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Immunocytochemical distribution of transferrin and its receptor in the developing chicken nervous system
Authors:T H Oh  G J Markelonis  G M Royal  B S Bregman
Abstract:Transferrin is the plasma protein responsible for iron transport in all vertebrates. While transferrin is known to have growth-promoting activity on a variety of cells in culture, the role of transferrin and its membrane receptor in neuronal development is unknown. Using antibodies to transferrin and transferrin receptors, we studied the immunocytochemical localization of transferrin and its receptor in developing chicken neural tissues by the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. In 5-day-old embryonic brain, germinal cells of the ventricular zone showed a positive reaction for transferrin receptors but were negative for transferrin. By 6-7 days, transferrin-positive cells were seen in the inner layer of the ventricular zone and a few 'patches' of transferrin-positive cells were also seen in the adjacent area. By 10 days, large neurons throughout the brain were strongly positive for transferrin. By 11-16 days, all neurons in the brain showed a strong positive reaction for the protein. Thereafter, the transferrin-positive reaction became gradually weaker in neurons whereas the walls of blood capillaries showed a positive reaction for transferrin. In the adult brain, neurons showed very weak or negative staining. A similar staining pattern for transferrin was observed in the developing spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia (DRG). By 10-12 days, both spinal cord neurons and DRG neurons showed strong reactions for transferrin. Thereafter, the transferrin-positive reaction gradually diminished in older spinal cord neurons and completely disappeared from DRG neurons. Cultured cerebral hemisphere, spinal cord, and DRG neurons showed positive staining reactions for both transferrin and its receptor. Our results suggest that: transferrin is initially taken up by developing neurons from cerebrospinal fluid via receptor-mediated endocytosis; the accumulation of transferrin ultimately reaches a maximum level within immunoreactive neurons and then declines just prior to hatching; in contrast to other CNS neurons, DRG neurons accumulate transferrin only briefly and then become negative for transferrin by immunocytochemistry; and after closure of the blood-brain barrier, transferrin may reach neurons by transport across capillaries into the 'paravascular' spaces. In view of these results, transferrin may play some important but unrecognized role in early neuronal development in vivo as well as in vitro.
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