TAG-1 is a 135000 Mr axonal glycoprotein of the immunoglobulin superfamily that promotes axon extension in vitro. One distinguishing feature of TAG-1 is its transient expression on subsets of axons in the developing nervous system. To examine the mechanisms that regulate TAG-1, we have monitored the expression of this protein by developing central and peripheral neurons in vitro. TAG-1 was detected on the surface of a subset of Ell to E13 spinal cord neurons in vitro and was also released by these neurons. Expression of TAG-1 on the cell surface was transient but it was possible to detect a released form of TAG-1 at all times in vitro. Spinal cord neurons isolated from older embryos did not express surface TAG-1 when they regenerated axons in vitro. Changes in the environment of spinal cord neurons did not alter the time course of TAG-1 expression, suggesting that regulation of the protein is cell autonomous. In contrast to these results with spinal cord neurons, surface expression of TAG-1 by DRG neurons persisted in vitro and adult DRG neurons re-expressed TAG-1 when grown in vitro. The cell surface and released forms of TAG-1 therefore appear to be regulated differently by central and peripheral neurons.

During the development of the nervous system, axons project to their targets along complex but stereotyped pathways. The growth and pathfinding of axons is thought to depend on interactions between molecules located on the surface and in the local environment of the growth cone (Dodd and Jessell, 1988; Harrelson and Goodman, 1988). Several axonal glycoproteins have been implicated in growth cone extension and many of these fall into three major structural classes: proteins with immunoglobulin and fibronectin type III domains (Jessell, 1988; Rutishauser, 1989), Ca2+-dependent adhesion proteins termed cadherins (Takeichi, 1990) and heterodimeric proteins termed integrins (Reichardt et al. 1990). Regulation of the structure and expression of these glycoproteins during development may affect the ability of neurons to extend axons. For example, the neural cell adhesion molecule N-CAM exhibits a striking change in polysialic acid (PSA) content during development (Edelman, 1986; Rutishauser, 1989) and removal of PSA from N-CAM on the surface of retinal ganglion neurons reduces axon outgrowth on N-CAM substrates (Doherty et al. 1990). During development retinal ganglion neurons also lose the ability to extend axons on a laminin substrate (Cohen et al. 1987). This appears to result from a developmental, loss of laminin receptors (Cohen et al. 1989), probably of the integrin family (Reichardt et al. 1991).

The axonal glycoprotein TAG-1 has been shown to exhibit both spatial and temporal restrictions in its expression during early neural development (Yamamoto et al. 1986; Dodd et al. 1988; Yamamoto et al. 1990). Within the spinal cord, TAG-1 is expressed transiently during the initial outgrowth of motor, commissural and dorsal root ganglion (DRG) axons (Dodd et al. 1988). The amino acid sequence of TAG-1 deduced from cDNA clones shows it to be a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily (Furley et al. 1990) with structural features in common with other vertebrate axonal glycoproteins, in particular N-CAM, LI and contactin/F3/Fll (Cunningham et al. 1987; Moos et al. 1988; Ranscht, 1988; Gennarini et al. 1989,a;b; Brummendorf et al. 1989). Moreover, neurons grown in vitro extend long processes on a substrate of TAG-1 (Furley et al. 1990), suggesting that the protein is involved in the growth of axons in vivo.

The transient expression of TAG-1 in vivo distinguishes it from that of other neuronal immunoglobulin family members, in particular N-CAM, LI and contactin, which can be detected on the surface of adult axons (Edelman, 1986; Rathjen and Rutishauser, 1984; Ranscht, 1988). To provide information on the mechanisms that control the expression of TAG-1 on developing axons, we have examined the regulation of this glycoprotein in vitro on embryonic CNS neurons obtained from the rat spinal cord and on peripheral neurons of the dorsal root ganglion (DRG). We show here that spinal cord and DRG neurons express both a glycosyl phosphatidylinositol-anchored surface form and a released form of TAG-1 and that the surface form of TAG-1 is regulated differentially by central and peripheral neurons in a cell-type-specific manner.

Cell culture

Spinal cords were dissected from embryonic day (E) 13 rats and placed into L15 medium at 4°C. The dorsal and ventral regions of the spinal cord were dissected and incubated separately with 0.05% trypsin (Gibco) for 20 min in Ca2+/ Mg2+-free modified essential medium (S-MEM) (Gibco) supplemented with 8 mg ml−1 glucose. The tissue was then washed with S-MEM and triturated to give a single cell suspension Spinal cord cells were usually plated into 35 mm tissue culture dishes containing a monolayer of neonatal cortical astrocytes and grown in Ham’s F12 medium (Gibco) supplemented with N3 additives (F12-N3) (Romijn et al. 1982) at a density of 1–1 2×104cellscm−2 in a 5% CO2 humidified incubator at 37°C. In some experiments, spinal cord neurons were plated directly onto substrates of poly-D-lysine (20μgμl−1)/laminin (20μgml−1) or hydrated rat tail collagen (∼100μgml−1).

Dorsal root ganglia (DRG) were dissected from embryonic or neonatal rats and placed into L15 medium, trypsinized and treated as described above. Neurons were plated into 35 mm dishes (Nunc) treated with poly-D-lysine/laminin (20μgml-1 each; Sigma, Collaborative Research) in F12-N3 containing 5 % horse serum (Gibco) and 100 ng NGF. Non-neuronal cells were eliminated from the cultures by treatment soon after plating with 10−5M cytosine arabinoside for 24–48 h. DRG from 21- to 90-day-old rats were isolated, dissociated and prepared for cell culture as described (Lindsay, 1988) Briefly, DRG were isolated and placed in L15 medium and incubated for 2×1.5h periods with collagenase (0 125%; Boehringer Mannheim) in F12 medium containing 5 % horse serum at 37 °C. DRG were then washed in F12 with 5 % horse serum and triturated to a give single cell suspension Culture conditions were as described for DRG obtained from younger rats.

[3H]thymidine labelling

Cells dissociated from embryonic spinal cord were plated onto a cortical astrocyte monolayer, grown overnight and incubated for 10 h with [3H]thymidine (NEN) (1 mCi ml−1) (Kriegstein and Dichter, 1984) [3H]thymidine was added in RPMI-1640 medium with 5 % horse serum; 2 mM 1-glutamine; 1001.u. ml1 penicillin/streptomycm and MEM vitamins (Gibco). The cultures were maintained for 14 h to 5 days after labelling. Cultures were fixed after various times by exposure to 1 % glutaraldehyde in 0.12M phosphate buffer (PB) for 20 – 45min, washed with 20mM PB, 0.9% saline (PBS), followed by distilled water and stored desiccated overnight. The dishes were then coated with NTB2 emulsion diluted IT with water and exposed for 40 – 48 h at 4°C Autoradiographs were processed in Ilford ID11 developer, washed three times in water, covershpped and viewed under phase optics with a Zeiss Axioplan microscope.

Immunocytochemical localization of axonal glycoproteins

TAG-1 was detected with monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) 4D7 (IgM, Yamamoto et al 1986), and 1C12 (IgGl; Dodd et al. 1988) or with rabbit antibodies to immunoaffinity-purified TAG-1 (Dodd et al. 1988) LI was detected by mAbs 69A1 (IgG; Pigott and Davies, 1987) or ASCS4 (IgG; Sweadner, 1983) and by polyclonal antisera raised against mouse LI (Rathjen and Schachner, 1984). The polysialylated form of NCAM was identified by mAb 5A5 (IgM; Dodd et al. 1988). Fluoresceinated isotype-specific second antibodies were purchased from TAGO (goat anti-mouse IgM) and Boehringer Mannheim Biochermcals (goat anti-mouse IgG) and used at dilution of 1:100 to 1:200.

For immunofluorescence labelling (Dodd and Jessell, 1985), cultures were washed once at 22 °C with L15 supplemented with 8 mg ml−1 glucose and 0.1% BSA (Gibco) and then incubated with primary antibodies (diluted in L15 containing 8mgml−1 glucose and 0.1% BSA) for 30 min at 22 11C. Cultures were then washed twice m L15 – 1 % normal goat serum (NGS) and incubated with secondary FITC-conjugated isotype-specific antibodies diluted in L15-l% NGS for 30 min at 22 °C. Cultures were washed twice and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.12 M phosphate buffer (PB) (pH7.4) for 15 –20mm, rinsed in 0.12M PB and covershpped in 0.04% paraphenylenediamine (Sigma) in 0 2M sodium carbonate (pH9 0): glycerol (11) Cultures were viewed on a Zeiss Axioplan microscope under epifluorescence optics. 100 – 300 neurons were analyzed for each data point.

For labelling of tissue sections, the spinal cord and DRG were dissected from rats fixed by immersion or perfusion with 4 % paraformaldehyde, washed in PBS and immersed in 30 % sucrose in 0.1 M PB overnight at 4°C. Tissue was mounted in OCT compound (Miles) and 10 – 15 μm cryostat sections were collected onto gelatin-subbed slides Sections were washed in PBS, incubated with primary antibodies overnight at 4°C and then washed in PBS/1% heat-inactivated NGS. Processing with peroxidase-conjugated second antibodies (Boehringer Mannheim) was performed as described (Dodd et al. 1988)

Detection of TAG-1 by Western blotting

Embryonic spinal cord and DRG neurons were plated at a density of 1 – 1.2 × 104cells cm−2 in 35 mm or 60 mm diameter culture dishes. NP-40 cell lysates were prepared from embryonic spinal cord and DRG neurons maintained in vitro for 1 to 5 days. Cell lysates derived from 60 mm diameter dishes were centrifuged at 3000 g and the supernatant fraction separated by SDS-PAGE electrophoresis under reducing conditions, transferred onto nitrocellulose and reacted with rabbit antisera to TAG-1 diluted 1:50 000 (Dodd et al. 1988). Conditioned medium was centrifuged at 3000 g and the supernatant concentrated on a Centricon 10 (Amicon) and mixed with sample buffer prior to analysis by SDS-PAGE.

