The Role of Nerve Growth Factor During Chronic Inflammation of the Descending Colon In Vivo: a Novel Source for Nerve Growth Factor

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Petrie, Casey

Date

2013-09-05

Type

thesis

Language

eng

Keyword

NGF , Dogiel Type II , p75 , Inflammation

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

In these experiments, we primarily investigate the role and source of nerve growth factor (NGF) in peripheral tissues undergoing chronic inflammation. It has been previously determined that there is a significant increase in the levels of NGF following prolonged inflammation of the urinary bladder or the colon, and the first of two projects discussed here mimics this increase with transgenic mice which ectopically produce NGF under control of the smooth muscle alpha-actin promoter. It was determined by this increase that a p75-sensitive increase in sympathetic innervation occurs when an abundance of NGF is produced locally in the descending colon. Sensory innervation in the colon was found to come from two unique populations, one of which increased following heightened NGF levels. The urinary bladders of NGF overexpressing mice were determined to have an increase in sensory axonal density. The second project described here features chemically induced colonic inflammation and observes the nervous and growth factor changes as a response. Transgenic reporter mice are used to observe the cellular source of NGF in the descending colon, which unexpectedly was determined to be Dogiel type II (DgII neurons) based on morphological and chemical characteristics. We report the increase in NGF mRNA and protein observed following a brief 5-day colonic inflammation, and note that there is no increase in axonal density observed. The chemical inflammation did, however, induce an increase in axonal varicosities, used as a measure of axon damage. Finally, a heterozygous null-mutation of NGF was made in a line of transgenic mice to observe changes in local sensory neurons, sympathetic innervation or NGF protein production, but no differences between the heterozygous null mutants and age-matched wild-type siblings were observed.

Description

Thesis (Master, Neuroscience Studies) -- Queen's University, 2013-09-05 12:08:44.326

Citation

Publisher

License

This publication is made available by the authority of the copyright owner solely for the purpose of private study and research and may not be copied or reproduced except as permitted by the copyright laws without written authority from the copyright owner.

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

External DOI

ISSN

EISSN