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Publication : Support of trigeminal sensory neurons by nonneuronal p75 neurotrophin receptors.

First Author  Fan L Year  2004
Journal  Brain Res Dev Brain Res Volume  150
Issue  1 Pages  23-39
PubMed ID  15126035 Mgi Jnum  J:90280
Mgi Id  MGI:3042811 Doi  10.1016/j.devbrainres.2004.02.008
Citation  Fan L, et al. (2004) Support of trigeminal sensory neurons by nonneuronal p75 neurotrophin receptors. Brain Res Dev Brain Res 150(1):23-39
abstractText  The p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR) binds all four mammalian neurotrophins, including neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) required for the development of select sensory neurons. This study demonstrated that many gustatory and somatosensory neurons of the tongue depend upon p75NTR. Each of thousands of filiform papillae at the front of the tongue as well as each somatosensory prominence at the back of the tongue has a small cluster of p75NTR-positive epithelial cells that is targeted by somatosensory innervation. This expression of p75NTR by epithelial target cells required NT-3 but not adult innervation. NT-3-secreting cells were adjacent to the p75NTR-positive target cells of each somatosensory organ, as demonstrated in NT-3(lacZneo) transgenic mice. In NT-3 null mutant mice, there were few lingual somatosensory neurons. In p75NTR null mutant mice, the lingual somatosensory axons were likewise absent or had deficient terminal arborizations. Cell culture indicated that substrate p75NTR can influence neuronal outgrowth. Specifically, dissociated trigeminal sensory neurons more than doubled their neurite lengths when grown on a lawn of p75NTR-overexpressing fibroblasts. This enhancement of neurite outgrowth by fibroblast p75NTR raises the possibility that epithelial target cell p75NTR may help to promote axonal arborization in vivo. The co-occurrence in p75NTR null mice of a 35% reduction in geniculate ganglion taste neurons and a shortfall of taste buds is consistent with the established role of gustatory innervation in prompting mammalian taste receptor cell differentiation.
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