Western blotting experiments were also performed with rabbit anti-Ll antibodies and with two monoclonal antibodies against N-CAM, mAbs 5B8 and 5A5. mAb 5B8 recognizes an intracellular epitope on the 140 and 180 ×103 iso forms of N-CAM mAb 5A5 recognizes an α·-2,8 linked polysiahc acid epitope on the polysialyl side chain of N-CAM (Dodd et al. 1988). In western blots of extracts of cultured spinal cord cells, mAb 5A5 reacts with a band in excess of 200 ×103 indicating a high degree of N-CAM sialylation. In extracts of E13-15 spinal cord treated with endoneuramindase, the 140 × 103Mr and 180 × 103Mr isoforms of N-CAM are detected at high levels with mAb 5B8. Moreover, treatment of hving spinal cord neurons with PI-PLC did not significantly reduce the intensity of mAb 5A5 labelling, indicating that there is little or no expression of the 120×103 GPl-linked isoform of N-CAM at this developmental stage.

Treatment of cultured cells with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C

Cultured spinal cord or DRG cells were incubated for 30 min at 37°C in 50mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.2) buffer with or without 0.7 unit ml−1 phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (isolated from B. thuringiensis) (Low and Saltiel, 1988) Cells were processed for immunofluorescence or western blotting as described above.

[3 H] ethanolamine labelling of cellular and released proteins

To measure incorporation of ethanolamine into TAG-1, DRG cultures were incubated in [3H]ethanolamine (03mCi, 30 riiM) m F12-N3 medium. The medium was removed from the cultures, centrifuged and stored at 4°C. Cultures were then treated with 0.7 U phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C and the released proteins and cell pellet collected separately. The cell pellet was solubilized in Triton X – 100. Supernatants and cell pellets were then concentrated and mcubated with rabbit anti-TAG-1 antiserum (1·1000) in a final volume of 20 μl. Antibody-antigen complexes were separated by addition of protein A-affigel beads (BioRad) Pelleted beads were washed extensively then boiled in SDS containing buffer and solubilized proteins run on a 10 % SDS-PAGE gel under reducing conditions (Dodd et al. 1988) Gels were dried and autoradiographs exposed for 4-16 weeks. As control, rabbit anti-Thy-1 antibodies or normal rabbit serum was used.

Reuograde labelling with Dtl

Retrograde labelling of motor neurons with Dil (1,1’-dioctadecyl-3,3.3’,3’-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate; 2.5 mg ml−1 in DMSO; Molecular Probes) was performed using a modification of the method of Homg and Hume (1986). Dil (5nl) was injected in the hind limbs of E15 rat embryos with a glass micropipette. After a 16–20 h in vuro incubation in F12-N3 media at 37°C and aeration with 95 % O2-5 % CO2, embryos were processed either for histology or for tissue culture. For histology, embryos were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M PB for 2–3 h and embedded in 2.8% agarose (Sigma, type 1, low EEO). 200μm transverse sections of dye-injected embryos and were cut with a Vibratome. For tissue culture, the ventral spinal cord from injected embryos was isolated, dissociated with trypsin to give a single cell suspension and plated on astrocyte membranes obtained by freeze-thaw of a confluent monolayer of cortical astrocytes, because identification of labelled neurons was difficult with living astrocytes, due to the transfer of Dil from neurons to astrocytes.

Photography

Photographs were taken on a Zeiss Axioplan microscope equipped with a 35 mm camera using Ilford HP5 film. A 40×Plan-Neufluor objective was used and exposure times ranged from 10 to 60 s.

Cell surface and released forms of TAG-1

TAG-1 was characterized originally as an axonal glycoprotein that appears transiently on the surface of a subset of central and peripheral neurons (Yamamoto et al. 1986; Dodd et al. 1988; Furley et al. 1990; Yamamoto et al. 1990). The hydrophobicity of the carboxy terminal amino acid sequence of TAG-1 deduced from cDNA clones suggests that the protein is attached to the neuronal surface membrane by a glycosyl phosphatidyl-inositol (GPI) anchor (Furley et al. 1990). In support of this, biochemical studies have shown that TAG-1 is released from brain membranes and from the surface of neuroblastoma cells transfected with TAG-1 cDNA by bacterial phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase-C (PI-PLC) (Furley et al. 1990). To determine whether TAG-1 is attached to the surface of primary neurons via a GPI linkage, E13 dorsal spinal cord or E15 DRG neurons were grown in vitro for 1-3 days and then incubated for 30 min with control buffer or with PI-PLC. Expression of TAG-1 was analyzed by immuno-fluorescence histochemistry and by western blotting.

TAG-1 was detected on the surface of spinal cord and DRG neurons in cultures treated with control buffer (Figs 1A,B; 2A,B). After treatment with PI-PLC, TAG-1 disappeared from the surface of spinal cord (Fig. 1C,D) and DRG neurons (Fig. 2C,D), whereas surface expression of the related immunoglobulin family members N-CAM and LI was not affected by identical PI-PLC treatment (Figs 1E-H; 2E-H). LI and the major neuronal isoforms of N-CAM are transmem-brane proteins (Cunningham et al. 1987; Moos et al. 1988), thus PI-PLC treatment appeared selectively to remove GPI-linked proteins. When assayed by immu-noblotting, virtually all the TAG-1 in untreated spinal cord or DRG cultures was associated with the cell pellet, although a very small amount of TAG-1 was detected in the medium after a 30 min incubation (Fig. 3A, lanes 1,3; Fig. 3B, lane 6). Treatment of spinal cord and DRG cultures with PI-PLC for 30 min resulted in the appearance of large amounts of TAG-1 in the medium (Fig. 3A, lane 4; Fig. 3B, lane 8), although low amounts of TAG-1 remained associated with neurons (Fig. 3A, lane 2; Fig. 3B, lane 7). The residual TAG-1 may represent an intracellular store of the protein. These results indicate that all of the TAG-1 on the surface of dorsal spinal cord and DRG neurons is attached via a GPI linkage.

Fig. 1.

TAG-1 is attached to the surface of spinal cord neurons by a glycosyl phosphatidyinositol anchor Phase and fluorescence micrographs of E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons grown on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes for 24 h. (A,B) TAG-1 is expressed on a subset of dorsal spinal cord neurons (C,D) Treatment of dorsal spinal cord neurons with bacterial phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (Pl-PLC) removes TAG-1 from the cell surface. (E,F) N-CAM is expressed by dorsal spinal cord neurons. (G,H) Treatment of dorsal spinal cord neurons with PI-PLC does not decrease cell surface expression of N-CAM Similar results were obtained in five different experiments. Scale Bar=100μm.

Fig. 1.

TAG-1 is attached to the surface of spinal cord neurons by a glycosyl phosphatidyinositol anchor Phase and fluorescence micrographs of E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons grown on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes for 24 h. (A,B) TAG-1 is expressed on a subset of dorsal spinal cord neurons (C,D) Treatment of dorsal spinal cord neurons with bacterial phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (Pl-PLC) removes TAG-1 from the cell surface. (E,F) N-CAM is expressed by dorsal spinal cord neurons. (G,H) Treatment of dorsal spinal cord neurons with PI-PLC does not decrease cell surface expression of N-CAM Similar results were obtained in five different experiments. Scale Bar=100μm.

Fig. 2.

TAG-1 is attached to the surface of DRG neurons by a glycosyl phosphatidylinositol anchor. Phase and fluorescence micrographs of dissociated E15 DRG neurons grown in vitro for 48h. (A,B) TAG-1 is expressed on virtually all DRG neurons, but not on ganglionic nonneuronal cells. (C,D) Treatment of DRG neurons with PI-PLC removes TAG-1 from the surface of neurons. (E,F) LI is expressed on the surface of all DRG neurons, but is absent from non-neuronal cells. (G,H) PI-PLC treatment of DRG neurons does not remove LI from the cell surface. Similar results were found with N-CAM expression Similar results were obtained in five different experiments. Scale Bar=100μm.

Fig. 2.

TAG-1 is attached to the surface of DRG neurons by a glycosyl phosphatidylinositol anchor. Phase and fluorescence micrographs of dissociated E15 DRG neurons grown in vitro for 48h. (A,B) TAG-1 is expressed on virtually all DRG neurons, but not on ganglionic nonneuronal cells. (C,D) Treatment of DRG neurons with PI-PLC removes TAG-1 from the surface of neurons. (E,F) LI is expressed on the surface of all DRG neurons, but is absent from non-neuronal cells. (G,H) PI-PLC treatment of DRG neurons does not remove LI from the cell surface. Similar results were found with N-CAM expression Similar results were obtained in five different experiments. Scale Bar=100μm.

Fig. 3.

