Arzu Hizay, Mark Seitz, Maria Grosheva, Nektarios Sinis, Yasemin Kaya, Habib Bendella, Levent Sarikcioglu, Sarah A. Dunlop, Doychin N. Angelov. FGF-2 is required to prevent astrogliosis in the facial nucleus after facial nerve injury and mechanical stimulation of denervated vibrissal muscles[J]. The Journal of Biomedical Research, 2016, 30(2): 142-148. DOI: 10.7555/JBR.30.20140042
Citation:
Arzu Hizay, Mark Seitz, Maria Grosheva, Nektarios Sinis, Yasemin Kaya, Habib Bendella, Levent Sarikcioglu, Sarah A. Dunlop, Doychin N. Angelov. FGF-2 is required to prevent astrogliosis in the facial nucleus after facial nerve injury and mechanical stimulation of denervated vibrissal muscles[J]. The Journal of Biomedical Research, 2016, 30(2): 142-148. DOI: 10.7555/JBR.30.20140042
Arzu Hizay, Mark Seitz, Maria Grosheva, Nektarios Sinis, Yasemin Kaya, Habib Bendella, Levent Sarikcioglu, Sarah A. Dunlop, Doychin N. Angelov. FGF-2 is required to prevent astrogliosis in the facial nucleus after facial nerve injury and mechanical stimulation of denervated vibrissal muscles[J]. The Journal of Biomedical Research, 2016, 30(2): 142-148. DOI: 10.7555/JBR.30.20140042
Citation:
Arzu Hizay, Mark Seitz, Maria Grosheva, Nektarios Sinis, Yasemin Kaya, Habib Bendella, Levent Sarikcioglu, Sarah A. Dunlop, Doychin N. Angelov. FGF-2 is required to prevent astrogliosis in the facial nucleus after facial nerve injury and mechanical stimulation of denervated vibrissal muscles[J]. The Journal of Biomedical Research, 2016, 30(2): 142-148. DOI: 10.7555/JBR.30.20140042
Department of Anatomy, Akdeniz University, Faculty of Medicine, Dumlupinar Bulvari 07058 Kampus, Antalya, Turkey
2.
Department of Anatomy I, University of Cologne, Joseph-Stelzmann-Strasse 9, D-50924 Cologne, FR Germany
3.
Department of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology, University Hospital Cologne, Joseph-Stelzmann-Strasse 9, D-50924 Cologne, FR Germany
4.
Depeartment of Plastic-, Hand- and Reconstructive Microsurgery, Berlin, FR 12249, Germany
5.
Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital Merheim, University of Witten-Herdecke, Ostmerheimer Stra?e 200, 51109 Cologne, Germany
6.
Experimental and Regenerative Neurosciences, School of Animal Biology, University of Western Australia (M092) 35 Stirling Highway, CRAWLEY WA 6009, Australia
Funds:
the K?ln
Fortune Programm, the Jean-Uhrmacher Foundation,
and Akdeniz University Research Fund. SAD is a
Principal Research Fellow of the National Health &
Medical Research Council, Australia
Recently, we have shown that manual stimulation of paralyzed vibrissal muscles after facial-facial anastomosis reduced the poly-innervation of neuromuscular junctions and restored vibrissal whisking. Using gene knock outs,we found a differential dependence of manual stimulation effects on growth factors. Thus, insulin-like growth factor-1 and brain-derived neurotrophic factor are required to underpin manual stimulation-mediated improvements,whereas FGF-2 is not. The lack of dependence on FGF-2 in mediating these peripheral effects prompted us to look centrally, i.e. within the facial nucleus where increased astrogliosis after facial-facial anastomosis follows "synaptic stripping". We measured the intensity of Cy3-fluorescence after immunostaining for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) as an indirect indicator of synaptic coverage of axotomized neurons in the facial nucleus of mice lacking FGF-2 (FGF-2-/- mice). There was no difference in GFAP-Cy3-fluorescence (pixel number, gray value range 17–103) between intact wildtype mice (2.12±?0.37×107) and their intact FGF-2-/- counterparts (2.12±0.27×107) nor after facial-facial anastomosis ?handling (wildtype: 4.06±0.32×107; FGF-2-/-: 4.3±0.17×107). However, after facial-facial anastomosis, GFAP-Cy3-fluorescence remained elevated in FGF-2-/--animals (4.54±0.12×107), whereas manual stimulation reduced the intensity of GFAP-immunofluorescence in wild type mice to values that were not significantly different from intact mice (2.63±0.39×10 ). We conclude that FGF-2 is not required to underpin the beneficial effects of manual stimulation at the neuro-muscular junction, but it is required to minimize astrogliosis in the brainstem and, by implication, restore synaptic coverage of recovering facial motoneurons.
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