27 research outputs found

    Restoration of full mass in nerve-intact muscle grafts after delayed reinnervation

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    A rat muscle freely grafted with the motor nerve intact becomes restored to full mass and contractile function, in contrast to the reduced weight of a standard free graft. By crushing the nerve to a nerve-intact graft and delaying reinnervation, full mass is still restored. One can conclude that earlier reinnervation is not the reason for the success of nerve-intact grafts, but that it is rather due to reinnervation along preserved Schwann cell channels.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/42762/1/18_2005_Article_BF01958882.pd

    Changes in the expression of protease-activated receptor 1 and protease nexin-1 mRNA during rat nervous system development and after nerve lesion.

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    peer reviewedHDs racI Thrombin causes profound metabolic and morphological changes in cultured neural cells via activation of the thrombin receptor, also called protease-activated receptor 1 (PAR1). PAR1 mRNA is present in the rat brain, but the role of this receptor in the nervous system remains elusive. The expression of PAR1 and the potent thrombin inhibitor protease nexin-1 (PN-1) was investigated in the developing rat brain and spinal cord and after peripheral nerve lesion. As seen by in situ hybridization, the PAR1 mRNA signal in the late embryonic and early postnatal nervous system was widespread, but generally of low intensity whereas in the adult it was more pronounced and confined to particular neuronal cells. These include the mesencephalic dopaminergic neurons, several thalamic and brainstem nuclei, the mitral cells in the olfactory bulb and the Purkinje cells in the cerebellum. In the spinal cord, PAR1 mRNA was abundant in motoneurons and a particularly high expression was detected in the preganglionic neurons of the autonomic nervous system. High PAR1 mRNA expression was also found in the dorsal root ganglia. Interestingly, strong immunoreactivity for the protease inhibitor PN-1 was present in spinal motoneuron cell bodies, although its transcript was undetectable there. In response to sciatic nerve transection, the signal intensity of PAR1 mRNA as seen by Northern analysis increased in the proximal and the distal part of the lesioned nerve and in the denervated muscle, whereas the PN-1 mRNA signal strongly increased only in the distal part of the nerve but remained unchanged in the proximal part and in the muscle. After facial nerve transection, PAR1 mRNA expression substantially decreased in facial motoneurons. No PAR1 transcript was detected in reactive astrocytes. Similar to PAR1, PN-1 mRNA which was expressed in interneurons within the facial nucleus was also decreased following facial nerve transection

    Mice lacking the CNTF receptor, unlike mice lacking CNTF, exhibit profound motor neuron deficits at birth

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    Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) supports motor neuron survival in vitro and in mouse models of motor neuron degeneration and was considered a candidate for the muscle-derived neurotrophic activity that regulates motor neuron survival during development. However, CNTF expression is very low in the embryo, and CNTF gene mutations in mice or human do not result in notable abnormalities of the developing nervous system. We have generated and directly compared mice containing null mutations in the genes encoding CNTF or its receptor (CNTFRα). Unlike mice lacking CNTF, mice lacking CNTFRα die perinatally and display severe motor neuron deficits. Thus, CNTFRα is critical for the developing nervous system, most likely by serving as a receptor for a second, developmentally important, CNTF-like ligand
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