Biochemical characterization of cell surface and released forms of TAG-1. (A) Western blot analysis of TAG-1 expression by E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons grown for 24 h in vitro on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes. Lane 1: TAG-1 is detected in cell lysates obtained from dorsal spinal cord cells. In control experiments, no TAG-1 was detected in lysates of cortical astrocyte monolayers grown in the absence of spinal cord neurons (not shown) Lane 2: TAG-1 is detected at low amounts in spinal cord cell lysates after PI-PLC treatment Lane 3. TAG-1 is detected at very low levels in culture medium exposed to spinal cord neurons for 30 mm at 37°C. Lane 4. Treatment of E13 spinal cord neurons with PI-PLC for 30 min releases large amounts of TAG-1 into the culture medium. Lane 5: Medium conditioned by 12 h exposure to E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons contains high levels of TAG-1. (B) Analysis of TAG-1 expression by E15 DRG neurons grown in vitro on a laminin substratum for 48 h. Lane 6: TAG-1 is detected in extracts of cultured DRG neurons Lane 7: TAG-1 is detected at reduced levels in the cell pellet after release of cell surface protein with PI-PLC. The residual TAG-1 may represent an intracellular pool not exposed to PI-PLC. Lane 8’ TAG-1 is released into the medium by treatment of cultured DRG neurons with PI-PLC. Lane 9. Large amounts of TAG-1 are released by DRG neurons within a 6H period in the absence of PI-PLC treatment. Low amounts of TAG-1 were also detected in medium exposed to DRG neurons for 3Onrin (not shown) In control experiments, LI and N-CAM were not detected in the medium after similar incubations. (C) Comparison of amounts of TAG-1 obtained from DRG neurons in vitro by PI-PLC cleavage and release. Lane 10: TAG-1 immunoreactive band obtained by release of cell surface TAG-1 after treatment of E15 DRG cultures with PI-PLC. Lane Il· TAG-1 immunoreactive band obtained from medium conditioned by 12 h exposure to the same number of E15 DRG neurons in the absence of PI-PLC. (D) [3H]ethanolamine incorporation into the cell surface and released forms of TAG-1 synthesized by E15 DRG neurons Autoradiograms show [3H]ethanolamirie incorporated into TAG-1 after metabolic labelling followed by immunoprecipitation with rabbit anti-TAG-1 or control antibodies Lane 12. [3H]ethanolamine-labelled TAG-1 released into the medium after cleavage of TAG-1 from the surface of DRG neurons with PI-PLC. The 40×103Mr lower band is a non-specific protein that is also immunoprecipitated by a variety of control antibodies (not shown) Lane 13: [3H]ethanolamine incorporation into TAG-1 released over a 12 h period by DRG neurons in the absence of PI-PLC treatment Over this time period, the amount of immunoreactive TAG-1 released into the culture medium is approximately equal to that released from DRG neurons by a 30 min treatment with PI-PLC, as determined by western blotting (Fig. 3C). Molecular weight markers in all gels. 200×10·3Mr, rabbit myosin, 116×103Mr: β-galactosidase, 92.5×103Mr phosphorylase A. 135× 103Mr is indicated on Figure.

Fig. 3.

Biochemical characterization of cell surface and released forms of TAG-1. (A) Western blot analysis of TAG-1 expression by E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons grown for 24 h in vitro on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes. Lane 1: TAG-1 is detected in cell lysates obtained from dorsal spinal cord cells. In control experiments, no TAG-1 was detected in lysates of cortical astrocyte monolayers grown in the absence of spinal cord neurons (not shown) Lane 2: TAG-1 is detected at low amounts in spinal cord cell lysates after PI-PLC treatment Lane 3. TAG-1 is detected at very low levels in culture medium exposed to spinal cord neurons for 30 mm at 37°C. Lane 4. Treatment of E13 spinal cord neurons with PI-PLC for 30 min releases large amounts of TAG-1 into the culture medium. Lane 5: Medium conditioned by 12 h exposure to E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons contains high levels of TAG-1. (B) Analysis of TAG-1 expression by E15 DRG neurons grown in vitro on a laminin substratum for 48 h. Lane 6: TAG-1 is detected in extracts of cultured DRG neurons Lane 7: TAG-1 is detected at reduced levels in the cell pellet after release of cell surface protein with PI-PLC. The residual TAG-1 may represent an intracellular pool not exposed to PI-PLC. Lane 8’ TAG-1 is released into the medium by treatment of cultured DRG neurons with PI-PLC. Lane 9. Large amounts of TAG-1 are released by DRG neurons within a 6H period in the absence of PI-PLC treatment. Low amounts of TAG-1 were also detected in medium exposed to DRG neurons for 3Onrin (not shown) In control experiments, LI and N-CAM were not detected in the medium after similar incubations. (C) Comparison of amounts of TAG-1 obtained from DRG neurons in vitro by PI-PLC cleavage and release. Lane 10: TAG-1 immunoreactive band obtained by release of cell surface TAG-1 after treatment of E15 DRG cultures with PI-PLC. Lane Il· TAG-1 immunoreactive band obtained from medium conditioned by 12 h exposure to the same number of E15 DRG neurons in the absence of PI-PLC. (D) [3H]ethanolamine incorporation into the cell surface and released forms of TAG-1 synthesized by E15 DRG neurons Autoradiograms show [3H]ethanolamirie incorporated into TAG-1 after metabolic labelling followed by immunoprecipitation with rabbit anti-TAG-1 or control antibodies Lane 12. [3H]ethanolamine-labelled TAG-1 released into the medium after cleavage of TAG-1 from the surface of DRG neurons with PI-PLC. The 40×103Mr lower band is a non-specific protein that is also immunoprecipitated by a variety of control antibodies (not shown) Lane 13: [3H]ethanolamine incorporation into TAG-1 released over a 12 h period by DRG neurons in the absence of PI-PLC treatment Over this time period, the amount of immunoreactive TAG-1 released into the culture medium is approximately equal to that released from DRG neurons by a 30 min treatment with PI-PLC, as determined by western blotting (Fig. 3C). Molecular weight markers in all gels. 200×10·3Mr, rabbit myosin, 116×103Mr: β-galactosidase, 92.5×103Mr phosphorylase A. 135× 103Mr is indicated on Figure.

To examine whether neurons release TAG-1 in the absence of PI-PLC treatment, E13 dorsal spinal cord cells were grown on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes for 12–24 h and then incubated in serum-free medium for an additional 12 h. A large amount of TAG-1 was detected in medium conditioned by spinal cord neurons (Fig. 3A, lane 5). Similarly, E15 DRG neurons grown on a laminin substrate released large amounts of TAG-1 into the culture medium in the absence of PI-PLC treatment (Fig. 3B, lane 9). In control experiments, the transmembrane glycoproteins LI and N-CAM were not detectable in culture medium exposed to DRG neurons in the absence of PI-PLC treatment (not shown). Thus, TAG-1 is expressed on the surface of dorsal spinal cord and DRG neurons and is also released into the medium. These results extend other studies showing that neuroblastoma cells transfected with TAG-1 cDNA release TAG-1 into the culture medium in the absence of PI-PLC treatment (Furley et al. 1990).

To examine the relationship between surface and released forms of TAG-1, E15 DRG neurons in culture were incubated with [3H]ethanolamine. GPI-linked proteins incorporate [3H]ethanolamine into the lipid anchor and cleavage of the anchor by PI-PLC results in the release of proteins that retain [3H]ethanolamine group(s), (Ferguson and Williams, 1988; Doering et al. 1990). In the present experiments, incubation times were adjusted such that approximately equal amounts of immunoreactive TAG-1 were obtained by cleavage of surface TAG-1 with PI-PLC and by collection of medium exposed to DRG neurons in the absence of PI-PLC (Fig. 3C, lanes 10,11). TAG-1 released from DRG neurons by PI-PLC treatment had incorporated large amounts of [3H]ethanolamine as assessed by the intensity of the autoradiographic band (Fig. 3D, lane 12). However, the·intensity of the [3H]ethanolamine-labelled band was much lower in the form of TAG-1 that was released by DRG neurons in the absence of PI-PLC treatment (Fig. 3D, lane 13). Thus, it appears that a large fraction of released TAG-1 derived from a precursor form that had not incorporated ethanolamine or from a processed form from which the ethanolamine-containing anchor had been removed.

TAG-1 is expressed transiently on the surface of spinal cord neurons in vitro

Immunocytochemical studies have shown that TAG-1 is expressed transiently on spinal cord neurons in situ, appearing on commissural neurons in the dorsal spinal cord over the period Ell to E15 and on motor neurons in the ventral spinal cord over the period E10.5 to E12 (Dodd et al. 1988). We therefore examined the time course of expression of TAG-1 on the surface of spinal cord neurons in vitro.

Approximately 45 % of E13 cultured dorsal spinal cord neurons expressed TAG-1 by 24 h after plating (Figs 4A,B; 5A). The percentage of TAG-l-labelled neurons decreased progressively with time in vitro and by 4–5 days after plating virtually no neurons expressed TAG-1 on their surface (Fig. 4C,D; 5A). TAG-1 immunoreactivity was not detectable in permeabilized dorsal spinal cord neurons that had been maintained in vitro for 4 days (not shown) suggesting that the inability to detect TAG-1 on the surface of dorsal spinal cord neurons in vitro did not result from retention of the protein intracellularly. Similar results were obtained when dorsal spinal cord neurons isolated from Ell embryos (the time at which the first commissural neurons begin to extend axons) were maintained in dissociated cell culture. About 60% of Ell neurons expressed TAG-1 on their surface after 24 h in culture. By 4 days after plating, the number of TAG-l-labelled neurons had decreased to 15 % and by 6 days in vitro no TAG-l-labelled neurons were detected (not shown). We also examined the time course of expression of TAG-1 on neurons isolated from ventral spinal cord of Ell rat embryos. By 24 h after plating, between 55 and 60% of Ell ventral spinal cord neurons expressed TAG-1 (Fig. 5B). There was a marked decrease in the number of TAG-1 labelled neurons over the next three days and by 5 days, no TAG-1 immunoreactive neurons were detectable (Fig. 5B). Thus, in vitro TAG-1 disappears from spinal neurons with a time course that reflects, approximately, the loss of the protein from the same neurons in situ.

Fig. 4.

Developmental expression of TAG-1, LI and N-CAM by embryonic dorsal spinal neurons. E13 dorsal spinal cord cells were plated on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes and grown in vitro for 1 or 5 days. (A,B) Phase-contrast and fluorescence micrographs showing expression of TAG-1 on a subset of neurons 1 day after plating. (C,D) Micrographs showing the absence of TAG-l-labelled neurons in cultures maintained for 5 days in vitro. (E,F) Micrographs showing that few L1-labelled neurons are detectable 1 day after plating. (G,H) Micrographs showing a dense meshwork of L1-labelled neurites after 5 days in vitro. Note that neuronal cell bodies are not labelled. (I,J) Micrographs showing expression of N-CAM on virtually all neurons 1 day after plating. (K,L) Micrographs showing the persistent expression of N-CAM on virtually all neurons after 5 days in vitro. Calibration bar = 40μm.

Fig. 4.

