the extent of the fiber network of cholinergic neurons of all areas. Fifth, NGF treatment produces severalfold elevations in ChAT activity in septal cultures and more modest increases in cultures of nucleus basalis and striatum, suggesting that NGF is able to stimulate ChAT activity also in the absence of a stimulatory effect on survival and fiber growth. Our results demonstrate that, during early development, NGF is able to affect survival and differentiation of all three populations of forebrain cholinergic neurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Six-day 'binge' ethanol intoxication postnatal days (PD) 4-9 delays up-regulation of gamma-aminobutyric acid type A receptors (GABAARs) in developing rat septal neurons [Dev. Brain Res. 130 (2001) 25]. This distortion occurs during synaptogenesis and could contribute to cognitive dysfunction in fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). Here, we asked two questions concerning requirements for vulnerability to GABAAR blunting by ethanol. First, we asked whether receptor blunting required PD 4-9 ethanol exposure in rat pups and found that just a brief 2-day exposure (PD 8-9) was as effective as all 6 days. However, 2-day exposure on PD 4-5 was ineffective, showing that 'binge' timing was important. We also asked whether 'binge' exposure directly inhibited intrinsic processes of septal neurons and could blunt GABAARs on cells maturing outside the brain. Embryonic septal neurons grown in serum-free dispersed culture developed extensive dendritic arborizations, spontaneous synaptic activity and robust whole-cell GABAAR function, but surprisingly, did not show developmental up-regulation of GABAARs like septal neurons maturing in vivo [Brain Res. 810 (1998) 100]. Furthermore, age-matched 6-day 'binge' ethanol exposure did not blunt GABAAR function in septal neurons in vitro. These results suggest developmental mechanisms driving up-regulation of GABAAR function in septal neurons in vivo briefly becomes vulnerable to ethanol insult in early postnatal life. While septal neurons express comparable functional GABAARs whether maturing in vivo or in vitro, vulnerability to ethanol-induced receptor blunting requires elements of an intact brain environment not replicated in culture.  相似文献   

18.
K M Guthrie  M Leon 《Brain research》1989,497(1):117-131
Olfactory nerve input is required for the normal expression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) by dopaminergic neurons in the glomerular region of the rodent main olfactory bulb. To determine whether the olfactory nerve exerts a similar influence on neurons in other brain regions, we performed unilateral bulbectomies in rat pups on postnatal day 5-7 and examined the brains 2-6 months later, after the regenerated olfactory nerve had penetrated the forebrain. Tissue was stained for TH, dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DBH) and olfactory marker protein immunoreactivity. We observed novel TH-immunoreactivity in neurons located in those areas of the adult forebrain which received olfactory nerve fibers, particularly the rostral extension of the subependymal layer. Many of these neurons resembled the periglomerular cells of the olfactory bulb. No cell staining for DBH was observed in these areas, suggesting the possible dopaminergic phenotype of these neurons. Our data indicate that afferent regulation of neurotransmitter expression by the olfactory nerve is not limited to the cells of the olfactory bulb.  相似文献   

19.
Fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) are multifunctional growth factors that increase the proliferation of mesoderm- and neuroectoderm-derived cells and promote neuronal survival and neurite outgrowth in various regions of the brain, yet the physiological role(s) they may play in nervous system function and/or development is unclear. The present report demonstrates, using a well-characterized system, avian sympathetic neurons in vitro, that acidic and basic FGFs increase ChAT but decrease tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) activity in these cells, without affecting neuronal growth and survival. Heparin, which binds to FGFs with a high affinity, potentiates the activity of FGF on ChAT, but not TH. The time course of FGF action on the neurotransmitter phenotype is slow since effects start to appear after 1-2 d only. FGFs may thus modulate the activities of ChAT and TH by differentially regulating the expression of the genes coding for these enzymes. In conclusion, this report provides evidence supporting the hypothesis that FGFs may play a role in regulating neurotransmitter expression in sympathetic neurons during development independently of any effect on neuronal survival.  相似文献   

20.
Degeneration of cholinergic neurons in the medial septum and the diagonal band of Broca is a frequent neuropathological feature of Alzheimer's disease. To determine whether an immune process can injure these basal forebrain cholinergic neurons, we serially immunized guinea pigs with septal cholinergic hybrid cells (SN-56). Following immunization, a relatively selective damage of septal cholinergic neurons, reduction in septal choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity and decrease in acetylcholine release in hippocampus were detected. Serum IgG from guinea pigs immunized with SN-56 cells and stereotactically injected into the medial septal region of rats produced a loss of ChAT activity in the medial septum, frontal cortex and hippocampus, together with impairment of learning and long term spatial memory. These data suggest that relatively selective damage to septal cholinergic neurons can be caused by an immune-mediated process in experimental animals.  相似文献   

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