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  • Title: p75-deficient sensory axons are immunoreactive for the glycoprotein L1 in mice overexpressing nerve growth factor.
    Author: Walsh GS, Petruccelli K, Kawaja MD.
    Journal: Brain Res; 1998 Jul 06; 798(1-2):184-94. PubMed ID: 9666123.
    Abstract:
    Nerve growth factor (NGF) regulates the expression of the glycoprotein L1 among neural cell populations. The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether NGF equally affects the immunolocalization of L1 on both sympathetic and sensory axons, and whether the functional expression of the p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR) is required for the immunodetection of this glycoprotein on peripheral axons. Two lines of transgenic mice overexpressing NGF among glial cells were used in this study: (1) one line of mice possessing two normal alleles for p75NTR, and (2) another line of mice possessing two mutated alleles for p75NTR. In both types of animals, sensory axons stained immunohistochemically for calcitonin gene-related peptide and sympathetic axons stained immunohistochemically for tyrosine hydroxylase invaded the deep white matter portions of the cerebellum (a central structure containing high levels of transgene expression and synthesis); the cerebella of wild type (C57Bl/6) and p75NTR-deficient mice lacked these sensory and sympathetic fibers. Both lines of transgenic animals also possessed a dense plexus of L1-immunoreactive axons in their cerebella; the spatial distribution of these L1-immunostained axons paralleled that seen for the sensory and sympathetic axons. A unilateral removal of the superior cervical ganglion in both lines of transgenic animals caused a complete reduction of tyrosine hydroxylase-immunopositive axons in the cerebellum but did not affect the density of L1-immunopositive axons. From these in vivo data, we conclude that collateral branches of sensory axons which invade a NGF-rich target area display L1 immunoreactivity, and that such immunodetection does not require the functional expression of p75NTR.
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