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Death pathways activated in the neurotrophic factor-deprived neurons

Authors :
Helsingin yliopisto, biotieteellinen tiedekunta, bio- ja ympäristötieteiden laitos
Helsingfors universitet, biovetenskapliga fakulteten, institutionen för bio- och miljövetenskaper
University of Helsinki, Faculty of Biosciences, Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences
Institute of Biotechnology
Yu, Liying
Helsingin yliopisto, biotieteellinen tiedekunta, bio- ja ympäristötieteiden laitos
Helsingfors universitet, biovetenskapliga fakulteten, institutionen för bio- och miljövetenskaper
University of Helsinki, Faculty of Biosciences, Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences
Institute of Biotechnology
Yu, Liying
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Programed cell death (PCD) is a fundamental biological process that is as essential for the development and tissue homeostasis as cell proliferation, differentiation and adaptation. The main mode of PCD - apoptosis - occurs via specifi c pathways, such as mitochondrial or death receptor pathway. In the developing nervous system, programed death broadly occurs, mainly triggered by the defi ciency of different survival-promoting neurotrophic factors, but the respective death pathways are poorly studied. In one of the best-characterized models, sympathetic neurons deprived of nerve growth factor (NGF) die via the classical mitochondrial apoptotic pathway. The main aim of this study was to describe the death programs activated in these and other neuronal populations by using neuronal cultures deprived of other neurotrophic factors. First, this study showed that the cultured sympathetic neurons deprived of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) die via a novel non-classical death pathway, in which mitochondria and death receptors are not involved. Indeed, cytochrome c was not released into the cytosol, Bax, caspase-9, and caspase-3 were not involved, and Bcl-xL overexpression did not prevent the death. This pathway involved activation of mixed lineage kinases and c-jun, and crucially requires caspase-2 and -7. Second, it was shown that deprivation of neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) from cultured sensory neurons of the dorsal root ganglia kills them via a dependence receptor pathway, including cleavage of the NT- 3 receptor TrkC and liberation of a pro-apoptotic dependence domain. Indeed, death of NT-3-deprived neurons was blocked by a dominant-negative construct interfering with TrkC cleavage. Also, the uncleavable mutant of TrkC, replacing the siRNA-silenced endogeneous TrkC, was not able to trigger death upon NT-3 removal. Such a pathway was not activated in another subpopulation of sensory neurons deprived of NGF. Third, it was shown that cultured midbrain dopaminer<br />Ei saatavilla

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn746228969
Document Type :
Electronic Resource