Herrera D G, Maysinger D, Gadient R, Boeckh C, Otten U, Cuello A C
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Brain Res. 1993 Jan 29;602(1):99-103. doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(93)90247-k.
Application of potassium chloride (KCl) to the brain surface elicits spreading depression which leads to a marked induction of the proto-oncogene c-fos in the treated cerebral cortex at the earliest time examined (90 min). High levels of c-fos immunoreactivity are observed up to 6 h after KCl treatment. The areas affected include the cingulate, entorhinal and frontoparietal cortex throughout the treated hemisphere. The c-fos expression preceded an increase in both NGFmRNA and NGF-like protein(s). A maximal increase in c-fos was detected within 3 h, whereas NGFmRNA peaked at 12 h and NGF-like protein(s) reached their maximum level 24 h after KCl application. The most prominent increase in NGFmRNA was measured in the entorhinal cortex (50-fold), but other cortical areas also showed a moderate increase of 2-3-fold. In conclusion, our results provide evidence that increases in c-fos and NGF expression are early adaptive responses following brain injury.