HGF regulates the development of cortical pyramidal dendrites

Author

Gutierrez, Humberto

Dolcet Roca, Xavier

Tolcos, Mary

Davies, Alun M.

Publication date

2015-11-19T14:02:55Z

2015-11-19T14:02:55Z

2004-08



Abstract

Although hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) and its receptor tyrosine kinase MET are widely expressed in the developing and mature central nervous system, little is known about the role of MET signaling in the brain. We have used particle-mediated gene transfer in cortical organotypic slice cultures established from early postnatal mice to study the effects of HGF on the development of dendritic arbors of pyramidal neurons. Compared with untreated control cultures, exogenous HGF promoted a highly significant increase in dendritic growth and branching of layer 2 pyramidal neurons, whereas inactivation of endogenous HGF with function-blocking, anti-HGF antibody caused a marked reduction in size and complexity of the dendritic arbors of these neurons. Furthermore, pyramidal neurons transfected with an MET dominant-negative mutant receptor likewise had much smaller and less complex dendritic arbors than did control transfected neurons. Our results indicate that HGF plays a role in regulating dendritic morphology in the developing cerebral cortex.

Document Type

article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

MET; Neurons; Process growth; Slice cultures; Neurones

Publisher

Company of Biologists Ltd.

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.01209

Development, 2004, vol. 131, núm.15, p. 3717-3726

Rights

(c) Company of Biologists Ltd., 2004

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