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Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 13, 577-585, Copyright © 1993 by Society for Neuroscience
NGF induces neonatal rat sensory neurons to extend dendrites in culture after removal of satellite cells
P De Koninck, S Carbonetto and E Cooper
Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Vertebrate sensory neurons have a pseudo-unipolar morphology; their somata
are covered by satellite cells and lack dendrites or synaptic contacts.
However, when neonatal rat sensory neurons from the nodose ganglia develop
in culture in absence of satellite cells and with NGF, they form synapses
among themselves. In this study, we investigated whether neonatal rat
nodose neurons express dendrites under the same culture conditions. We show
by Lucifer yellow injection that nodose neurons remain typically unipolar
when cocultured with their ganglionic satellite cells. However, when these
neurons are cultured without satellite cells, virtually all neurons acquire
a multipolar morphology. Moreover, when NGF is added to satellite cell-free
cultures, several neurons extend dendrites; these processes stain
positively for microtubule-associated protein-2. NGF induces a 17-fold
increase in dendritic outgrowth after 3 weeks but has little effect on axon
number. In addition, we find that the ability of nodose neurons to extend
dendrites is developmentally regulated. Furthermore, in a combined
morphological and electrophysiological study, using whole-cell voltage-
clamp technique with Lucifer yellow in the recording solution, we
demonstrate a positive correlation between the extent of dendritic
outgrowth and the density of ACh currents, suggesting that these dendrites
have ACh receptors. Our results indicate that neonatal rat nodose neurons
are capable of extending dendrites and that extrinsic factors can induce or
suppress their extension. In addition, the results suggest that these
dendrites may act as principal post-synaptic structures for synapse
formation that occurs in these cultures.
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