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Volume 17, Number 4,
Issue of February 15, 1997
pp. 1447-1459
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Expression and Distribution of IGF-1 Receptors Containing a
-Subunit Variant ( gc) in Developing Neurons
Received Aug. 27, 1996; revised Nov. 12, 1996; accepted Dec. 3, 1996.
Faustino Mascotti1,
Alfredo Cáceres1,
Karl H. Pfenninger2, and
Santiago Quiroga3
1 Instituto Investigación Médica Mercedes y
Martín Ferreya, Córdoba, Argentina,
2 Department of Cellular and Structural Biology, University
of Colorado School of Medicine, Denver, Colorado, and
3 Departamento Química Biológica, Facultad
Ciencias Químicas, Universidad Nacional de
Córdoba/Consejo Nacional de Investigaciónes
Científicas y Técnicas, Córdoba, Argentina
gc is a -subunit variant of the insulin-like
growth factor-1 (IGF-1) receptor highly enriched in growth cone
membranes prepared by subcellular fractionation of fetal rat brain
(). The present study is focused on the expression
and on the cellular and subcellular distribution of gc
in developing neurons and differentiating PC12 cells. In the developing
cerebral cortex and, at least at early stages, in cultured primary
neurons, gc expression was found to be correlated with
neurite outgrowth. In PC12 cells gc expression was nerve
growth factor (NGF)-dependent and also paralleled neurite outgrowth. In
contrast, -subunits of the insulin receptor and/or of other IGF-1
receptors (" P5"; detected with antibody AbP5) were
downregulated as gc expression increased.
Immunofluorescence studies confirmed the enrichment of
gc at growth cones and demonstrated morphologically its
spatial separation from P5, which is confined to the
perikaryon. At the growth cone, gc colocalizes and
associates in a proximal region with microtubules, but it seems
independent of the more peripheral microfilaments. Some
gc immunoreactivity is detected in the perinuclear region of PC12 cells, most likely the Golgi complex and its vicinity. gc seems to emerge from the periphery of this structure
in an apparently vesicular compartment distinct from that carrying
synaptophysin to the growth cones. The facts that (1) gc
expression is correlated closely with neurite outgrowth, that (2) it is
regulated in PC12 cells by a neurotrophin, NGF, and that (3)
gc is concentrated in the proximal growth cone region
raise new questions regarding a possible role of IGF-1 receptors
containing gc in the regulation of neurite growth.
Key words:
IGF-1 receptor;
-subunits;
gc;
growth cones;
neurons;
neurite outgrowth;
neurotrophins;
PC12 cells;
development;
tissue culture
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