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Basic fibroblast growth factor regulates ionic...
Journal article

Basic fibroblast growth factor regulates ionic currents and excitability of fetal rat carotid body chemoreceptors

Abstract

Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and nerve growth factor (NGF) are known mitogens and/or differentiation factors for cells of the sympathoadrenal lineage. Though carotid body (CB) chemoreceptors (type 1 cells) are considered part of this lineage, their response to bFGF is unknown and so far they appear unresponsive to NGF in vitro. In this study we use whole-cell recording to investigate whether bFGF (and NGF) can influence the development of ionic currents in these chemoreceptors, cultured from fetal (E18-19) rat pups. bFGF (10ng/ml) significantly augmented both transient inward Na+ and outward K+ currents in type 1 cells after only 2 days of treatment; after normalizing for the accompanying increase in cell size, as indicated by whole-cell capacitance, the Na+ current density was nonetheless increased by bFGF. Unlike controls, bFGF-treated type 1 cells readily fired action potentials following depolarization. These effects were not mimicked by NGF (100 ng/ml) treatment. Since the carotid body is one of the most richly vascularized organs and bFGF is a potent angiogenic factor, it is conceivable that variations in local bFGF concentrations during fetal development may contribute to the known species differences in CB chemoreceptor excitability.

Authors

Zhong H; Nurse C

Journal

Neuroscience Letters, Vol. 202, No. 1-2, pp. 41–44

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

December 29, 1995

DOI

10.1016/0304-3940(95)12200-1

ISSN

0304-3940

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