Publication | Open Access
Nerve growth factor-induced fiber outgrowth from isolated rat adrenal chromaffin cells: impairment by glucocorticoids.
467
Citations
17
References
1978
Year
Peripheral NerveGlucocorticoidPeripheral NervesPeripheral Nervous SystemAdrenal GlandHealth SciencesGrowth HormoneFiber OutgrowthAdrenal DiseaseNervous SystemEndocrinologyChromaffin CellsDevelopmental BiologyNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyNeuroendocrine DisorderNerve Growth FactorNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
Addition of nerve growth factor to cultures of dissociated rat adrenal medullary cells caused fiber outgrowth from chromaffin cells. These fibers exhibited all the characteristics of neurites, particularly the formation of typical growth cones exhibiting intense catecholamine-specific fluorescence. Because this nerve growth factor-mediated neurite outgrowth could be abolished by physiological concentrations of glucocorticoids, it is concluded that the high glucocorticoid concentrations normally present in the adrenal medulla prevent the fiber outgrowth from medullary chromaffin cells in vivo. In dissociated sympathetic neurons the same concentrations of glucocorticoids markedly reduce but do not completely abolish neuronal fiber outgrowth.
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