Developmental expression of TAG-1, LI and N-CAM by embryonic dorsal spinal neurons. E13 dorsal spinal cord cells were plated on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes and grown in vitro for 1 or 5 days. (A,B) Phase-contrast and fluorescence micrographs showing expression of TAG-1 on a subset of neurons 1 day after plating. (C,D) Micrographs showing the absence of TAG-l-labelled neurons in cultures maintained for 5 days in vitro. (E,F) Micrographs showing that few L1-labelled neurons are detectable 1 day after plating. (G,H) Micrographs showing a dense meshwork of L1-labelled neurites after 5 days in vitro. Note that neuronal cell bodies are not labelled. (I,J) Micrographs showing expression of N-CAM on virtually all neurons 1 day after plating. (K,L) Micrographs showing the persistent expression of N-CAM on virtually all neurons after 5 days in vitro. Calibration bar = 40μm.

Fig. 5.

Developmental time course of axonal glycoprotein expression on embryonic rat spinal neurons in vitro. (A) Time course of TAG-1, LI and N-CAM expression on E13 dorsal spinal neurons plated on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes. The percentage of labelled neurons (±S.E.M.) obtained from several experiments (n=10-32 for different time points) plotted against time in culture. (100 – 300 neurons were counted for each time point.) TAG-1 immunoreactive neurons were identified with rabbit anti-TAG-1 antibodies or monoclonal antibodies 4D7 or 1C12. The percentage of LI immunoreactive neurons was determined using mAb 69A1 or rabbit anti-Ll antibodies. The values obtained with mAb 69A1 are shown here. With polyclonal antibodies directed against LI, the initial number of LI immunoreactive neurons was about 25 – 30% and increased to about 70-80% with time in culture (not shown). N-CAM immunoreactive neurons were determined using mAb 5A5. (B) Time course of TAG-1 and LI expression on Ell ventral spinal cord neurons plated on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes. The percentage of labelled neurons (±S.E.M.) obtained from four different experiments are plotted against time in culture. Virtually all neurons expressed N-CAM (not shown).

Fig. 5.

Developmental time course of axonal glycoprotein expression on embryonic rat spinal neurons in vitro. (A) Time course of TAG-1, LI and N-CAM expression on E13 dorsal spinal neurons plated on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes. The percentage of labelled neurons (±S.E.M.) obtained from several experiments (n=10-32 for different time points) plotted against time in culture. (100 – 300 neurons were counted for each time point.) TAG-1 immunoreactive neurons were identified with rabbit anti-TAG-1 antibodies or monoclonal antibodies 4D7 or 1C12. The percentage of LI immunoreactive neurons was determined using mAb 69A1 or rabbit anti-Ll antibodies. The values obtained with mAb 69A1 are shown here. With polyclonal antibodies directed against LI, the initial number of LI immunoreactive neurons was about 25 – 30% and increased to about 70-80% with time in culture (not shown). N-CAM immunoreactive neurons were determined using mAb 5A5. (B) Time course of TAG-1 and LI expression on Ell ventral spinal cord neurons plated on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes. The percentage of labelled neurons (±S.E.M.) obtained from four different experiments are plotted against time in culture. Virtually all neurons expressed N-CAM (not shown).

The structurally related axonal glycoprotein LI has an expression pattern in embryonic spinal cord that is distinct from that of TAG-1. LI appears on neurons later than TAG-1 and is restricted primarily to fasciculated fiber tracts (Stallcup et al. 1984; Dodd et al. 1988; Holley and Schachner, cited in Schachner et al. 1990). The temporal expression of LI on cultured spinal cord neurons differed markedly from that of TAG-1. A low percentage of Ll-labelled neurons (10-30 % depending on whether monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies were used) was detected 24 h after plating (Figs 4E,F; 5A), with a progressive increase in the percentage of Ll-labelled dorsal neurons detected over the first few days in culture (Figs 4G,H; 5A). As described previously (Pigott and Davies, 1987), LI was expressed primarily on the neurites of dorsal spinal cord neurons (Fig. 4H), which made it difficult to determine the exact percentage of Ll-labelled neurons after the third day in vitro, by which time a complex network of neurites was visible. The number of Ll-labelled neurons in cultures of Ell ventral spinal cord also increased progressively with time in vitro, from about 30% on day 1 to at least 70% by day 5 (Fig. 5B). A third immunoglobulin family member, N-CAM, is expressed soon after neural differentiation and persists on axons throughout embryonic and postnatal development (Edelman, 1986; Dodd et al. 1988). Consistent with this, N-CAM was detected on virtually all spinal cord neurons within 24 h after plating and expression persisted for up to 8 days in vitro, the longest period examined (Figs 4I-L; 5A).

We also used western blotting to determine TAG-1 levels in E13 dorsal spinal cord cultures that had been maintained in vitro for 1 or 5 days. A prominent 135×103Mr TAG-1 band was detected in neurons maintained in vitro for 1 day (Fig. 6, lane 1), whereas after 5 days the amount of TAG-1 was markedly decreased (Fig. 6, lane 2). In contrast, similar amounts of TAG-1 were detected in medium exposed for 12 h to E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons grown in vitro for 1 and 5 days (Fig. 6; lanes 3,4). Thus, TAG-1 appears to be released by spinal neurons at approximately constant levels after the surface form of TAG-1 has disappeared.

Fig. 6.

TAG-1 release from embryonic spinal cord neurons persists after the loss of the cell surface form. Cell surface and released forms of TAG-1 were analyzed by western blotting after 1 and 5 days in vitro. Lane 1: TAG-1 associated with E13 dorsal spinal cord cells grown in vitro for 1 day Lane 2 E13 spinal cord neurons grown in vitro for 5 days contain much lower amounts of TAG-1 than neurons on day 1. Lane 3: TAG-1 is present in medium conditioned by E13 spinal cord neurons grown in vitro for 1 day. Lane 4: Similar amounts of TAG-1 are present in medium conditioned by E13 spinal cord cells grown in vitro for 5 days. In control experiments, levels of N-CAM, detected by western blotting, did not change significantly between day 1 and day 5 in vitro. Neurons were plated at a density of 2 × 106 cells/60mm dish. The number of neurons surviving at 5 days was ∼ 80% of that at day 1 Similar results were obtained in four additional experiments. Molecular weight markers as in Fig. 3.

Fig. 6.

TAG-1 release from embryonic spinal cord neurons persists after the loss of the cell surface form. Cell surface and released forms of TAG-1 were analyzed by western blotting after 1 and 5 days in vitro. Lane 1: TAG-1 associated with E13 dorsal spinal cord cells grown in vitro for 1 day Lane 2 E13 spinal cord neurons grown in vitro for 5 days contain much lower amounts of TAG-1 than neurons on day 1. Lane 3: TAG-1 is present in medium conditioned by E13 spinal cord neurons grown in vitro for 1 day. Lane 4: Similar amounts of TAG-1 are present in medium conditioned by E13 spinal cord cells grown in vitro for 5 days. In control experiments, levels of N-CAM, detected by western blotting, did not change significantly between day 1 and day 5 in vitro. Neurons were plated at a density of 2 × 106 cells/60mm dish. The number of neurons surviving at 5 days was ∼ 80% of that at day 1 Similar results were obtained in four additional experiments. Molecular weight markers as in Fig. 3.

The progressive decrease in the number of TAG-l-labelled cells does not appear to result from neuronal death. The total number of neurons that survived in vitro, identified by their morphology and by expression of the neuronal antigens 3A10 and N-CAM (Dodd et al. 1988; Furley et al. 1990), did not change significantly over the first 4 days in vitro (Fig. 7A). By day 8 in vitro, the number of surviving neurons had fallen to about 75% of the number originally plated (Fig. 7A); however, this decrease occurred after the disappearance of TAG-l-labelled neurons. Dorsal spinal cord neurons have been shown to differentiate over an extended period, up to about E14-E15 in vivo (Altman and Bayer, 1984); thus it is possible that a constant number of neurons is maintained, despite neuronal death, by the differentiation of precursor cells. To determine whether cultures contained dividing precursors capable of differentiating into neurons in vitro, we dissociated the dorsal spinal cord of E13 rat embryos, plated them on astrocyte monolayers for 6 – 12 h and then incubated the cultures in [3H]thymidine for 10 h.

Fig. 7.

Survival of E13 dorsal spinal neurons in vitro. (A) Plot of the percentage of surviving neurons as a function of the number of neurons plated. 10 – 15 random fields were counted for each culture dish. Neurons were identified by phase-contrast morphology and by expression of the 5A5 and 3A10 antigens. Survival at day 1 was normalized to 100%. Bars indicate S.E M for seven experiments, with the exception of the 4 day survival time point which was derived from two experiments (range is given). (B) Absence of neuronal proliferation in vitro Phase-contrast micrograph of an autoradiogram of E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons grown on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes for 5 days in vitro. Arrows point to silver grains accumulating over the nuclei of non-neuronal cells. No silver grains were detected over nuclei of neurons, identified by their morphology This experiment was repeated four times with similar results Calibration bar=200 μm.

Fig. 7.

Survival of E13 dorsal spinal neurons in vitro. (A) Plot of the percentage of surviving neurons as a function of the number of neurons plated. 10 – 15 random fields were counted for each culture dish. Neurons were identified by phase-contrast morphology and by expression of the 5A5 and 3A10 antigens. Survival at day 1 was normalized to 100%. Bars indicate S.E M for seven experiments, with the exception of the 4 day survival time point which was derived from two experiments (range is given). (B) Absence of neuronal proliferation in vitro Phase-contrast micrograph of an autoradiogram of E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons grown on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes for 5 days in vitro. Arrows point to silver grains accumulating over the nuclei of non-neuronal cells. No silver grains were detected over nuclei of neurons, identified by their morphology This experiment was repeated four times with similar results Calibration bar=200 μm.

The cultures were grown for a further 14 h – 5 days and then processed for autoradiography. Silver grains were detected in the nuclei of many flat, non-neuronal cells; however, none of 1414 cells that were identified morphologically as neurons exhibited labelled nuclei (Fig. 7B). These observations indicate that proliferating neuronal precursor cells do not generate significant numbers of neurons in vitro. Thus, the loss of TAG-l-labelled neurons in vitro appears to result primarily from the disappearance of the glycoprotein from the cell surface rather than from cell death. These results do not, however, resolve whether the released form of TAG-1 derives from the same neurons that transiently express the surface form, although this seems likely.

