Abstract

During development, neurons pass through a critical phase in which survival is dependent on neurotrophin support. In order to dissect the potential role of p75NTR, the common neurotrophin receptor, in neurotrophin dependence, we expressed wild-type and mutant p75NTR in cells that do not express endogenous p75NTR or Trk family members (NIH3T3). Expression of wild-type p75NTR created a state of neurotrophin dependence: cells could be rescued by nerve growth factor (NGF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), or neurotrophin-3 (NT-3), but not by a mutant NGF that binds well to Trk A but poorly to p75NTR. Similarly, expression of p75NTR in human prostate cancer cells in culture rendered a metastatic tumor cell line (PC-3) sensitive to the availability of neurotrophins for survival. Moreover, expression of mutant p75NTR's in another neurotrophin-insensitive cell line (HEK293T) showed that a domain within the intracellular domain governs alternate responses to neurotrophins: the carboxy terminus of the intracellular domain of p75NTR including the sixth alpha helix domain is necessary for rescue by BDNF, but not NGF. These results, when considered with previous studies of the timing of p75NTR expression, support the hypothesis that p75NTR is a mediator of neurotrophin dependence during the critical phase of developmental cell death and during the progression of carcinogenesis in prostate cancer.

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