Somatostatin affects GnRH neuronal development and migration and stimulates olfactory‐related fiber fasciculation

Author:

Murakami Shizuko1ORCID,Ohki‐Hamazaki Hiroko2,Uchiyama Yasuo1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cellular and Molecular Neuropathology Juntendo University Graduate School of Medicine Tokyo Japan

2. College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Kitasato University Sagamihara Kanagawa Japan

Abstract

AbstractTransient expression of somatostatin (SST) has been observed in the olfactory epithelium (OE) and nerves of chick embryos. Intense expression of SST in these regions on embryonic days (E) 5–8 coincides with the migration of neurons producing gonadotropin‐releasing hormone (GnRH) from the OE to the forebrain (FB), suggesting that SST plays a role in the development of GnRH neurons. Using in ovo electroporation of small interfering RNA, we found that the suppression of SST mRNA in the olfactory placode (OP) of E3.5 chick embryos significantly reduced the number of GnRH and Islet‐1‐immunoreactive neurons in the nasal region without affecting the entry of GnRH neurons into the FB at E5.5–6. SST knockdown did not lead to changes in the number of apoptotic, proliferating, or HuC/D‐positive neuronal cells in the OE; therefore, it is possible that SST is involved in the neurogenesis/differentiation of GnRH neurons and OP‐derived GnRH‐negative migratory neurons. In whole OP explant cultures, we also found that SST or its analog octreotide treatment significantly increased the number of migratory GnRH neurons and the migratory distance from the explants. The co‐application of an SST antagonist blocked the octreotide‐induced increase in the number of GnRH neurons. Furthermore, the fasciculation of polysialylated neural cell adhesion molecule‐immunoreactive fibers emerging from the explants was dependent on octreotide. Taken together, our results provide evidence that SST exerts facilitatory effects on the development of neurons expressing GnRH or Islet‐1 and on GnRH neuronal migration, in addition to olfactory‐related fiber fasciculation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Developmental Neuroscience

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