McNulty J A, Fox L M, Silberman S
Department of Cell Biology, Loyola University Chicago, Stritch School of Medicine, Maywood 60153.
Brain Res. 1993 Apr 30;610(1):108-14. doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(93)91223-f.
Nerve growth factor receptor immunoreactivity (NGFRI) in the pineal gland was examined both light and electron microscopically using the monoclonal antibody 192IgG. NGFRI was located on sympathetic fibers and on perivascular cells resembling macrophage/microglia. A pineal gland dispersed cell culture model confirmed the presence of NGFRI in cells that exhibited processes of varying lengths and were distributed among pinealocytes and other flat cells. Pinealocytes in dispersed cell culture were identified immunocytochemically by their expression of S-antigen, their round shape and small size and their tendency to extend neurites in the direction of the flat cells in culture. The length of pinealocyte neurites showed a significant increase when cultured in the presence of NGF (25 ng/ml), suggesting that trophic factors, mediated by these macrophage/microglial cells, are important to the morphogenesis of these neuroendocrine cells. Neurotrophic activation of these neuroendocrine macrophage/microglia may have neuro-immunomodulatory implications leading to expression of proteins encoded by the major histocompatibility complex.