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The Journal of Neuroscience logoLink to The Journal of Neuroscience
. 1984 Jul 1;4(7):1892–1903. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.04-07-01892.1984

Glia are a unique substrate for the in vitro growth of central nervous system neurons

M Noble, J Fok-Seang, J Cohen
PMCID: PMC6564884  PMID: 6737045

Abstract

We have examined the consequences of surface interactions with glial and nonglial cells on the in vitro growth of CNS neurons. When cerebellar or spinal cord cells were plated onto monolayers highly enriched in cortical astrocytes or sciatic nerve Schwann cells, neurons generally grew as single cells and showed relatively little tendency to aggregate. Similarly, neurites showed little tendency to fasciculate. In contrast, when plated onto fibroblast, heart muscle-fibroblast, or astrocyte-free meningeal monolayers, neurons rapidly aggregated, and neurite outgrowth was primarily in large fascicles. There were no glia detectable in the majority of aggregates or fascicles, suggesting that aggregation and fasciculation were due to interactions between neurons. Neurite outgrowth over 24 hr was also greater on astrocytes than on nonglia. Whether or not aggregation and fasciculation occurred was due to surface properties of the glial and nonglial cells. When neurons were added to astrocyte and nonglial monolayers growing in medium conditioned by a large excess of co-cultured nonglia or astrocytes, respectively, the pattern of neuronal growth was determined by the type of monolayer with which the neurons were in contact. Moreover, the initial growth of neurons on heat-killed astrocytes was indistinguishable from growth on living astrocytes. The pattern of neuronal growth on these different monolayers suggests that neurons are more adherent to glia than to other neurons but are more adherent to other neurons than to nonglia. Such an adherence hierarchy could explain the consistent finding of an apposition of neurons to glial surfaces during neuronal migration and axon outgrowth. Our findings also suggest that the interaction of axons with the non-neuronal milieu through which they grow may play an important role in regulating fasciculation, a process which has generally been treated as due primarily to axon-axon interactions.


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