| Literature DB >> 7671212 |
E Pannese1, M Ledda, V Conte, L Rigamonti, P Procacci.
Abstract
While the outgrowth of the slender projections from the perikaryon of spinal ganglion neurons is an intrinsic property of these neurons, it is also influenced by the surrounding microenvironment. To obtain evidence concerning whether the outgrowth of these projections is influenced by one or both components of the perineuronal microenvironment (satellite cells plus extracellular matrix) we have taken advantage of a rare arrangement of these neurons. In the spinal ganglia of adult animals nerve cell bodies are occasionally arranged in pairs, the two nerve cell bodies of the pair being separated by a satellite cell sheet lacking a basal lamina, while along the remaining portions of their surfaces they are enveloped by a satellite cell sheath, in turn surrounded by a basal lamina and connective tissue. By studying these paired nerve cells we have been able to compare, in the same nerve cell body, the extent of the perikaryal projections in surface domains associated only with satellite cells and in surface domains associated with both satellite cells and extracellular matrix. In spinal ganglia of the rat and lizard we have found that the overall development of the perikaryal projections does not differ significantly in either of these surface domains. This finding suggests that neuron-satellite cell interactions rather than factors in the extracellular matrix play a role in promoting the outgrowth of perikaryal projections from spinal ganglion neurons.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1995 PMID: 7671212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Submicrosc Cytol Pathol ISSN: 1122-9497