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Journal ArticleDOI

Platelet-derived growth factor from astrocytes drives the clock that times oligodendrocyte development in culture.

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TLDR
It is shown that platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) can replace type-1-astrocyte-conditioned medium in restoring the normal timing of oligodendrocytes differentiation in vitro and that anti-PDGF antibodies inhibit this property of the appropriately conditioned medium.
Abstract
The various cell types in a multicellular animal differentiate on a predictable schedule but the mechanisms responsible for timing cell differentiation are largely unknown. We have studied a population of bipotential glial (O-2A) progenitor cells in the developing rat optic nerve that gives rise to oligodendrocytes beginning at birth and to type-2 astrocytes beginning in the second postnatal week. Whereas, in vivo, these O-2A progenitor cells proliferate and give rise to postimitotic oligodendrocytes over several weeks, in serum-free (or low-serum) culture they stop dividing prematurely and differentiate into oligodendrocytes within two or three days. The normal timing of oligodendrocyte development can be restored if embryonic optic-nerve cells are cultured in medium conditioned by type-1 astrocytes, the first glial cells to differentiate in the nerve: in this case the progenitor cells continue to proliferate, the first oligodendrocytes appear on the equivalent of the day of birth, and new oligodendrocytes continue to develop over several weeks, just as in vivo. Here we show that platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) can replace type-1-astrocyte-conditioned medium in restoring the normal timing of oligodendrocyte differentiation in vitro and that anti-PDGF antibodies inhibit this property of the appropriately conditioned medium. We also show that PDGF is present in the developing optic nerve. These findings suggest that type-1-astrocyte-derived PDGF drives the clock that times oligodendrocyte development.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism of Action and In Vivo Role of Platelet-Derived Growth Factor

TL;DR: Structural and functional properties of PDGF and PDGF receptors, the mechanism whereby PDGF exerts its cellular effects, and the role ofPDGF in normal and diseased tissues are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biology of Oligodendrocyte and Myelin in the Mammalian Central Nervous System

TL;DR: This review deals with the recent progress related to the origin and differentiation of the oligodendrocytes, their relationships to other neural cells, and functional neuroglial interactions under physiological conditions and in demyelinating diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell death and control of cell survival in the oligodendrocyte lineage

TL;DR: It is shown that about 50% of oligodendrocytes normally die in the developing rat optic nerve, apparently as a result of a competition for limiting amounts of survival signals and that a requirement for survival signals is more general than previously thought.
Journal ArticleDOI

Derivation of pluripotential embryonic stem cells from murine primordial germ cells in culture.

TL;DR: It is shown that addition of bFGF to cultures in the presence of membrane-associated SF and LIF enhances the growth of PGCs and allows their continued proliferation beyond the time when they normally stop dividing in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth factors and cancer

Stuart A. Aaronson
- 22 Nov 1991 - 
TL;DR: Signaling pathways that mediate the normal functions of growth factors are commonly subverted in cancer, and oncogenes appear to replace the actions of one set of these growth factors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A glial progenitor cell that develops in vitro into an astrocyte or an oligodendrocyte depending on culture medium

TL;DR: It is suggested that fibrous astrocytes and oligodendrocyte develop from a common progenitor cell and provide a striking example of developmental plasticity and environmental influence in the differentiation of CNS glial cells.
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Astrocytes induce blood–brain barrier properties in endothelial cells

TL;DR: Direct evidence is provided that astrocytes are capable of inducing blood–brain barrier properties in non-neural endothelial cells in vivo.
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Monoclonal antibody to a plasma membrane antigen of neurons

TL;DR: Results suggest that the antigen is a complex ganglioside in plasma membranes of retina neuron cell bodies but not axons or dendrites, which suggests that antibody A2B5 cytotoxicity against retina cells is inhibited by a GQ gangliosiside fraction from bovine brain but not by other purifiedgangliosides tested.
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Development of oligodendrocytes and Schwann cells studied with a monoclonal antibody against galactocerebroside

TL;DR: A hybridoma cell line secreting a monoclonal antibody that specifically binds to the surfaces of oligodendrocytes and Schwann cells, the cells involved in myelin formation in the central and peripheral nervous systems, respectively, is generated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Platelet-derived growth factor promotes division and motility and inhibits premature differentiation of the oligodendrocyte/type-2 astrocyte progenitor cell.

TL;DR: It is found that platelet-derived growth factor mimics the effects of type-1 astrocytes on O-2A progenitor cells, and antibodies to PDGF block the effects.
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