Ganglioside and neurotrophic growth factor interactions in retinal neuronal and glial cells

Henri Dreyfus, Emmanuelle Meuillet, Bernard Guérold, Valérie Fontaine, Valérie Forster, Valérie Heidinger, José Sahel, David Hicks

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ganglioside (GG) and neurotrophic growth factor (GF) interactions in retinal neuronal and glial cells have been very little studied. Rat retinas were mechanically separated into outer (photoreceptor or PR) and inner (other neurons, IR) halves by planar vibratome sectioning and retinal Müller glial (RMG) cells were isolated and cultured according to previously published methods. The distribution on a percent molar basis of individual GG was different between the two halves: PR were dominated by GD3 (48% total GG) and contained only trace amounts (<4%) of complex species (GT1b, GQ); IR was more typical of mature brain tissue, exhibiting substantial amounts (∼25%) of more complex GG. The GG profile of RMG cells was also simple, dominated by GM3 (60%) and GD1a (20%). A single addition to the medium of 500 pM bFGF or EGF for 48 hr to cultured RMG cells led to significant increases in total GG levels of 30-40%. Such treatments by both growth factors induced increases in GM3, whereas longer exposure (96 hr) of confluent RMG to these factors additionally stimulated synthesis of more complex GG. Incubations of RMG with [3H]-glucosamine showed that GG synthesis was 2-fold stimulated by growth factors. We also tested the effect of GM3 on one of the bFGF receptor transduction pathways, namely PI-3 kinase activation. To our knowledge these data constitute the first demonstration of neurotrophic factor stimulation of GG levels in cells of CNS in vitro. Such complex interactions may have particularly important consequences for neural physiopathology.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)90-96
Number of pages7
JournalIndian Journal of Biochemistry and Biophysics
Volume34
Issue number1-2
StatePublished - Feb 1997
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biophysics
  • Biochemistry

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