Abstract

In early primary cultures from newborn rat brain, few glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)-positive glial cells expressed intracytoplasmic immunoreactivity for fibronectin. After the second week in culture, however, fibronectin was expressed by a distinct population of GFAP-positive flat astrocytes, irrespective of which brain region was studied. In cerebellar cultures, these cells were more abundant than in cortical or neostriatal cultures and often formed a major population of the GFAP-positive cells. The difference in fibronectin expression between cerebellum and the other areas studied was statistically significant. When cultures were started from 9-day-old postnatal rat brain, fibronectin-positive astrocytes appeared earlier than in those from newborn animals, in all areas studied. Further, especially in the case of cerebellum, the number of fibronectin-positive astrocytes increased as a function of time in culture. In cultures started from whole brains of 12-day-old rat embryos, fibronectin was expressed within 24 h in culture by all the cells with morphology of flat astrocytes, positive for vimentin but negative for GFAP. These results indicate that astrocytes cultured from newborn and early postnatal rat brain are a heterogeneous population of cells: depending on the brain region studied and also depending on the age of brain tissue or the time in culture, <1–60% of the GFAP-positive flat astrocytes expressed fibronectin. This, together with the fact that fibronectin was present in early embryonic brain cells in culture, suggests that fibronectin may be a prerequisite for the development or interactions of brain cells.

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