Abstract

Neurocan is a developmentally regulated chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan in the rat brain. In the present study, spatiotemporal patterns of expression of neurocan and the corresponding mRNA were examined in the developing cortical barrel field of the rat brain by using a monoclonal antibody that was highly specific to neurocan and a riboprobe for a portion of the mRNA. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed that neurocan was distributed throughout the cerebral cortex during early postnatal development but was excluded from the centres of cortical barrels at the time of entry and arborization of thalamocortical axons. At this developmental stage, expression of neurocan mRNA was shown by in situ hybridization to be down-regulated in the barrel centres. When a row of whisker follicles was laser-cauterized on postnatal day 1, the pattern of expression of neurocan was disturbed in the row of barrels that corresponded to the lesioned whisker follicles in the contralateral somatosensory cortex. From these observations, it appears that neuronal stimuli through early thalamocortical fibres from the sensory periphery cause reduced expression of neurocan mRNA in neurocan-producing cells in the presumptive barrel centres. Our findings also suggest that the pattern of distribution of neurocan in early postnatal barrel fields may be due mainly to the down-regulation of expression of neurocan mRNA.

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