The surface form of TAG-1 on spinal neurons is regulated autonomously

The disappearance of the surface form of TAG-1 from spinal neurons could be controlled by environmental factors or by events that occur autonomously in neurons that synthesize TAG-1. To distinguish between these two possibilities, we first tested whether expression of TAG-1 was dependent on the substratum upon which the neurons were grown. The transient expression of TAG-1 by E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons in vitro was not a consequence of the use of an astrocyte monolayer as substratum, since the number of TAG-1 neurons decreased over a similar time course when E13 dorsal spinal cord cells were plated on substrata of poly-L-lysine/laminin or collagen (not shown). The loss of TAG-1 expression also occurred over a similar time course when E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons were grown on astrocyte monolayers in serum-free medium (not shown). Thus, transient expression of TAG-1 on the surface of dorsal spinal cord neurons was not critically dependent on substratum or serum factors.

To determine whether the loss of the surface form of TAG-1 with time in vitro is controlled by signals derived from other spinal cord cells, we compared the time course of disappearance of TAG-1 from the surface of E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons grown on cortical astrocytes alone or on astrocytes on to which E13 dorsal spinal cord cells had been plated 4 days previously. TAG-1 had completely disappeared from the surface of the older neurons at the time of addition of the new set of E13 spinal cord ceils (Fig. 8A; closed circles). No consistent difference was observed in the rate at which TAG-1 disappeared from the surface of E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons plated on astrocytes alone (Fig. 8A; open diamonds) when compared with sibling cultures in which an aliquot of the same cell preparation had been plated on astrocytes in the presence of E13 dorsal spinal cord cells aged in vitro (Fig. 8B). The time course of disappearance of the surface form of TAG-1 therefore appears to be dependent on the age of the neurons that express TAG-1 and not on the age of the surrounding neuronal or non-neuronal cells. Although these results suggest that the cell surface form of TAG-1 is regulated by events that occur autonomously in this subset of neurons, we cannot exclude that other changes in the environment can affect TAG-1 expression.

Fig. 8.

The time course with which TAG-1 disappears from the cell surface is not changed when E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons are plated on older spinal cord cultures (A) Percentage of TAG-1 labelled neurons detected in E13 dorsal spinal cord cultures plated on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes Closed circles show the progressive loss of TAG-1 from E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons with time in culture. After 4 days in vitro, no TAG-1 labelled neurons were detected. Sibling cultures were used to generate the aged cultures used as a substratum in B. Open diamonds indicate separate platings in which the time course of disappearance of TAG-1 from the surface of neurons on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes is plotted. An aliquot of cells from the same preparation was plated on astrocytes which contained 4 day old spinal cord cultures (see B). (B) Time course of disappearance of TAG-1 from the surface of E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons which had been plated on dorsal spinal cord cultures aged in vitro for 4 days. The time course of loss of TAG-1 is similar to that of neurons obtained from the same dissociation and plated on astrocytes alone (open diamonds in A) The total number of TAG-1 immunoreactive neurons in B is about half that in A because an equal number of 4 day old (TAG-1 non-immunoreactive) neurons were present in the culture at the time of plating Error bars indicate mean±s.E.M. from three separate experiments.

Fig. 8.

The time course with which TAG-1 disappears from the cell surface is not changed when E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons are plated on older spinal cord cultures (A) Percentage of TAG-1 labelled neurons detected in E13 dorsal spinal cord cultures plated on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes Closed circles show the progressive loss of TAG-1 from E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons with time in culture. After 4 days in vitro, no TAG-1 labelled neurons were detected. Sibling cultures were used to generate the aged cultures used as a substratum in B. Open diamonds indicate separate platings in which the time course of disappearance of TAG-1 from the surface of neurons on a monolayer of cortical astrocytes is plotted. An aliquot of cells from the same preparation was plated on astrocytes which contained 4 day old spinal cord cultures (see B). (B) Time course of disappearance of TAG-1 from the surface of E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons which had been plated on dorsal spinal cord cultures aged in vitro for 4 days. The time course of loss of TAG-1 is similar to that of neurons obtained from the same dissociation and plated on astrocytes alone (open diamonds in A) The total number of TAG-1 immunoreactive neurons in B is about half that in A because an equal number of 4 day old (TAG-1 non-immunoreactive) neurons were present in the culture at the time of plating Error bars indicate mean±s.E.M. from three separate experiments.

TAG-1 expression persists on DRG neurons in vitro

TAG-1 is not detectable within DRG in situ after P7 (Dodd et al. 1988). To examine whether TAG-1 is expressed transiently on the surface of embryonic or postnatal DRG neurons in vitro, we isolated DRG neurons from E15, E17, P3 and P5 rats and grew them on a substrate of poly-D-lysine/lammin for periods of up to 21 days. TAG-1 was expressed on the surface of the majority (80-90%) of DRG neurons within 24h after plating (Fig. 9A); however, in contrast to results obtained with spinal cord neurons, expression on DRG neurons persisted for the entire period in vitro. This result was obtained independent of the age at which neurons were isolated. Surface expression of TAG-1 also persisted when DRG neurons were grown in defined medium, on cortical astrocyte monolayers or on astrocytes with E13 dorsal spinal cord cells aged in vitro as described above (not shown). LI and N-CAM were expressed by the majority of DRG neurons at all times in vitro (not shown).

Fig. 9.

Persistent expression of TAG-1 by DRG neurons in vitro. (A) Time course of TAG-1 expression on P3 DRG neurons maintained in dissociated cell culture for 20 days The percentage of TAG-1 immunoreactive neurons does not change markedly with time in culture. Similar results were obtained when DRG were obtained from E15 to P10 rats (not shown). Bars indicate S.E.M. for three different experiments performed using P3 DRG. (B,C) Phase-contrast (B) and fluorescent (C) micrographs showing TAG-1 expression on the neurites of DRG neurons that derive from P5 ganglia grown as expiants in vitro for 28 days. High levels of TAG-1 are expressed on virtually all neurites. Calibration bar=30, μm.

Fig. 9.

Persistent expression of TAG-1 by DRG neurons in vitro. (A) Time course of TAG-1 expression on P3 DRG neurons maintained in dissociated cell culture for 20 days The percentage of TAG-1 immunoreactive neurons does not change markedly with time in culture. Similar results were obtained when DRG were obtained from E15 to P10 rats (not shown). Bars indicate S.E.M. for three different experiments performed using P3 DRG. (B,C) Phase-contrast (B) and fluorescent (C) micrographs showing TAG-1 expression on the neurites of DRG neurons that derive from P5 ganglia grown as expiants in vitro for 28 days. High levels of TAG-1 are expressed on virtually all neurites. Calibration bar=30, μm.

In these experiments, cultures were treated with cytosine arabinoside (10”‘M) for 36–48 h to suppress the proliferation of ganglionic non-neuronal cells. To examine whether the absence of non-neuronal cells was responsible for the persistent expression of TAG-1, we delayed addition of cytoside arabinoside until day 4 in vitro, thus permitting extensive proliferation of non-neuronal cells. Under these conditions, TAG-1 expression still persisted for 21 days in vitro (not shown). To ensure that neurons remained in direct contact with ganglionic non-neuronal cells, E15 and P5 DRG were also grown as explant cultures. Again, TAG-1 expression on DRG neurites persisted for at least 28 days in vitro (Fig. 9B). These results suggest that the persistent expression of TAG-1 on the surface of DRG neurons in vitro is not affected by the presence of central and peripheral glial cells.

TAG-1 is not re-expressed on the surface of spinal cord neurons that regenerate axons in vitro

In the embryonic spinal cord, TAG-1 does not reappear on the surface of neurons after the early phase of expression has terminated (Dodd et al. 1988). We therefore examined whether neurons isolated from the spinal cord at times when TAG-1 is no longer present on the cell surface can re-express TAG-1 on regenerating axons in vitro. Neurons were isolated from the dorsal spinal cord of E19, E20, P0 and P2 rats and plated on astrocyte monolayers. Although the recovery of viable neurons from these older ages was low, many dorsal spinal cord neurons regenerated neurites within 12 h of plating and survived for periods of up to 3 days in vitro (not shown). These neurons expressed LI (Fig. 10A,B) and N-CAM (Fig. 10C,D) on neuronal processes within 24 h after plating and expression of both proteins persisted for 3 days in vitro. In contrast, TAG-1 was not expressed on the neurite surface (Fig. 10E,F). These findings suggest that commissural neurons isolated from late gestational stage embryos do not re-express TAG-1 when they regenerate neurites in vitro. The low yield of neurons obtained from older spinal cords prevented us from examining whether neurons that failed to reexpress the surface form of TAG-1 continued to synthesize the released form.

Fig. 10.

Re-expression of N-CAM and LI but not TAG-1 by E19 dorsal spinal cord neurons in vitro. (A,B) Fluorescence (A) and phase contrast (B) micrographs of E19 dorsal spinal cord neurons maintained for 1 day in vitro. N-CAM is expressed on the cell bodies and regenerated neurites of all neurons (C,D) Micrographs showing that LI is expressed on the neurites that extend from spinal cord neurons. (E,F) Micrographs showing that TAG-1 is not detected on the surface of E19 dorsal spinal cord neurons that regenerate neurites in vitro. The expression of N-CAM and LI persisted for at least 3 days in vitro, whereas TAG-1 remained undetectable. Similar results were obtained in three experiments Calibration bar=60μm.

Fig. 10.

Re-expression of N-CAM and LI but not TAG-1 by E19 dorsal spinal cord neurons in vitro. (A,B) Fluorescence (A) and phase contrast (B) micrographs of E19 dorsal spinal cord neurons maintained for 1 day in vitro. N-CAM is expressed on the cell bodies and regenerated neurites of all neurons (C,D) Micrographs showing that LI is expressed on the neurites that extend from spinal cord neurons. (E,F) Micrographs showing that TAG-1 is not detected on the surface of E19 dorsal spinal cord neurons that regenerate neurites in vitro. The expression of N-CAM and LI persisted for at least 3 days in vitro, whereas TAG-1 remained undetectable. Similar results were obtained in three experiments Calibration bar=60μm.

