Skip to main content
The Journal of Neuroscience logoLink to The Journal of Neuroscience
. 1984 Feb 1;4(2):585–592. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.04-02-00585.1984

Fibrous and protoplasmic astrocytes are biochemically and developmentally distinct

RH Miller, MC Raff
PMCID: PMC6564905  PMID: 6366155

Abstract

We have studied semithin frozen sections of developing and adult rat central nervous system (CNS) by indirect immunofluorescence in order to determine the antigenic phenotype of protoplasmic and fibrous astrocytes. Using antibodies against glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) to identify astrocytes, we show that the great majority of fibrous astrocytes in adult optic nerve are labeled by the monoclonal antibody A2B5, while the great majority of protoplasmic astrocytes in adult cerebral cortex are not. Astrocytes located at the periphery of the adult optic nerve that form the glial limiting membrane are more like protoplasmic astrocytes than fibrous astrocytes in that they strain relatively weakly with anti-GFAP antiserum and are A2B5-. In the developing rat optic nerve, protoplasmic-like astrocytes appear at least one week before the first fibrous astrocytes can be detected. Taken together with our previous observations on astrocytes in suspensions and cultures of developing rat optic nerve (Raff, M.C., E.R. Abney, J. Cohen, R. Lindsay, and M. Noble (1983) J. Neurosci. 3: 1289–1300; Raff, M.C., R.H. Miller, and M. Noble (1983) Nature 303: 390– 396), these results suggest that protoplasmic and fibrous astrocytes are distinct classes of glial cells that differ in their antigenic phenotype and developmental history, as well as in their morphology and location within the CNS.


Articles from The Journal of Neuroscience are provided here courtesy of Society for Neuroscience

RESOURCES