1. Trigeminal nasal-specific neurons respond to nerve growth factor with substance-P biosynthesis.
- Author
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Mingomataj E, Dinh QT, Groneberg D, Feleszko W, Schmeck B, Joachim R, Noga O, Nagel S, Klapp BF, and Fischer A
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Glutamic Acid biosynthesis, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, Neurofilament Proteins biosynthesis, Neurons cytology, Trigeminal Nerve metabolism, Nasal Mucosa innervation, Nerve Growth Factor metabolism, Neurons metabolism, Substance P biosynthesis, Trigeminal Nerve cytology
- Abstract
Background: Nerve growth factor (NGF) has been found to induce substance-P biosynthesis in large-diameter A-fibres vagal airway neurons. However, the effect of NGF on trigeminal neurons innervating the nasal mucosa of the mouse has not been investigated so far., Objective: NGF has been implicated in allergic diseases by modulating sensory nerves. Therefore, the present study investigated the effect of NGF on neuropeptides expression such as substance-P and glutamate in nasal trigeminal neurons., Methods: Using neuronal tracing in combination with double labelling immunohistochemistry the expression of substance-P, glutamate and neurofilament protein 68-kDa expression was examined in nasal-specific trigeminal neurons of BALB/c-mice., Results: The numbers of Fast blue-labelled trigeminal neurons expressing substance-P were significantly increased after NGF exposure (NGF-treated ganglia: 16.4 +/- 0.6% vs. control: 7.0 +/- 0.4%, P
- Published
- 2008
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