Abstract

Epidermal growth factor (EGF) and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) induce proliferation of neural precursor cells from several central nervous system regions in vitro. We have previously described two neural precursor cell populations from 13.5 days postcoitium (dpc) mesencephalon, one forming colonies in response to EGF, present in the ventral mesencephalon, and other forming colonies in response to EGF + bFGF, mainly present in the dorsal mesencephalon. In the present work, we show that 13.5 dpc dorsal mesencephalic cells required bFGF only for 1 h to form colonies in response to EGF alone, indicating that these two growth factors act in sequence rather than simultaneously. Absence of bFGF at the beginning of the culture gave rise to very few colonies, even after the addition of EGF + bFGF, suggesting that cells responsive to bFGF were very labile in the primary culture condition. This result is in contrast with cells pretreated with bFGF, which could survive for up to 5 days in the absence of bFGF or EGF, and then were capable of efficiently forming colonies in response to EGF. Basic FGF was also able to support survival of EGF-responsive neural precursors from both ventral and dorsal mesencephalon. The population requiring bFGF to form colonies in response to EGF was identified at different developmental stages (11.5-15.5 dpc), with higher contribution to the total number of neural precursors cells detected (EGF-responsive plus bFGF-responsive) at early stages and in the dorsal region. We show that the differentiation effect of bFGF resulted in the appearance of the mRNA coding for the EGF receptor. Our data suggest that bFGF-responsive neural precursors are the source of EGF-responsive neural precursors.

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