نتایج جستجو برای: nerve growth factors

تعداد نتایج: 1917112  

2011
Sumiko Kiryu-Seo Hiroshi Kiyama

Peripheral nervous system (PNS) neurons survive and regenerate after nerve injury, whereas central nervous system (CNS) neurons lack the capacity to do so. The inability of the CNS to regenerate presumably results from a lack of intrinsic growth activity and a permissive environment. To achieve CNS regeneration, we can learn from successful nerve regeneration in the PNS. Neurons in the PNS elic...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1981
K Huff D End G Guroff

PC12 cells, which differentiate morphologically and biochemically into sympathetic neruonlike cells in response to nerve growth fact, also respond to epidermal growth factor. The response to epidermal growth factor is similar in certain respects to the response to nerve growth fact. Both peptides produce rapid increases in cellular adhesion and 2-deoxyglucose uptake and both induce ornithine de...

Journal: :Neuron 1999
Robert O'Connor Marc Tessier-Lavigne

Trigeminal sensory axons project to several epithelial targets, including those of the maxillary and mandibular processes. Previous studies identified a chemoattractant activity, termed Maxillary Factor, secreted by these processes, which can attract developing trigeminal axons in vitro. We report that Maxillary Factor activity is composed of two neurotrophins, neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) and Brain-D...

Journal: :Cell 2003
Isabella A. Graef Fan Wang Frederic Charron Lei Chen Joel Neilson Marc Tessier-Lavigne Gerald R. Crabtree

Axon outgrowth is the first step in the formation of neuronal connections, but the pathways that regulate axon extension are still poorly understood. We find that mice deficient in calcineurin-NFAT signaling have dramatic defects in axonal outgrowth, yet have little or no defect in neuronal differentiation or survival. In vitro, sensory and commissural neurons lacking calcineurin function or NF...

Journal: :Current Biology 1997
Alun M Davies

In the fifty years since its discovery, a substantial body of work has established that nerve growth factor plays a key role in promoting the survival of neurons during development; the recent demonstration that it can also promote cell death therefore comes as a surprise.

Journal: :Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews 2003
F Cirulli A Berry E Alleva

Early environmental manipulations can impact on the developing nervous system, contributing to shape individual differences in physiological and behavioral responses to environmental challenges. In particular, it has been shown that disruptions in the mother-infant relationship result in neuroendocrine, neurochemical and behavioural changes in the adult organism, although the basic mechanisms u...

Journal: :Science 2001
K Kohara A Kitamura M Morishima T Tsumoto

Neurotrophins such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) are thought to be transferred from post- to presynaptic neurons and to be involved in the formation and plasticity of neural circuits. However, direct evidence for a transneuronal transfer of BDNF and its relation to neuronal activity remains elusive. We simultaneously injected complementary DNAs of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-t...

2011
Parichehr Hassanzadeh

Obesity with an increasing prevalence rate worldwide is correlated with multiple comorbidities. Unfortunately, the currently available therapies such as the pharmacotherapy, bariatric surgery or gene-transfer technology are associated with a number of disadvantages including undesirable side effects, poor compliance or transient effectiveness. Therefore, modifications of the lifestyle factors m...

Journal: :Neuron 2003
Bai Lu

Neurotrophins are synthesized first as precursors, followed by maturation through proteolytic removal of the "pro" region. Since pro- and mature neurotrophins elicit opposite functional effects by differential interactions with Trks and p75 receptors, extracellular cleavage represents a new way to control the synaptic functions of neurotrophins. A single nucleotide mutation in the pro-region ap...

Journal: :Science 1998
H Song G Ming Z He M Lehmann L McKerracher M Tessier-Lavigne M Poo

Nerve growth is regulated by attractive and repulsive factors in the nervous system. Microscopic gradients of Collapsin-1/Semaphorin III/D (Sema III) and myelin-associated glycoprotein trigger repulsive turning responses by growth cones of cultured Xenopus spinal neurons; the repulsion can be converted to attraction by pharmacological activation of the guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate (cGMP) and a...

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