Abstract

Schwann cells express the low-affinity neurotrophin receptor (p75), but no role for either the neurotrophins or their cognate receptors in Schwann cell development has been established. We have found that Schwann cells isolated from postnatal day 1 (P1) or P2 mice that were p75-deficient exhibited potentiated survival compared to wild-type cells after growth factor and serum withdrawal. There was, however, no disparity in the survival of p75-deficient and wild-type Schwann cells isolated at embryonic day 15, suggesting that the death-inducing effects of p75 are developmentally regulated. A comparable degree of cell death was also observed in the sciatic nerves of both wild-type and p75-deficient mice at P1. However, 24 hr after axotomy, there was a 13-fold increase in the percentage of apoptotic nuclei in the distal nerve stumps of the transected sciatic nerves of neonatal wild-type but not p75-deficient mice. The expression of both the p75 and nerve growth factor (NGF) genes was upregulated after axotomy in neonatal wild-type nerves. Collectively, these results suggest that NGF-mediated activation of p75 is likely to be an important mediator of Schwann cell apoptosis in the context of peripheral nerve injury.

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