Abstract

To determine whether glia from different regions of the central nervous system (CNS) initiate or maintain primary dendritic growth, embryonic day 18 mouse cortical neurons were co-cultured with rat (postnatal day 4) astroglial cells derived from retina, spinal cord, mesencephalon, striatum, olfactory bulb, retina, and cortex. Axon and dendrite outgrowth from isolated neurons was quantified using morphological and immunohistochemical techniques at 18 h and 1, 3, and 5 days in vitro. Neurons initially extend the same number of neurites, regardless of the source of glial monolayer; however, glial cells differ in their ability to maintain primary dendrites. Homotypic cortical astrocytes maintain the greatest number of primary dendrites. Glia derived from the olfactory bulb and retina maintained intermediate numbers of dendrites, whereas only a small number of primary dendrites were maintained by glia derived from striatum, spinal cord, or mesencephalon. Longer axons were initially observed from neurons grown on glia that did not maintain dendrite number. Axonal length, however, was similar on the various monolayers after 5 days in vitro. Neurons that were grown in media conditioned by either mesencephalic or cortical glia for the first 24 h followed by culture media from glia of the alternate source for 4 days in vitro confirmed that glia maintained, rather than initiated, the outgrowth of the primary dendritic arbor. These results indicate that glial cells derived from various CNS regions differ in their ability to maintain the primary dendritic arbor from mouse cortical neurons in vitro.

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