Crutcher, K. A. and Collins, F. (1986). Entorhinal lesions result in increased nerve growth factor-like growth-promoting activity in medium conditioned by hippocampal slices. Brain Research, 399(2):383-9.
Abstract
Nerve growth factor (NGF) is present in high concentrations in the
rat hippocampal formation where it may be involved in sympathetic
sprouting following septohippocampal denervation. In addition,
recent evidence suggests that some forebrain cholinergic neurons,
including septohippocampal neurons, are responsive to exogenous NGF.
Since septohippocampal neurons have been shown to sprout in response
to entorhinal lesions both in rats and, recently, in humans, we
sought to determine whether endogenous NGF-like activity increases
in the rat hippocampal formation following injury to the entorhinal
cortex. We found that entorhinal lesions which result in extensive
denervation of the dentate granule cells, and subsequent sprouting
of septohippocampal axons, do result in greater NGF-like
growth-promoting activity in medium conditioned by slices of the
denervated tissue when compared to medium conditioned by control
tissue. These results suggest that brain NGF may be involved in
injury-induced sprouting of forebrain cholinergic neurons.
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