In view of the low yield of late embryonic neurons, it is possible that the surviving neurons represent a population of neurons distinct from those that originally expressed TAG-1. To determine whether an identified class of spinal neurons re-expresses the surface form of TAG-1 during neurite regeneration after the normal period of expression of the protein in situ, we monitored TAG-1 expression on spinal motor neurons. Motor neurons were labelled by retrograde accumulation of the lipophilic carbocyanine dye, Dil (Honig and Hume, 1986). Histological studies established that within the ventral spinal cord Dil was restricted to the area occupied by motor neuron cell bodies, their dendrites and axon collaterals (Fig. 11 A), although Dil also accumulated in the cell bodies of primary sensory neurons in the DRG (Fig 11A). Motor neurons that regenerated neurites in vitro were identified on the basis of the accumulation of Dil. Of 147 Dil-labelled neurons examined, none expressed cell surface TAG-1 (Fig. 11B,C). In contrast, N-CAM was expressed on most Dil-labelled neurons (not shown), indicating that the presence of Dil does not interfere with the detection of glycoproteins on the cell surface. To examine whether the accumulation of Dil by motor neurons prevented them from expressing TAG-1 on the surface of their neurites, we labeled spinal motor neurons in Ell embryos by injecting Dil into the anterior half of somites at a time when many TAG-1 labelled motor axons are passing through the somite (Keynes and Stem, 1985; Dodd et al. 1988). Dil-labelled motor neurons isolated at Ell and maintained in vitro for 24 h were found to express TAG-1 on their surface (Fig. 11D-F). These results suggest that TAG-1 can be expressed over the period that neurite growth normally occurs and at a stage when motor axons still express TAG-1 in situ (Dodd et al. 1988).

Fig. 11.

Absence of TAG-1 expression on regenerating motor neurons in vitro. (A) Retrograde labelling of the motor column after injection of Dil into the hind limb of E15 rat embryos. A 200 μm transverse section of a Dil-injected embryo shows the labelled motor pool (m) and dorsal root ganglion (d). Ventral spinal cords from injected embryos were isolated, dissociated to a single cell suspension and plated on astrocyte membranes obtained by freeze-thawing astrocyte monolayers. Dil-labelled neurons extend processes in vitro (B), but TAG-1 is not detected on their surface (C). In contrast, Dil-labelled neurons isolated from Ell spinal cord after injection of Dil into the anterior somite express TAG-1 at low levels on their processes. In D-F the same field is shown with D showing phase contrast, E, Dil labelling and F indirect immunofluorescence labelling of cell surface TAG-1. Similar results were obtained in five different experiments. Scale bar=A: 200μm, B to F 60μm.

Fig. 11.

Absence of TAG-1 expression on regenerating motor neurons in vitro. (A) Retrograde labelling of the motor column after injection of Dil into the hind limb of E15 rat embryos. A 200 μm transverse section of a Dil-injected embryo shows the labelled motor pool (m) and dorsal root ganglion (d). Ventral spinal cords from injected embryos were isolated, dissociated to a single cell suspension and plated on astrocyte membranes obtained by freeze-thawing astrocyte monolayers. Dil-labelled neurons extend processes in vitro (B), but TAG-1 is not detected on their surface (C). In contrast, Dil-labelled neurons isolated from Ell spinal cord after injection of Dil into the anterior somite express TAG-1 at low levels on their processes. In D-F the same field is shown with D showing phase contrast, E, Dil labelling and F indirect immunofluorescence labelling of cell surface TAG-1. Similar results were obtained in five different experiments. Scale bar=A: 200μm, B to F 60μm.

TAG-l is re-expressed on the surface of adult DRG neurons that regenerate axons in vitro

In contrast to the results described above with spinal cord neurons, DRG neurons isolated at times when TAG-1 is no longer detected immunohistochemically in situ (Fig. 12A,B; Dodd et al. 1988) express the protein on regenerating axons in vitro. DRG neurons were removed from P6, P10, P15, P26-P28 and P60-P90 rats, dissociated and plated on a substrate of poly-L-lysine/lammin or on cortical astrocytes in the presence or absence of NGF (100 ng ml−1). Regardless of the age of animals from which DRG were removed, over 90 % of the neurons expressed TAG-1 on their cell bodies and neurites by 24 h of plating (Fig. 12C,D). The surface expression of TAG-1 persisted for 3 days in vitro, the longest time period that we examined. LI (Fig. 12E,F) and N-CAM (not shown) were also expressed at high levels on adult DRG neurons in vitro. Postnatal DRG neurons also released large amounts of TAG-1 into the medium (not shown). Thus postnatal and adult DRG neurons grown in dissociated cell culture re-express the surface form of TAG-1.

Fig. 12.

Re-expression of TAG-1 on postnatal DRG neurons in vitro. (A) Immunoperoxidase localization of TAG-1 in DRG neurons in situ viewed with Nomarski optics. TAG-1 is detectable on the cell bodies and processes of E15 DRG neurons. (B) TAG-1 is not detected in P8 DRG in situ. (C,D) Phase (C) and fluorescence (D) micrographs showing that TAG-1 is expressed on the surface of DRG neurons isolated from P26 DRG and maintained in vitro for 3 days (E,F) Micrographs showing that LI is expressed on DRG neurons isolated from P26 DRG and maintained in vitro for 3 days. Similar results were obtained in 11 experiments with DRG obtained from PIO to P90 rats Calibration bar=A: 250μm; B’ 400μm; C to F. 50μm.

Fig. 12.

Re-expression of TAG-1 on postnatal DRG neurons in vitro. (A) Immunoperoxidase localization of TAG-1 in DRG neurons in situ viewed with Nomarski optics. TAG-1 is detectable on the cell bodies and processes of E15 DRG neurons. (B) TAG-1 is not detected in P8 DRG in situ. (C,D) Phase (C) and fluorescence (D) micrographs showing that TAG-1 is expressed on the surface of DRG neurons isolated from P26 DRG and maintained in vitro for 3 days (E,F) Micrographs showing that LI is expressed on DRG neurons isolated from P26 DRG and maintained in vitro for 3 days. Similar results were obtained in 11 experiments with DRG obtained from PIO to P90 rats Calibration bar=A: 250μm; B’ 400μm; C to F. 50μm.

Embryonic neurons express a variety of surface molecules that are thought to contribute to the extension and pathfinding of developing axons (Dodd and Jessell, 1988; Harrelson and Goodman, 1988; Takeichi, 1990; Reichardt et al. 1990). One of these molecules, TAG-1, is a 135×103Mr member of the immunoglobulin family (Furley et al. 1990), which differs from many other vertebrate glycoproteins implicated in neuronal recognition and adhesion in that it is transiently expressed on a restricted subset of central and peripheral neurons in situ (Yamamoto et al. 1986; Dodd et al. 1988; Yamamoto et al. 1990). We show here TAG-1 is also expressed transiently on the surface of a subpopulation of spinal neurons in vitro and in addition is released from these neurons. TAG-1 disappears from the surface of cultured spinal neurons with a time course that parallels the loss of the protein from the same neurons in the developing embryo; however, neurons continue to release TAG-1 in vitro. The expression of TAG-1 on the cell surface appears to be regulated by mechanisms intrinsic to the neurons that synthesize TAG-1, and neurons isolated after surface expression of TAG-1 expression has ceased in vivo do not re-express surface TAG-1. In contrast to these results with spinal neurons, TAG-1 persists on the surface of DRG neurons in vitro well beyond the normal period of TAG-1 expression on these neurons in situ. Moreover, adult DRG neurons, which do not express detectable TAG-1 tn situ, re-express the protein on their surface when placed in vitro, suggesting that the cell surface form of TAG-1 is regulated differently by central and peripheral neurons.

Spinal cord and DRG neurons express two forms of TAG-1

TAG-1 has a hydrophobic carboxy terminal domain suggesting that the protein is attached to the neuronal surface membrane by a GPI anchor (Furley et al. 1990). In support of this possibility, TAG-1 can be released from brain membranes and from the surface of cell lines transfected with TAG-1 cDNA by treatment with PI-PLC (Furley et al. 1990). The present studies provide evidence that the predominant or exclusive mode of covalent attachment of TAG-1 to the surface of primary neurons is via a GPI anchor. In addition, embryonic central and peripheral neurons release large amounts of TAG-1.

Both the surface and released forms of TAG-1 can be detected in cell lines transfected with TAG-1 cDNA clones (Furley et al. 1990), which suggests that differential RNA splicing is not required for the generation of the two different forms of the protein. However, the biosynthetic processing that gives rise to the surface and released forms of TAG-1 in primary neurons is not established. The detection of [3H]ethanolamine in a fraction of the TAG-1 released in the absence of PI-PLC treatment suggests that released protein may derive, in part, from cleavage of the GPI-anchored surface form by endogenous phospholipases or proteases. A serum phospholipase with specificity for the GPI linkages of surface glycoproteins has recently been characterized (Huang et al. 1990). The amount of [3H]ethanolamine incorporated into the released form appears to be much lower than that incorporated into the PI-PLC cleaved surface form, which suggests that a large fraction of TAG-1 released from DRG neurons is not derived from the GPI-anchored cell surface form. The GPI anchor is added to proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum soon after synthesis of the nascent polypeptide chain. Cleavage of the carboxy terminal hydro-phobic region of the protein is required for attachment of the phosphoethanolamine residue to the new C-terminal residue (Doering et al. 1990). The released form of TAG-1, which lacks an ethanolamine group, could therefore be generated in the endoplasmic reticulum by failure to cleave the carboxy terminal domain of TAG-1 or by the failure to attach the GPI anchor after carboxy terminal peptide cleavage. Additionally, the released form of TAG-1 could be generated by proteolytic cleavage of the surface form.

