Abstract

The study investigated the role of nerve growth factor (NGF) in the regeneration of noradrenergic nerves of the right atria from control and 8-week diabetic rats, after lesion caused by a single injection of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA, 100 mg/kg ip). This treatment caused a profound depletion of tissue noradrenaline (NA) of the right atria from both control and diabetic groups, followed by a progressive repletion that was not complete at 49 days. Immunoreactivity for the NGF receptorstrkA and p75NTRwas decreased and increased, respectively, between days 3 and 28 in right atria from diabetic rats and returned to pretreatment levels at day 49. Receptor levels were not significantly altered in controls. In contrast to tissue NA, at day 14 functional responses to electrical nerve stimulation of the right atria had completely returned to the pretreatment state in diabetic rats and were very close to normal in nondiabetic rats. NGF treatment (1 mg/kg, three times/week, for 2 weeks) increased tissue NA only in control rats; the pattern was similar after 6-OHDA. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that NGF normally plays a role in the regulation of autonomic sympathetic nerves in the adult rat atrium and that mature and uninjured sympathetic neurons remain responsive to NGF. In injured noradrenergic neurons, NGF promotes regeneration in nondiabetic rats. The ability of NGF to promote regeneration of noradrenergic nerves is lost in diabetes and this may relate to the loss oftrkA receptor on prejunctional nerve terminals after denervation.

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