Abstract
The immunocytochemical and immuno-electron microscopic distribution of a neural proteoglycan (PG) was investigated with a monoclonal antibody, MAb 6B4, in the olfactory epithelium, the olfactory nerve, and the cells originating the epithelium and migrating along the olfactory nerve toward the forebrain in chick embryos. The PG recognized by MAb 6B4, that is 6B4 PG, in the brain of early postnatal rats, is identical to phosphacan. In chick embryos, immunoreactivity to 6B4 PG appeared on embryonic day (ED) 3-3.5 in a thin layer beneath the olfactory epithelium. It disappeared immediately, then becoming apparent in the bundles of the olfactory nerve. The immunoreactivity in the nerve bundles gradually increased during ED 5–11. On the other hand, cell surface-associated extracellular localization of the immunoreactivity was seen in the olfactory epithelium on ED 6 and afterwards. Immunofluorescent double-labeling of 6B4 PG and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) revealed that the cell bodies of both GnRH-containing cells and other cells migrating along the olfactory nerve were surrounded by a rim immunoreactive to the PG. Under an electron microscope, the surfaces of the cell bodies and of the neurites in the nerve bundles were surrounded by deposits immunoreactive to 6B4 PG. These results indicate that 6B4 PG in chick embryos is one type of cell surface-associated extracellular matrix molecule, and that 6B4 PG covered the surfaces of migrating cells and of elongating olfactory nerve. The cell surface-associated extracellular localization of 6B4 PG found in the nasal region, taken together with the binding properties of this PG with cell adhesion molecules shown in rat brains, suggested that 6B4 PG played a role in guiding the migration of cells along the olfactory nerve in chick embryos.
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