Abstract
Employing complementary technical approaches, we have studied the expression of acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF) and FGF receptors in rat dorsal root ganglia. The results clearly showed that within spinal nerves aFGF and two high-affinity FGF receptors, FGFR-1 and FGFR-2, were prominently expressed in neurons, while expression in Schwann cells was undetectable. FGFR-3 and FGFR-4 were not expressed in dorsal root ganglia. Acidic FGF mRNA was detected in the majority of dorsal root ganglion neurons, including all size classes: FGFR-1 and FGFR-2 transcripts were only detected in subpopulations of mainly large and medium size neurons. In subcellular fractionation studies on dorsal root ganglion and spinal root tissue, aFGF was recovered in the soluble fraction and was thus not tightly associated with neuronal membranes. During development FGFR-1 and FGFR-2 mRNAs were found to be present at all stages examined (embryonic days 15-21 and postnatal days 1-120). Acidic FGF mRNA and protein were first detected at embryonic day 18, and their expression then increased progressively up to postnatal levels. In cultures of dorsal root ganglion neurons derived from day 15 embryos, aFGF expression was first detected 3 days after plating. The resulting neuron cultures continued to express aFGF in a Schwann cell-independent manner. In combination, these results indicate that aFGF expression in dorsal root ganglia is initiated and maintained in postmitotic neurons. Furthermore, the data suggest that the physiological function of aFGF in the peripheral nervous system is connected to processes specific to the mature sensory (and motor) system, such as the maintenance and survival of peripheral nerve neurons.
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