Author:
Yoshimura Shinichi,Takagi Yasushi,Harada Jun,Teramoto Tetsuyuki,Thomas Sunu S.,Waeber Christian,Bakowska Joanna C.,Breakefield Xandra O.,Moskowitz Michael A.
Abstract
Fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) promotes proliferation of
neuroprogenitor cells in culture and is up-regulated within brain after
injury. Using mice genetically deficient in FGF-2
(FGF-2−/− mice), we addressed the importance of
endogenously generated FGF-2 on neurogenesis within the
hippocampus, a structure involved in spatial, declarative, and
contextual memory, after seizures or ischemic injury. BrdUrd
incorporation was used to mark dividing neuroprogenitor cells and NeuN
expression to monitor their differentiation into neurons. In the
wild-type strain, hippocampal FGF-2 increased after either kainic acid
injection or middle cerebral artery occlusion, and the numbers of
BrdUrd/NeuN-positive cells significantly increased on days 9 and 16
as compared with the controls. In FGF-2−/− mice, BrdUrd
labeling was attenuated after kainic acid or middle cerebral artery
occlusion, as was the number of neural cells colabeled with both BrdUrd
and NeuN. After FGF-2−/− mice were injected
intraventricularly with a herpes simplex virus-1 amplicon vector
carrying FGF-2 gene, the number of BrdUrd-labeled cells increased
significantly to values equivalent to wild-type littermates after
kainate seizures. These results indicate that endogenously
synthesized FGF-2 is necessary and sufficient to stimulate
proliferation and differentiation of neuroprogenitor cells in the adult
hippocampus after brain insult.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
390 articles.
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