Phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated neurofilament proteins: distribution in the rat hippocampus and early changes after kainic acid induced seizures |
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Authors: | Qiner Yang Shu Wang Jan-Erik Karlsson Anders Hamberger Kenneth G. Haglid |
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Affiliation: | Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, University of Göteborg, Medieinaregatan 5, 413 90 Göteborg, Sweden |
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Abstract: | The regional distribution of neurofilament proteins in the rat hippocampus and their early changes after kainic acid induced seizures were investigated immunocytochemically with antibodies against light weight neurofilament, phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated heavy weight neurofilament. The light weight and non-phosphorylated heavy weight neurofilaments were distributed more unevenly than the phosphorylated neurofilament. The perikarya and processes of pyramidal cells in the CA3 field contained the highest light weight and non-phosphorylated heavy weight neurofilaments, while the perikarya of granule cells contained only few light weight neurofilament and the perikarya of CAI pyramidal cells were even devoid of immunoreactivity of both light and heavy weight neurofilaments. The fiber staining of the light weight and non-phosphorylated heavy weight neurofilaments, especially the former, was less in the CAI field and molecular layer of dentate gyrus. The phosphorylated neurofilament immunoreactivity was identified only in axons. Mossy fibers, the axons of granule cells, contained the light weight and phosphorylated heavy weight neurofilaments, but not the non-phosphorylated neurofilament. Seven days after the kainic acid induced seizures, the phosphorylated neurofilament staining was greatly reduced in the CAI and inner molecular layer of the dentate gyrus, probably resulting from the axonal degeneration of the Schaffer collaterals and the commissural/associational fibers. Furthermore, the non-phosphorylated neurofilament appeared in the mossy fibers of the CA3 stratum lucidum, which normally do not express such immunoreactivity. The results indicate that the neurofilaments are altered following the neuronal degeneration and post lesional plasticity caused by the kainic acid administration. Therefore, the examination of various phosphorylated neurofilaments may offer a comprehensive understanding of major hippocampul pathways, axonal plasticity and the possible roles of neurofilaments in the hippocampus following excitotoxic insults. |
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Keywords: | Ethanol fixation Immunoblot Immunocytochemistry Kainic acid Phosphorylation |
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