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Staurosporine induces the outgrowth of neurites from the dorsal root ganglion of the chick embryo and PC12D cells
Authors:M Sano  M Iwanaga  H Fujisawa  M Nagahama  Y Yamazaki
Affiliation:Institute for Developmental Research, Aichi Prefectural Colony, Japan.
Abstract:Staurosporine, a potent inhibitor of protein kinases, caused the rapid outgrowth of neurites from cultured dorsal root ganglia of chick embryos and from PC12D cells, a subline of PC12 cells. Treatment of dorsal root ganglia with 1 to 20 nM staurosporine resulted in the extensive outgrowth of neurites that were indistinguishable from those induced by NGF, as assessed by phase-contrast microscopy, electron microscopy and cytochemical staining of actin and tubulin. However, neurites generated from the ganglia in response to the higher concentrations of staurosporine (40-100 nM) seemed to have different characteristics, possibly as a result of the inhibition of cell migration from ganglia. The sequential changes in morphology of PC12D cells in response to staurosporine and to NGF were revealed by staining of actin. Ruffling membranes emerged at the margins of PC12D cells within 4 min after the addition of staurosporine or of NGF. From 10 min to 24 h after the addition of either compound, the ruffles were transformed into several projections that became growing neurites. The formation of ruffles and the outgrowth of neurites were both apparent at a concentration of staurosporine of 10 nM. The neurites that emerged from PC12D cells in response to staurosporine and in response to NGF were indistinguishable under the phase-contrast microscope and after staining of actin and tubulin. However, staurosporine never promoted survival of PC12D cells in serum-free conditions as that promoted by NGF. The observations indicate that staurosporine at nanomolar concentrations may reproduce the neurogenic changes that induced by NGF in primed neuronal cells, although it can not mimic the action of NGF that supports survival of neurons.
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