Huang Tao, Ma Liqun, Krimm Robin F
Department of Anatomical Sciences and Neurobiology, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, KY 40292, USA.
Department of Anatomical Sciences and Neurobiology, University of Louisville School of Medicine, Louisville, KY 40292, USA.
Dev Biol. 2015 Sep 15;405(2):225-36. doi: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2015.07.006. Epub 2015 Jul 8.
The refinement of innervation is a common developmental mechanism that serves to increase the specificity of connections following initial innervation. In the peripheral gustatory system, the extent to which innervation is refined and how refinement might be regulated is unclear. The initial innervation of taste buds is controlled by brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). Following initial innervation, taste receptor cells are added and become newly innervated. The connections between the taste receptor cells and nerve fibers are likely to be specific in order to retain peripheral coding mechanisms. Here, we explored the possibility that the down-regulation of BDNF regulates the refinement of taste bud innervation during postnatal development. An analysis of BDNF expression in Bdnf(lacZ/+) mice and real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) revealed that BDNF was down-regulated between postnatal day (P) 5 and P10. This reduction in BDNF expression was due to a loss of precursor/progenitor cells that express BDNF, while the expression of BDNF in the subpopulations of taste receptor cells did not change. Gustatory innervation, which was identified by P2X3 immunohistochemistry, was lost around the perimeter where most progenitor/precursor cells are located. In addition, the density of innervation in the taste bud was reduced between P5 and P10, because taste buds increase in size without increasing innervation. This reduction of innervation density was blocked by the overexpression of BDNF in the precursor/progenitor population of taste bud cells. Together these findings indicate that the process of BDNF restriction to a subpopulation of taste receptor cells between P5 and P10, results in a refinement of gustatory innervation. We speculate that this refinement results in an increased specificity of connections between neurons and taste receptor cells during development.
神经支配的精细化是一种常见的发育机制,其作用是在初始神经支配后增加连接的特异性。在周围味觉系统中,神经支配精细化的程度以及精细化可能如何被调节尚不清楚。味蕾的初始神经支配由脑源性神经营养因子(BDNF)控制。初始神经支配后,味觉受体细胞增加并获得新的神经支配。味觉受体细胞与神经纤维之间的连接可能具有特异性,以保留外周编码机制。在此,我们探讨了BDNF下调在出生后发育过程中调节味蕾神经支配精细化的可能性。对Bdnf(lacZ/+)小鼠中BDNF表达的分析以及实时逆转录聚合酶链反应(RT-PCR)显示,BDNF在出生后第(P)5天至P10天之间下调。BDNF表达的这种降低是由于表达BDNF的前体细胞/祖细胞的丧失,而味觉受体细胞亚群中BDNF的表达没有变化。通过P2X3免疫组织化学鉴定的味觉神经支配在大多数祖细胞/前体细胞所在的周边区域消失。此外,在P5和P10之间味蕾中的神经支配密度降低,因为味蕾在不增加神经支配的情况下增大。在味蕾细胞的前体/祖细胞群体中BDNF的过表达阻止了这种神经支配密度的降低。这些发现共同表明,在P5和P10之间BDNF限制在味觉受体细胞亚群的过程导致了味觉神经支配的精细化。我们推测这种精细化导致发育过程中神经元与味觉受体细胞之间连接的特异性增加。