Abstract

The developmental expression of the myelin basic protein (MBP) gene was studied in rat cultured oligodendrocytes using immunofluorescence and in situ hybridization. In newborn rat brain cultures, which contain only glial cells, large amounts of MBP-specific mRNA (as assayed by grain counts in autoradiograms) abruptly accumulated within immature oligodendrocytes 5 to 6 days postnatal. MBP always emerged 6 to 8 days after birth; thus, a week after, galactocerebroside (GC), an early oligodendrocyte marker, had appeared. The percentage of MBP mRNA and MBP-positive cells peaked at about 15 days postnatal and decreased thereafter. The time of emergence of MBP in these cultured oligodendrocytes appears to be determined at a very early stage in their development and independent of continuous neuronal influences. There is a striking correspondence between the times of appearance of MBP in cultured oligodendrocytes and those in the intact animal. Thus, primary cultures made from 5-day prenatal, newborn, and 2-day postnatal animals all express MBP at about the same developmental stage, namely, after 14, 8, and 6 days in culture, respectively. Furthermore, cultured oligodendrocytes obtained from the spinal cord express MBP before those obtained from midbrain or hemispheres, as they would in the intact animal. Thus, the developmental expression of the MBP gene occurs in a similar time frame in vitro and in vivo. In oligodendrocyte-enriched cultures, where 60% to 80% of the cells express MBP, in situ hybridization with the cDNA clone revealed MBP-specific mRNA in the cell body and sometimes in the processes of the differentiated oligodendrocytes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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