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. 1987 Dec;330(6149):658-9.
doi: 10.1038/330658a0.

Interleukin-1 regulates synthesis of nerve growth factor in non-neuronal cells of rat sciatic nerve

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Interleukin-1 regulates synthesis of nerve growth factor in non-neuronal cells of rat sciatic nerve

D Lindholm et al. Nature. 1987 Dec.

Abstract

The Schwann cells and fibroblast-like cells of the intact sciatic nerve of adult rats synthesize very little nerve growth factor (NGF). After lesion, however, there is a dramatic increase in the amounts of both NGF-mRNA and NGF protein synthesized by the sciatic non-neuronal cells. This local increase in NGF synthesis partially replaces the interrupted NGF supply from the periphery to the NGF-responsive sensory and sympathetic neurons, whose axons run within the sciatic nerve. Macrophages, known to invade the site of nerve lesion during wallerian degeneration, are important in the regulation of NGF synthesis. Here we demonstrate that the effect of macrophages on NGF-mRNA levels in cultured explants of sciatic nerve can be mimicked by conditioned media of activated macrophages, and that interleukin-1 is the responsible agent.

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