Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 5, 2086-2094, Copyright © 1985 by Society for Neuroscience
Gangliosides alter morphology and growth of astrocytes and increase the activity of choline acetyltransferase in cultures of dissociated septal cells
F Hefti, J Hartikka and W Frick
Administration of gangliosides has been reported to stimulate regeneration
of motoneurons and of central dopaminergic and cholinergic neurons. To shed
light on the mechanism by which gangliosides mediate the effects on
cholinergic neurons, we studied their actions on cultures of cells
dissociated from the septal area of fetal rat brains. These cultures
contain cholinergic neurons, which, in vivo, give rise to the cholinergic
septo-hippocampal pathway. Gangliosides produced prominent changes in the
morphological appearance of the cultures. In contrast to control cultures,
which contained many process-bearing cells and a confluent layer of flat
cells, there were no flat cells in cultures grown in the presence of
gangliosides (0.2 to 0.8 mg/ml of medium). Using immunocytochemical
visualization of the astrocytic marker glial fibrillary acid protein, it
was shown that all astrocytes in cultures grown in the presence of
gangliosides exhibited the morphology of process-bearing cells, whereas in
control cultures astrocytes represented the majority of the flat cells.
Furthermore, gangliosides attenuated astrocytic proliferation. The effects
of gangliosides apparently were not mediated by cAMP, since they could be
differentiated from actions of forskolin, an activator of adenylate
cyclase. Astrocytic growth and morphology were affected by ganglioside
mixtures of various sources and composition and also by the pure
gangliosides GM1 and GD1a, whereas lipid and carbohydrate components of
gangliosides were ineffective. In contrast to the prominent effects on
astrocytes, gangliosides failed to significantly alter survival or fiber
growth of cholinergic neurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)