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Volume 17, Number 6,
Issue of March 15, 1997
pp. 2101-2111
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Neurotrophins Suppress Apoptosis Induced by Deafferentation of an
Avian Motor-Cortical Region
Received Sept. 18, 1996; revised Dec. 17, 1996; accepted Dec. 20, 1996.
Frank Johnson1,
Stephen
E. Hohmann2,
Peter S. DiStefano3, and
Sarah W. Bottjer2
1 Department of Psychology, Florida State University,
Tallahassee, Florida 32306-1051, 2 Department of Biological
Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California
90089-2520, and 3 Department of Neurobiology, Regeneron
Pharmaceuticals, Tarrytown, New York 10591-6707
Studies of the developing nervous system led to the general
view that growth factors promote neuronal survival in a
"retrograde" manner. For example, release of NGF from postsynaptic
peripheral targets followed by uptake and retrograde transport by
presynaptic neurons provided a widely accepted conceptual framework for
the action of neurotrophins. In contrast, although presynaptic or "anterograde" influences on the survival of developing neurons have
been recognized for some time, the mechanisms by which afferent input
regulates the survival of postsynaptic cells have received considerably
less attention. In the forebrain network for learned vocal behavior in
zebra finches, lesions of a cortical region for song control, the
lateral magnocellular nucleus of the anterior neostriatum (lMAN),
remove presynaptic input to a motor-cortical song region, the robust
nucleus of the archistriatum (RA), and cause massive RA neuron death in
young birds that are entering the sensitive period for song learning.
Here we report that lesions of lMAN followed by infusions of
neurotrophins directly into RA completely suppress neuronal apoptosis
in RA. Moreover, we show that lMAN neurons are able to transport
neurotrophins in the anterograde direction to RA, that
neurotrophin-like immunoreactivity is present in cells in lMAN and RA,
and that neurotrophin receptor-like immunoreactivity is present in RA.
Expression of neurotrophins in lMAN and RA suggests that lMAN
presynaptic input could regulate RA neuron survival by synthesizing,
transporting, and releasing neurotrophins anterogradely or by
regulating the auto/paracrine release of neurotrophins within RA, or
perhaps by both. These data provide the first in vivo
demonstration that neurotrophins can prevent the death of deafferented
cortical neurons, and they raise the possibility that nonretrograde
signaling by neurotrophins may be a common means of promoting neuronal
survival in the vertebrate telencephalon. Anterograde and
auto/paracrine neurotrophin signaling, along with the more established
view that neurotrophins regulate neuron survival via retrograde
mechanisms, suggests multidirectional neurotrophin signaling in the
vertebrate telencephalon.
Key words:
songbird;
cortex;
afferent;
apoptosis;
neurotrophins;
Trk
receptors
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