TAG-1 shares many biochemical and functional properties with axonin-1, a protein shown to be synthesized by developing chick neurons in cell surface and released forms (Stoeckli et al. 1989; Ruegg et al. 1989, 1990) and it is possible that axonin-1 is the chick homologue of TAG-1. Analysis of the synthesis of axonin-1 by chick DRG neurons has provided evidence that, like TAG-1, the released form of axonin-1 does not derive primarily from the surface form (Ruegg et al. 1990).

Developmental regulation of the surface form of TAG-1 by spinal cord and DRG neurons

TAG-1 is expressed on the surface of a subset of embryonic spinal neurons in culture. These neurons are likely to correspond to commissural and motor neurons, the two major classes of neurons in the spinal cord to express TAG-1 in vivo at early embryonic stages (Dodd et al. 1988), although other classes of spinal neurons express TAG-1 later in embryonic development (Furley et al. 1990; Vaughn et al. 1990). Over the first few days in vitro, spinal cord neurons lose TAG-1 from their surface, whereas N-CAM expression persists and the levels of LI are initially low but increase with time in vitro. Several lines of evidence indicate that under the present in vitro assay conditions, the disappearance of TAG-1 from the surface of dorsal spinal cord neurons appears to be regulated by events intrinsic to the neurons that synthesize TAG-1 rather than by factors in the environment of these neurons. First, TAG-1 is expressed in vitro on Ell dorsal spinal cord for a somewhat longer period than on E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons. Second, the loss of surface TAG-1 is not dependent on the substratum upon which dorsal spinal cord neurons are grown or on serum factors. Third, adding E13 dorsal spinal cord neurons to older spinal cord cultures does not accelerate the time course of disappearance of TAG-1. In contrast to these results with TAG-1, changes in substratum conditions have been shown to affect the surface expression of a 130 – 140 × 103Mr axonal glycoprotein, Bravo, which appears to be a related immunoglobulin family member (de la Rosa et al. 1990). It remains possible that in vivo expression of TAG-1 is regulated, in part, by environmental signals.

Previous studies have revealed that TAG-1 is expressed on the axons of commissural and motor neurons only over the initial phase of their growth (Dodd et al. 1988). TAG-1 expression on commissural neurons ceases as axons reach the ventral midline of the spinal cord and cross the floor plate. These observations raised the possibility that the floor plate contributes to the loss of the TAG-1 from the surface of commissural axons (Dodd et al. 1988). The present in vitro experiments provide evidence that transient expression of TAG-1 on commissural neurons can occur independently of contact with the floor plate Similarly, the transient expression of TAG-1 by motor neurons is likely to be regulated by an intrinsic timing mechanism, rather than by interactions with their immediate or final targets. This does not preclude the possibility that the floor plate has a role in refining the timing or spatial expression of TAG-1 on commissural axons in vivo.

The transient expression of TAG-1 on the surface of spinal neurons in vitro could result from a developmental increase in the activity of endogenous phospholipases or proteases that cleave the membrane anchored form of the protein as it is inserted into the membrane. Alternatively, there could be a developmental loss of factors required for transfer of the GPI anchor to the protein backbone, leading by default to a released form of the protein. Neurons that synthesize TAG-1 are likely also to express other immunoglobulin superfamily members that are linked to the cell surface via a GPI linkage, for example Thy-1 (Ferguson and Williams, 1988) and F11/F3 (Brummendorf et al. 1989; Gennarini et al. 1989a). Thy-1 is expressed on the surface of cultured spinal neurons at a time when surface expression of TAG-1 has ceased (Brown et al. 1984; Xue and Morris, 1990), suggesting that neurons may have mechanisms for regulating, differentially, the expression of individual GPI-anchored proteins.

The finding of a persistent, released form of TAG-1 may provide an explanation for apparent differences in the expression of TAG-1 in vivo as assessed by different detection methods. Immunocytochemical studies with monoclonal and rabbit antibodies detect TAG-1 only transiently during development (Yamamoto et al. 1986; Dodd et al. 1988). However, biochemical studies show that TAG-1 mRNA and protein can be detected in postnatal and adult brain at times when there is no protein detectable by immunocytochemistry (Furley et al. 1990). It is possible in situ that antibodies detect only the cell surface form of TAG-1 and that the apparent disappearance of the protein reflects the loss of the cell surface form. The released form of TAG-1 may not be detected in vivo because it is bound to cell surface or extracellular molecules that mask the reactive epitopes of the protein. At present, the functions of the surface and released forms of TAG-1 are not clear. One possibility is that TAG-1 released into the local environment of axons may be capable of regulating axonal growth by interacting homophilically with TAG-1 or heterophilically with other proteins on the axonal surface.

The regulation of TAG-1 expression by DRG neurons appears to differ markedly from that of spinal neurons. TAG-1 is not detectable in rat DRG in situ after P6, whereas TAG-1 persists well beyond this time on the surface of DRG neurons in vitro. The persistent expression of TAG-1 is not caused by absence of non-neuronal cells in vitro, because TAG-1 expression persisted when DRG were grown as explant cultures. However, it is possible that the properties of non-neuronal cells change in vitro, leading to a deregulation of TAG-1 expression. Alternatively, TAG-1 expression could be contained by the formation of contacts between sensory axons and their peripheral targets which were not present in vitro. There is evidence that other biochemical properties of DRG neurons are regulated by contact with the peripheral targets of sensory neurons (Philippe et al. 1988; Marusich et al. 1986; Marusich and Weston, 1988).

Differences in TAG-1 expression on regenerating central and peripheral neurons

Central and peripheral neurons also differ in their ability to re-express TAG-1 on regenerating axons in vitro. Commissural and motor neurons isolated from late embryonic or postnatal rats did not re-express TAG-1 when they regenerated axons in viuo. The mechanisms that direct expression of TAG-1 to the surface of early embryonic spinal neurons therefore do not appear to be reactivated when these neurons regenerate axons at later times. In contrast to spinal cord neurons, DRG neurons re-express TAG-1 on their surface when they are placed in culture at times when TAG-1 expression is no longer detected in situ. As discussed above, the absence of detectable TAG-1 on the surface of adult sensory neurons in situ may reflect the presence of environmental signals that repress TAG-1 expression. Removal of DRG neurons from the influence of these signals may permit the re-expression of TAG-1.

Central and peripheral neurons have markedly differing abilities to regenerate axons after damage Neuronal regeneration is thought to be regulated, in part, by the local environment of damaged axons (Bray et al. 1987; Schwab, 1990). However, the disappearance of neuronal cell surface glycoproteins during development also could contribute to the failure of axonal regeneration in the central nervous system. For example, some central and peripheral neurons lose the ability to extend axons on laminin substrata during development (Cohen et al. 1987; Hall et al. 1987). This appears to result from the inactivation of integrins or other laminin receptors present on the axonal surface that is triggered by contact of axons with their tectal targets (Cohen et al. 1989; Reichardt et al. 1990). The present observations provide additional evidence that glycoproteins implicated in cell adhesion and axonal growth are lost from the neuronal surface during development. In contrast to laminin receptors, however, the temporal expression of TAG-1 on spinal neurons may be regulated, in part, by a cell intrinsic timing mechanism that occurs independent of contact of the axon with its target.

