Abstract
Confocal microscopy and the Ca 2+-sensitive fluorescent dye fluo-3 were used to study subcellular Ca 2+ signals in embryonic, neonatal, and adult dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons in excised dorsal rooot ganglia. Optical images obtained from isolated' whole embryonic and neonatal ganglia revealed a marked variability in the resting Ca 2+ signals of different neurons as compared to signals in adult neurons which were uniformly faint. Many of the embryonic and neonatal neurons displayed nuclear Ca 2+ signals at rest which were larger than those in the cytoplasm. Embryonic DRG neurons showed a significant increase in nuclear and cytoplasmic fluorescence in response to depolarization with elevated extracellular potassium or electrical stimulation. A single brief electrical stimulus was sufficient to elicit nuclear Ca 2+ signals in a subset of the embryonic neurons. The depolarization-induced Ca 2+ signals were blocked by removal of extracellular Ca 2+, but not by treatment with 2,5-di ( tert-butyl)- 1,4 benzohydroquinone (DTBHQ), a compound which depletes intracellular Ca 2+ stores. The intensity of the depolarization-induced Ca 2+ signals declined significantly between the late embryonic (E18–E20) and early postnatal time periods (P0–P1). The nuclear and cytoplasmic Ca 2+ signals of the embryonic DRG neurons in the excised tissue preparation occur at a time of intense target innervation, suggesting a role for Ca 2+ signals in the development and maturation of rat DRG neurons.
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