LEUKEMIA INHIBITORY FACTOR PROMOTES THE NEURONAL DEVELOPMENT OF SPINAL-CORD PRECURSORS FROM THE NEURAL-TUBE
Details
Publication Year 1992-11,Volume 33,Issue #3,Page 476-484
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Recent evidence from our laboratory has shown that leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) can act early in peripheral nervous system development. We have investigated a potential role of LIF in the developing spinal cord. In explants and dissociated cultures of spinal cord primordium, LIF stimulated a profuse neurite outgrowth. To determine if these effects were related to neuronal differentiation, cells were plated at low cell density and stained for neurofilament. LIF stimulated an increase in the number of newly differentiated neurons, without inducing proliferation of the precursors. Given that LIF has previously reported effects as a cholinergic switching factor for sympathetic neurons, we investigated whether LIF had similar effects in these spinal cord cultures. LIF increased the number of cholinergic neurons in proportion to its overall effect on the stimulation of all neurofilament positive neurons in the culture. These data show that LIF stimulates the generation of spinal cord neurons from their precursors and further implicates a role for LIF in nervous system development.
Publisher
WILEY-LISS
Keywords
CONDITIONED MEDIUM; NERVOUS-SYSTEM; SYMPATHETIC NEURONS; CELL-DEATH; MUSCLE; CULTURES; MOTONEURONS; INVITRO; MOUSE; DIFFERENTIATION
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Creation Date: 1992-11-01 12:00:00
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