LONG-LASTING INCREASE OF NITRIC-OXIDE SYNTHASE IMMUNOREACTIVITY, NADPH-DIAPHORASE REACTION AND C-JUN COEXPRESSION IN RAT DORSAL-ROOT GANGLION NEURONS FOLLOWING SCIATIC-NERVE TRANSECTION

被引:168
作者
FIALLOSESTRADA, CE
KUMMER, W
MAYER, B
BRAVO, R
ZIMMERMANN, M
HERDEGEN, T
机构
[1] UNIV HEIDELBERG,INST PHYSIOL 2,NEUENHEIMER FELD 326,W-6900 HEIDELBERG,GERMANY
[2] UNIV HEIDELBERG,INST ANAT & ZELL BIOL,W-6900 HEIDELBERG,GERMANY
[3] GRAZ UNIV,INST PHARMACOL & TOXIKOL,A-8010 GRAZ,AUSTRIA
[4] BRISTOL MYERS SQUIBB PHARMACEUT RES INST,DEPT MOLEC BIOL,PRINCETON,NJ 08543
关键词
AXOTOMY; IMMEDIATE-EARLY GENE; NITRIC OXIDE; TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR;
D O I
10.1016/0304-3940(93)90528-S
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Changes of NADPH-diaphorase reaction (NDP) and nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity (NOS-IR) in neurons of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) were investigated following transection and ligation of rat sciatic nerve. In untreated rats, 2.7% of L4/L5 DRG neurons were labelled by NDP. After 3 days, intensity of NDP and number of labelled neurons increased and reached a maximal level between 10 and 20 days in 26.8% neurons which persisted up to 50 days. After 150 days, 8.7% of DRG neurons were still labelled. In contralateral L4/L5 DRG, but not L1 and T10 DRG, the number but not the intensity of NDP labelled neurons slightly increased between 10 and 50 days. The patterns of NOS-IR and NDP were congruent. Ipsilaterally, 76% to 92% of NDP neurons showed co-expression with the c-JUN transcription factor which is supposed to play a crucial role in the regeneration process. NDP accumulated in the peripheral nerve stump and was increased in the superficial dorsal horn between 10 and 30 days, whereas motoneurons were not labelled by NOS and NDP.
引用
收藏
页码:169 / 173
页数:5
相关论文
共 22 条
[1]   LOCALIZATION OF NADPH-DIAPHORASE-CONTAINING NEURONS IN SENSORY GANGLIA OF THE RAT [J].
AIMI, Y ;
FUJIMURA, M ;
VINCENT, SR ;
KIMURA, H .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 1991, 306 (03) :382-392
[2]   NADPH DIAPHORASE-POSITIVE NEURONS IN THE RAT SPINAL-CORD INCLUDE A SUBPOPULATION OF AUTONOMIC PREGANGLIONIC NEURONS [J].
ANDERSON, CR .
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 1992, 139 (02) :280-284
[3]   NITRIC-OXIDE SYNTHASE PROTEIN AND MESSENGER-RNA ARE DISCRETELY LOCALIZED IN NEURONAL POPULATIONS OF THE MAMMALIAN CNS TOGETHER WITH NADPH DIAPHORASE [J].
BREDT, DS ;
GLATT, CE ;
HWANG, PM ;
FOTUHI, M ;
DAWSON, TM ;
SNYDER, SH .
NEURON, 1991, 7 (04) :615-624
[4]   SELECTIVE SPARING OF A CLASS OF STRIATAL NEURONS IN HUNTINGTONS-DISEASE [J].
FERRANTE, RJ ;
KOWALL, NW ;
BEAL, MF ;
RICHARDSON, EP ;
BIRD, ED ;
MARTIN, JB .
SCIENCE, 1985, 230 (4725) :561-563
[5]   ELECTROPHYSIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE FOR A ROLE OF NITRIC-OXIDE IN PROLONGED CHEMICAL NOCICEPTION IN THE RAT [J].
HALEY, JE ;
DICKENSON, AH ;
SCHACHTER, M .
NEUROPHARMACOLOGY, 1992, 31 (03) :251-258
[6]   EXPRESSION OF C-JUN, JUN-B AND JUN-D PROTEINS IN RAT NERVOUS-SYSTEM FOLLOWING TRANSECTION OF VAGUS NERVE AND CERVICAL SYMPATHETIC TRUNK [J].
HERDEGEN, T ;
KUMMER, W ;
FIALLOS, CE ;
LEAH, J ;
BRAVO, R .
NEUROSCIENCE, 1991, 45 (02) :413-422
[7]   COLOCALIZATION AND COVARIATION OF C-JUN TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR WITH GALANIN IN PRIMARY AFFERENT NEURONS AND WITH CGRP IN SPINAL MOTONEURONS FOLLOWING TRANSECTION OF RAT SCIATIC-NERVE [J].
HERDEGEN, T ;
FIALLOSESTRADA, CE ;
BRAVO, R ;
ZIMMERMANN, M .
MOLECULAR BRAIN RESEARCH, 1993, 17 (1-2) :147-154
[8]   THE TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS C-JUN, JUN D AND CREB, BUT NOT FOS AND KROX-24, ARE DIFFERENTIALLY REGULATED IN AXOTOMIZED NEURONS FOLLOWING TRANSECTION OF RAT SCIATIC-NERVE [J].
HERDEGEN, T ;
FIALLOSESTRADA, CE ;
SCHMID, W ;
BRAVO, R ;
ZIMMERMANN, M .
MOLECULAR BRAIN RESEARCH, 1992, 14 (03) :155-165
[9]   NEURONAL NADPH DIAPHORASE IS A NITRIC-OXIDE SYNTHASE [J].
HOPE, BT ;
MICHAEL, GJ ;
KNIGGE, KM ;
VINCENT, SR .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1991, 88 (07) :2811-2814
[10]   LONG-TERM INCREASE IN THE LEVELS OF C-JUN MESSENGER-RNA AND JUN PROTEIN-LIKE IMMUNOREACTIVITY IN MOTOR AND SENSORY NEURONS FOLLOWING AXON DAMAGE [J].
JENKINS, R ;
HUNT, SP .
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 1991, 129 (01) :107-110