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Publication : Absence of the p75 neurotrophin receptor alters the pattern of sympathosensory sprouting in the trigeminal ganglia of mice overexpressing nerve growth factor.

First Author  Walsh GS Year  1999
Journal  J Neurosci Volume  19
Issue  1 Pages  258-73
PubMed ID  9870956 Mgi Jnum  J:51837
Mgi Id  MGI:1327018 Doi  10.1523/JNEUROSCI.19-01-00258.1999
Citation  Walsh GS, et al. (1999) Absence of the p75 neurotrophin receptor alters the pattern of sympathosensory sprouting in the trigeminal ganglia of mice overexpressing nerve growth factor. J Neurosci 19(1):258-73
abstractText  Sympathetic axons invade the trigeminal ganglia of mice overexpressing nerve growth factor (NGF) (NGF/p75(+/+) mice) and surround sensory neurons having intense NGF immunolabeling; the growth of these axons appears to be directional and specific (). In this investigation, we provide new insight into the neurochemical features and receptor requirements of this sympathosensory sprouting. Using double-antigen immunohistochemistry, we demonstrate that virtually all (98%) trigeminal neurons that exhibit a sympathetic plexus are trk tyrosine kinase receptor (trkA)-positive. In addition, the majority (86%) of those neurons enveloped by sympathetic fibers is also calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-positive; a smaller number of plexuses (14%) surrounded other somata lacking this neuropeptide. Our results show that sympathosensory interactions form primarily between noradrenergic sympathetic efferents and the trkA/CGRP-expressing sensory somata. To assess the contribution of the p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75(NTR)) in sympathosensory sprouting, a hybrid strain of mice was used that overexpresses NGF but lacks p75(NTR) expression (NGF/p75(-/-) mice). The trigeminal ganglia of NGF/p75(-/-) mice, like those of NGF/p75(+/+) mice, have increased levels of NGF protein and display a concomitant ingrowth of sympathetic axons. In contrast to the precise pattern of sprouting seen in the ganglia of NGF/p75(+/+) mice, sympathetic axons course randomly throughout the ganglionic neuropil of NGF/p75(-/-) mice, forming few perineuronal plexuses. Our results indicate that p75(NTR) is not required to initiate or sustain the growth of sympathetic axons into the NGF-rich trigeminal ganglia but rather plays a role in regulating the directional patterns of axon growth.
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