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Growth and degeneration of axons on astrocyte surfaces: Effects on extracellular matrix and on later axonal growth
Author(s) -
Ard March D.,
Schachner Melitta,
Rapp Jeffrey T.,
Faissner Andreas
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
glia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.954
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1098-1136
pISSN - 0894-1491
DOI - 10.1002/glia.440090403
Subject(s) - neurite , astrocyte , biology , extracellular matrix , axon , microbiology and biotechnology , fibronectin , retina , extracellular , laminin , growth cone , neuroglia , neuroscience , anatomy , central nervous system , biochemistry , in vitro
Cultured astrocytes deposit an extracellular matrix which has been shown by immunocytochemistry to react with antibodies to tenascin, laminin, and fibronectin. Neuronal‐glial interaction down‐regulates these components of the matrix, causing a reduction in extracellular matrix localized to areas of contact with axons. Axons used for these experiments were from embryonic rat retinal explants. In some experiments explants were removed from the co‐cultures and their axons allowed to degenerate. Degeneration of axons did not reverse the local reduction of extracellular matrix brought about by axon outgrowth. The period of axon outgrowth studied was 4‐5 days; the period of degeneration was 2‐3 days. Astrocytes alone, astrocytes with intact retinal explants, and astrocytes with 2‐day degenerated retinal axons were tested for their ability to support neurite outgrowth from embryonic rat cortical neurons. Neurite outgrowth occurred on all astrocyte cultures. Cortical neurite lengths, measured 2 days after plating, were not significantly different between astrocytes alone and astrocytes with degenerated retinal axons. However, there was a tendency for neurites to be shorter on astrocytes with intact retinal axons present. Two conclusions may be drawn from these results. First, the state of differentiation of astrocytes, as marked by their assembly of extracellular matrix, is altered by contact with axons. Second, degeneration of axons alone, in the absence of other cell types, is not a sufficient signal to reestablish assembly of extracellular matrix. However, neither is it a sufficient signal to render astrocytes inhospitable to further axonal outgrowth or regeneration. © 1993 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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