Injury to the CNS results in the formation of the glial scar, a primarily astrocytic structure that represents an obstacle to regrowing axons. Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPG) are greatly upregulated in the glial scar, and a large body of evidence suggests that these molecules are inhibitory to axon regeneration. We show that the CSPG neurocan, which is expressed in the CNS, exerts a repulsive effect on growing cerebellar axons. Expression of neurocan was examined in the normal and damaged CNS. Frozen sections labeled with anti-neurocan monoclonal antibodies 7 d after a unilateral knife lesion to the cerebral cortex revealed an upregulation of neurocan around the lesion. Western blot analysis of extracts prepared from injured and uninjured tissue also revealed substantially more neurocan in the injured CNS. Western blot analysis revealed neurocan and the processed forms neurocan-C and neurocan-130 to be present in the conditioned medium of highly purified rat astrocytes. The amount detected was increased by transforming growth factor beta and to a greater extent by epidermal growth factor and was decreased by platelet-derived growth factor and, to a lesser extent, by interferon gamma. O-2A lineage cells were also capable of synthesizing and processing neurocan. Immunocytochemistry revealed neurocan to be deposited on the substrate around and under astrocytes but not on the cells. Astrocytes therefore lack the means to retain neurocan at the cell surface. These findings raise the possibility that neurocan interferes with axonal regeneration after CNS injury.
The association of ganglioside GD3 with TAG-1, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored neuronal cell adhesion molecule, was examined by coimmunoprecipitation experiments. Previously, we have shown that the anti-ganglioside GD3 antibody (R24) immunoprecipitated the Src family kinase Lyn from the rat cerebellum, and R24 treatment of primary cerebellar cultures induced Lyn activation and rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of an 80-kDa protein (p80). We now report that R24 coimmunoprecipitates a 135-kDa protein (p135) from primary cerebellar cultures. Treatment with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C revealed that p135 was glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored to the membrane. It was identified as TAG-1 by sequential immunoprecipitation with an anti-TAG-1 antibody. Antibody-mediated cross-linking of TAG-1 induced Lyn activation and rapid tyrosine phosphorylation of p80. Selective inhibitor for Src family kinases reduced the tyrosine phosphorylation of p80. Sucrose density gradient analysis revealed that the TAG-1 and tyrosine-phosphorylated p80 in cerebellar cultures were present in the lipid raft fraction. These data show that TAG-1 transduces signals via Lyn to p80 in the lipid rafts of the cerebellum. Furthermore, degradation of cell-surface glycosphingolipids by endoglycoceramidase induced an alteration of TAG-1 distribution on an OptiPrep gradient and reduced the TAG-1-mediated Lyn activation and tyrosine phosphorylation of p80. These observations suggest that glycosphingolipids are involved in TAG-1-mediated signaling in lipid rafts.Gangliosides, sialic acid-containing glycosphingolipids (GSLs), 1 are found in the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane of all vertebrate cells and are thought to play functional roles in cellular interactions and the control of cell proliferation (1-4).In the nervous system, where gangliosides are particularly abundant, the species and amounts of gangliosides undergo profound changes during development, suggesting that they may play fundamental roles in this process (5). The accumulation of gangliosides within the neurons in ganglioside storage diseases results in extensive neurite outgrowth (6). Exogenously administered gangliosides accelerate the regeneration of neurons in the central nervous system in vivo after lesioning (7). The addition of exogenous gangliosides to primary cultures of neurons and neuroblastoma cells in vitro stimulates cellular differentiation with concomitant neurite sprouting and extension (8 -10). Glucosylceramide synthesis, the first glycosylation step of GSL synthesis, is required for axonal growth in hippocampal neurons (11) and for embryonic development (12). Transfection of the ganglioside GD3 2 synthase cDNA into neuroblastoma cells induces their cholinergic differentiation and neurite sprouting (13). Finally, mice lacking complex gangliosides exhibit axonal degeneration (14). These data show that gangliosides are involved in neural cell differentiation and brain development. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying the ganglioside-depend...
The behavior of cells is generally considered to be regulated by environmental factors, but the molecules in the milieu of neural stem cells have been little studied. We found by immunohistochemistry that chondroitin sulfate (CS) existed in the surroundings of nestin-positive cells or neural stem/progenitor cells in the rat ventricular zone of the telencephalon at embryonic day 14. Brain-specific chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs), including neurocan, phosphacan/receptor-type protein-tyrosine phosphatase , and neuroglycan C, were detected in the ventricular zone. Neurospheres formed by cells from the fetal telencephalon also expressed these CSPGs and NG2 proteoglycan. To examine the structural features and functions of CS polysaccharides in the milieu of neural stem cells, we isolated and purified CS from embryonic day 14 telencephalons. The CS preparation consisted of two fractions differing in size and extent of sulfation: small CS polysaccharides with low sulfation and large CS polysaccharides with high sulfation. Interestingly, both CS polysaccharides and commercial preparations of dermatan sulfate CS-B and an E-type of highly sulfated CS promoted the fibroblast growth factor-2-mediated proliferation of neural stem/progenitor cells. None of these CS preparations promoted the epidermal growth factor-mediated neural stem cell proliferation. These results suggest that these CSPGs are involved in the proliferation of neural stem cells as a group of cell microenvironmental factors.
Soluble chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs), prepared from 10-d-old rat brain, were added to the culture medium of PC12D cells containing NGF to examine the effects on NGF-induced neurite outgrowth from the cells. PC12D cells, a flat-shaped variant of PC12 pheochromocytoma cells, are characteristic of prompt neurite formation in response not only to NGF, but also to cAMP-enhancing reagents such as forskolin. Brain CSPGs inhibited the neurite elongation irreversibly in a dose-dependent manner; complete inhibition was observed at a concentration of 50 nmol uronic acid/ml. Closely similar dose-dependent inhibition was observed in the forskolin-induced neurite outgrowth from PC12D cells. NGF-induced neurite outgrowth from conventional PC12 cells was also inhibited completely by 50 nmol uronic acid/ml CSPGs. Some brain CSPGs seemed to be inhibitory, but the cartilage-unique CSPG did not show any inhibitory effect. Chondroitin sulfate, a polysaccharide moiety of CSPGs, did not show any inhibitory effect even at a concentration of 250 nmol uronic acid/ml, while core proteins prepared from brain CSPGs by digestion with chondroitinase ABC exhibited inhibitory activity similar to that of intact CSPGs. This indicates that the site of the inhibitory activity exists in the core protein moiety of brain CSPGs. From these observations, it is conceivable that brain CSPGs are involved in the regulation of neuronal differentiation.
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