SUBSETS OF OLFACTORY AND VOMERONASAL SENSORY EPITHELIAL CELLS AND AXONS REVEALED BY MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES TO CARBOHYDRATE ANTIGENS

1991 
Abstract Cell surface glycoconjugates are believed to play an important role in cell-cell interactions during development of CNS pathways. In order to identify developmentally regulated glycoconjugates in the nervous system, monoclonal antibodies were raised and selected for reactivity with carbohydrate antigens. Three monoclonal antibodies were identified, each of which reacts with a defined carbohydrate epitope and reveals a unique pattern of immunoreactivity within the olfactory sensory epithelia, vomeronasal and olfactory nerves and their terminal regions in rats. Antibody CC1 reacts with a globoside-like glycolipid which contains a terminal N -acetylgalactosamine residue. CC1-immunoreactivity is present in just the vomeronasal organ, vomeronasal nerve and in the rostral half of the accessory olfactory bulb. Antibody CC2 reacts with a complex glycolipid which contains a branched chain oligosaccharide terminating with α-galactose and α-fucose. CC2-immunoreactivity is seen throughout the vomeronasal organ, in dorsomedial regions of the olfactory sensory epithelia, in the vomeronasal and olfactory nerves, the accessory olfactory bulb and dorsomedial glomeruli of the main olfactory bulb. Antibody 1B2 reacts with lacto- N -glycosyl ceramides. 1B2-immunoreactivity is highest at the luminal surfaces of receptor cells throughout the vomeronasal organ and in portions of the olfactory sensory epithelia. 1B2 is also expressed on the surface of a subset of receptor cell bodies, their dendrites and the proximal region of their axons in dorsomedial regions of the main olfactory epithelium.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    26
    References
    119
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []