Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 12, 3399-3413, Copyright © 1992 by Society for Neuroscience
Appropriate target interactions prevent abnormal cytoskeletal changes in neurons: a study with intra-sciatic grafts of the septum and the hippocampus
LC Doering
Division of Anatomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Transplantation of embryonic CNS regions into the PNS provides an
opportunity to study temporal and spatial changes in the cytoskeleton that
are associated with aging and neurodegenerative diseases. In this study,
the fetal septum was transplanted alone or with the hippocampus into the
sciatic nerves of young adult rats to determine whether the proper central
neural target could prevent the expression of abnormal cytoskeletal
changes. The substantia nigra, a non-target area of the septum, served as
control co-grafts. After 1, 3, 6, 12, and 18 months of survival, the grafts
were examined by immunocytochemistry with antibodies to phosphorylated and
nonphosphorylated neurofilaments, microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs),
and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). Subpopulations of neurons in
the septal transplants expressed CAT and the NGF receptor (192-IgG).
Long-term (12-18 months) expression of these two markers was only observed
when the septum was combined with the hippocampus. Although isolated single
grafts of septum survived within the PNS substratum, significant neuronal
loss, extensive graft shrinkage, and aberrant cytoskeletal immunoreactivity
were prominent in the long-term group. Changes that reflected an aging
process included the ectopic expression of phosphorylated neurofilaments in
neuronal perikarya, swollen axons, and a loss of MAP2 immunoreactivity that
paralleled dendrite regression. In addition, abnormal "curly" fibers in the
neuropil were also immunolabeled with an antibody directed against tau
(5E2). Introduction of hippocampal co- grafts increased the final size of
the septal transplants and prevented the cytoskeletal changes that
accompanied the degeneration in the single septal grafts. The degree of
GFAP immunostaining in the septum corresponded with advancing graft age and
was minimized when grafted with the hippocampal formation. When the septum
was combined with the substantia nigra, the grafts also underwent shrinkage
and no protective influence from aberrant cytoskeletal staining was
observed. These experiments exemplify the importance of an appropriate CNS
neural target on the maintenance of long-term cholinergic neuron survival
and normal morphology at the cytoskeletal level and illustrate the
usefulness of these CNS-PNS constructs to examine conditions that influence
the cytoskeleton.