We are grateful to Paul Patterson, Fritz Rathjen and Rod Piggott for providing antibodies to LI, to Martin Low for supplies of PI-PLC and to L Reichardt and E. de la Rosa for sending preprints of unpublished work. Caroline Kopek provided assistance in dissections. We also thank Dan Felsenfeld, Andrew Furley, Marc Tessier-Lavigne and Mary Hynes for helpful comments, and Karen Liebert and Vicki Leon for assistance in preparing the manuscript. This work was supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (T.M.J.) and by grants from the Irma T. Hirschi Foundation and National Science Foundation (to J D ). T.M.J. is an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Altman
,
J
and
Bayer
,
S A
(
1984
)
The development of the rat spinal cord
Adv Anat Embryol Cell Biol
85
,
1
166
Bray
,
G M
,
Vidal
,
S M
and
Aguayo
,
A J
(
1987
).
Regeneration of axons from the central nervous system of adult rats
Progress in Brain Research
71
,
373
379
Brown
,
R H.
,
Schweitzer
,
J
and
Dichter
,
M A
(
1984
)
Expression of the Thy-1 antigen in long-term cultures of embryonic mouse spinal cord
Brain Res
296
,
87
91
Brummendorf
,
T
,
Wolff
,
J M
,
Frank
,
R.
and
Rathjen
,
F G
(
1989
)
Neural cell recognition molecule Fll: homology with fibronectin type III and immunoglobulin type C domains
Neuron
2
,
1351
1361
Cohen
,
J
,
Burne
,
J F.
,
Mckinlay
,
C
and
Winter
,
J
(
1987
).
The role of laminin and the lamimn/fibronectin receptor complex in the outgrowth of retinal ganglion cell axons
.
Devi Biol
122
,
407
418
Cohen
,
J
,
Nurcombe
,
V
,
Jeffrey
,
P
and
Edgar
,
D.
(
1989
)
Developmental loss of functional laminin receptors on retinal ganglion cells is regulated by their target tissue, the optic tectum
Development
107
,
381
387
Cunningham
,
B A.
,
Hemperly
,
J J
,
Murray
,
G A
,
Prediger
,
E A
,
Brackenbury
,
R
and
Edelman
,
G M
(
1987
).
Neural cell adhesion molecule: structure, immunoglobulin-like domains, cell surface modulation, and alternative RNA splicing
Science
236
,
799
806
De La Rosa
,
E J
,
Kayyem
,
J. F
,
Roman
,
J M
,
Stierhof
,
Y-D.
,
Dreyer
,
W J
and
Schwarz
,
U
(
1990
).
Topologically restricted appearance in the developing chick retino-tectal system of Bravo, a neural surface protein, experimental modulation by environmental cues
J Cell Biol.
Ill
,
3087
-
3096
Dodd
,
J.
and
Jessell
,
T M
(
1985
)
Lactosenes carbohydrates specify subsets of dorsal root ganglion neurons projecting to the superficial dorsal horn of rat spinal cord
J Neurosci
5
,
3278
-
3294
Dodd
,
J
and
Jessell
,
T M.
(
1988
)
Axon guidance and the patterning of neuronal projections in vertebrates
Science
242
,
692
699
Dodd
,
J
,
Morton
,
S B
,
Karagogeos
,
D
,
Yamamoto
,
M
and
Jessell
,
T M
(
1988
)
Spatial regulation of axonal glycoprotein expression on subsets of embryonic spinal neurons
Neuron
1
,
105
116
Doering
,
T L.
,
Masterson
,
W J
,
Hart
,
G W.
and
Englund
,
P T
(
1990
)
Biosynthesis of glycosyl phosphatidylinositol membrane anchors
J biol Chem
265
,
611
614
.
Doherty
,
P
,
Cohen
,
J.
and
Walsh
,
F S.
(
1990
)
Neurite outgrowth in response to transfected N-CAM changes during development and is modulated by polysialic acid
.
Neuron
5
,
209
219
Edelman
,
G M
(
1986
)
Cell adhesion molecules in the regulation of animal form and tissue pattern
Ann Rev Cell Biol
2
,
81
116
Ferguson
,
MAJ
and
Williams
,
A F.
(
1988
)
Cell-surface anchoring of proteins via glycosyl-phosphatidyhnositol structures
.
Ann Rev Biochem
57
,
285
320
Furley
,
A. J
,
Morton
,
S B
,
Manalo
,
D
,
Karagogeos
,
D
,
Dodd
,
J.
and
Jessell
,
T M
(
1990
)
The axonal glycoprotein TAG-1 is an immunoglobulin superfamily member with neurite outgrowth-promoting activity
Cell
61
,
157
170
.
Gennarini
,
G
,
Cibellj
,
G
,
Rougon
,
G.
,
Mattei
,
M.-G
and
Goridis
,
C
(
1989
)
The mouse neuronal cell surface protein F?. a phosphatidylinositol-anchored member of the immunoglobulin superfamily related to chicken contactin
J Cell B?l
109
,
775
788
Gennarini
,
G
,
Rougon
,
G
,
Vγriello
,
R
,
Corsi
,
P.
,
Di Benedetta
,
C.
and
Goridis
,
C
(
1989b
).
Identification and cDNA cloning of a new member of the L2/HNK-1 family of neural surface glycoproteins
J. Neurosa Res
22
,
1
12
.
Hall
,
D E
,
Neugebauer
,
K M
and
Reichardt
,
L F.
(
1987
)
Embryonic neural retinal cell response to extracellular matrix proteins developmental changes and effects of the cell substratum attachment antibody (CSAT)
J Cell B?l
104
,
623
634
Harrelson
,
A L
and
Goodman
,
C S
(
1988
)
Growth cone guidance in insects fasciclin II is a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily
Science
242
,
700
108
Honig
,
M G
and
Hume
,
R I.
(
1986
)
Fluorescent carbocyanine dyes allow living neurons of identified origin to be studied in long-term cultures
.
J Cell B?l
103
,
171
183
Huang
,
K S
,
Li
,
S
,
Fung
,
W J C
,
Hulmes
,
J D
,
Reik
,
L
,
Pan
,
Y C E
and
Low
,
M. G.
(
1990
).
Purification and characterization of glycosyl-phosphatidyhnositol-specific phospholipase D J b?l Chem
265
,
17738
17 745
Jessell
,
T M
(
1988
)
Adhesion molecules and the hierarchy of neural development
Neuron
1
,
3
13
.
Keynes
,
R J
and
Stern
,
C D
(
1985
)
Segmentation in the vertebrate nervous system
Nature
310
,
786
789
Kriegstein
,
A.
and
Dichter
,
M A
(
1984
)
Neuron generation in dissociated cell cultures from fetal cerebral cortex
Brain Res
295
,
184
189
.
Lindsay
,
R.
(
1988
)
Nerve growth factors (NGF, BDNF) enhance axonal regeneration but are not required for survival of adult sensory neurons
J Neurosa
8
,
2394
2405
Low
,
M G
and
Saltiel
,
A R
(
1988
)
Structural and functional roles of glycosyl-phosphatidyhnositol in membranes
Science
239
,
268
275
Marusich
,
M F
,
Pourmehr
,
K
and
Weston
,
J A.
(
1986
)
The development of an identified subpopulation of avian sensory neurons is regulated by interaction with the periphery
.
Devi B?l
118
,
505
510
Marusich
,
M F.
and
Weston
,
J A.
(
1988
)
Role of neuron-target interactions in the development of a subpopulation of avian sensory neurons
J Neurosa Res
21
,
480
486
.
Moos
,
M
,
TACKE
,
R
,
Schere
,
H
,
Teplow
,
D.
,
Fruh
,
K.
and
Schachner
,
M
(
1988
)
Neural adhesion molecule LI as a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily with binding domains similar to fibronectin
Nature
334
,
701
703
Philippe
,
E
,
Garosi
,
M
and
Droz
,
B
(
1988
).
Influence of peripheral and central targets on subpopulations of sensory neurons expressing calbindm immunoreactivity in the dorsal root ganglion of the chick embyro
Neuroscience
26
,
225
232
.
Pigott
,
R
and
Davies
,
A. M
(
1987
).
The monoclonal antibody 69A1 recognizes an epitope found on neurones with axons that fasciculate but not on those with non-fasciculating processes
Development
100
,
489
500
Ranscht
,
B
(
1988
)
Sequence of contactin, a 130 kD-glycoprotein concentrated in areas of intemeuronal contact, defines a new member of the immunoglobulin supergene family in the nervous system
J Cell B?l
107
,
1561
1573
Rathien
,
F G.
and
Rutishauser
,
U
(
1984
)
Comparison of two cell surface molecules involved in neural cell adhesion
EMBO J
3
,
461
465
.
Rathjen
,
F. G
and
Schachner
,
M
(
1984
)
Immunocytological and biochemical characterization of a new neuronal cell surface component (LI antigen) which is involved in cell adhesion
EMBO J
3
,
1
10
Reichardt
,
L F
,
Bossy
,
B
,
Carbonetto
,
S.
,
De Curtis
,
L
,
Emmett
,
C
,
Hall
,
D E
,
Ignatius
,
M J
,
Lefcort
,
F
,
Napolitano
,
E.
,
Neugebauer
,
K M
and
Tomaselli
,
K.
(
1991
)
Neuronal receptors that regulate axon growth
Cold Spring Harbor Symp
55
, In Press
Romuin
,
H J
,
Gabets
,
A M M. C
,
Mud
,
M T
and
Walters
,
P S
(
1982
)
Nerve outgrowth, synaptogenesis and bioelectric activating in rat cerebral cortex tissue cultured in serum-free, chemically defined medium
Devi Brain Res
2
,
583
589
Ruego
,
M A
,
Stoeckli
,
E
,
Lanz
,
R B.
,
Streit
,
P
and
Sonderegger
,
P
(
1990
)
A homologue of the axonally secreted protein axonin-1 is an integral membrane protein of nerve fiber tracts involved in neurite extension
J Cell B?l
109
,
2363
2378
Ruegg
,
M A
,
Stoeckli
,
E T.
,
Kuhn
,
T B
,
Heller
,
M
,
Zuellig
,
R
and
Sonderegger
,
P
(
1989
)
Purification of axonin-1, a protein that is secreted from axons during neurogenesis
EMBO J
8
,
55
63
Rutishauser
,
U.
(
1989
)
Neural cell-to-cell adhesion and recognition
Curr Opin Cell B?l
1
,
898
904
Schachner
,
M
,
Antonicek
,
H
,
Fahrig
,
T
et al.  (
1990
)
Families of neural cell adhesion molecules
In
Morphoregulatory Molecules
(ed
G M.
Edelman
,
B. A
Cunningham
and
J P
Thiery
)
John Wiley and Sons, New York
, pp
443
468
Schwab
,
M. E
(
1990
)
Myelin-associated inhibitors of neurite growth
Expl Neurol
109
,
2
5
Stallcup
,
W. B.
,
Beasley
,
L L.
and
Levine
,
J M
(
1984
)
Antibody against nerve growth factor-inducible large external (NILE) glycoprotein labels nerve fiber tracts in the developing rat nervous system
.
J Neurosa
5
,
1090
1101
Stoeckli
,
E T
,
Lemkin
,
P F
,
Kuhn
,
T B.
,
Ruegg
,
M A.
,
Heller
,
M
and
Sonderegger
,
P
(
1989
)
Identification of proteins secreted from axons of embryonic dorsal-root-ganglion neurons
.
Eur. J. Biochem.
180
,
249
258
.
Sweadner
,
K. J.
(
1983
).
Post-translational modification and evoked release of two large surface proteins of sympathetic neurons
.
J. Neurosci.
3
,
2504
2517
.
Takeichi
,
M.
(
1990
).
Cadherins: a molecular family important in selective cell-cell adhesion
.
Ann. Rev. Biochem.
59
,
237
252
.
Vaughn
,
J. E.
,
Phelps
,
P. E.
,
Yamamoto
,
M.
and
Barber
,
R. P.
(
1990
).
Association neurons of embryonic spinal cord express the cell surface glycoprotein TAG-1
.
Soc. Neurosci. Abs.
416
,
1
.
Xue
,
G. P.
and
Morris
,
R. J.
(
1990
).
Evidence for cell-type differences in the regulation of neuronal expression of Thy-1
.
Biochem. Soc. Transact.
18
,
441
442
.
Yamamoto
,
M.
,
Boyer
,
A. M.
,
Crandall
,
J. E.
,
Edwards
,
M.
and
Tanaka
,
H.
(
1986
).
Distribution of stage specific neurite-associated proteins in the developing murine nervous system recognized by a monoclonal antibody
.
J. Neurosci.
6
,
3576
3594
.
Yamamoto
,
M.
,
Hassinger
,
L.
and
Crandall
,
J. E.
(
1990
).
Ultrastructural localization of stage-specific neurite associated proteins in the developing rat cerebral and cerebellar cortices
.
J. Neurocytol.
19
,
619
627
.