Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 2, 663-673, Copyright © 1982 by Society for Neuroscience
Development of Thy-1 antigen on cerebellar neurons in culture
KL Fields, DN Currie and GR Dutton
The Thy-1.1 cell surface antigen was demonstrated by indirect
immunofluorescence on two types of neurons in dissociated cell cultures of
developing rat cerebellum. In cultures from postnatal rats, small cells
predominated. They bound tetanus toxin, a neuronal marker, and did not have
the capacity to take up gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) as measured by
autoradiography. From these properties, we conclude that they are granule
cells. These neurons began to express the surface antigen Thy-1.1 by 2
weeks in culture, and by 4 weeks, the antigen was detected on about 40% of
all of the surviving neurons. The second type of neuron, which may be a
heterogeneous mixture of cerebellar neurons, was numerous only in cultures
prepared from embryonic rats. They were larger than granule cells and
expressed Thy-1.1 antigen after a few days in culture. Such cells bound
tetanus toxin and were negative for the glial markers galactocerebroside
and glial fibrillary acidic protein. Thy-1-positive cells and cells with
high GABA uptake were most frequent in embryonic day 19 cultures, where 40
to 50% of all of the neurons were positive for either property. They
survived about 1 week in culture. The size and frequency of Thy-1 cells and
the frequency of similar cells with high GABA uptake suggest that the
embryonic rat cultures included many Purkinje cells, which express Thy-1.