Literature DB >> 14999074

Macrophage-derived tumor necrosis factor alpha, an early developmental signal for motoneuron death.

Frédéric Sedel1, Catherine Béchade, Sheela Vyas, Antoine Triller.   

Abstract

Mechanisms inducing neuronal death at defined times during embryogenesis remain enigmatic. We show in explants that a developmental switch occurs between embryonic day 12 (E12) and E13 in rats that is 72-48 hr before programmed cell death. Half the motoneurons isolated from peripheral tissues at E12 escape programmed cell death, whereas 90% of motoneurons isolated at E13 enter a death program. The surrounding somite commits E12 motoneurons to death. This effect requires macrophage cells, is mimicked by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha), and is inhibited by anti-TNFalpha antibodies. In vivo, TNFalpha is detected within somite macrophages, and TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1) is detected within motoneurons precisely between E12 and E13. Although motoneuron cell death occurs normally in TNFalpha-/- mice, this process is significantly reduced in explants from TNFalpha-/- and TNFR1-/- mice. Thus, embryonic motoneurons acquire the competence to die, before the onset of programmed cell death, from extrinsic signals such as macrophage-derived TNFalpha

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Year:  2004        PMID: 14999074      PMCID: PMC6730439          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4464-03.2004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


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