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      Regulation of adult olfactory neurogenesis by insulin-like growth factor-I.

      The European Journal of Neuroscience
      Animals, Antibodies, pharmacology, Blotting, Northern, Bromodeoxyuridine, metabolism, Cell Differentiation, drug effects, Cell Proliferation, Cell Survival, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Epithelial Cells, physiology, Immunohistochemistry, methods, Mice, Neurons, Olfactory Mucosa, Organ Culture Techniques, RNA, Messenger, biosynthesis, Rats, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Somatomedins, immunology, Tubulin

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          Abstract

          Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) has multiple effects within the developing nervous system but its role in neurogenesis in the adult nervous system is less clear. The adult olfactory mucosa is a site of continuing neurogenesis that expresses IGF-I, its receptor and its binding proteins. The aim of the present study was to investigate the roles of IGF-I in regulating proliferation and differentiation in the olfactory mucosa. The action of IGF-I was assayed in serum-free culture combined with bromodeoxyuridine-labelling of proliferating cells and immunochemistry for specific cell types. IGF-I and its receptor were expressed by globose basal cells (the neuronal precursor) and by olfactory neurons. IGF-I reduced the numbers of proliferating neuronal precursors, induced their differentiation into neurons and promoted morphological differentiation of neurons. The evidence suggests that IGF-I is an autocrine and/or paracrine signal that induces neuronal precursors to differentiate into olfactory sensory neurons. These effects appear to be similar to the cellular effects of IGF-I in the developing nervous system.

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