Figure 2
Figure 2. tPA binds to injured neurons ex vivo. NMDA was injected into the mouse striatum. Twenty-four hours later 1-mm coronal slices were prepared and incubated in 100 to 400 nM tPA overnight. Sections were then washed, fixed, and subjected to anti-tPA immunofluorescence (B,D,F) with a DAPI counterstain (A,C,E,G). A 40-μm scale bar is shown for panels A through D and a 20-μm scale bar, for panels E through G. (A,C) DAPI staining indicates a reduction in density of DAPI-positive cells following NMDA injection (compare ipsilateral [ipsi] with contralateral [contra] regions). (B,D) The contralateral striatum is devoid of tPA-binding cells, whereas numerous tPA-binding cells are present within the injured ipsilateral striatum. Panels E through G are the same section stained for tPA (F) and DAPI (E,G). Arrowheads point to healthy cells that do not bind tPA within the ipsilateral striatum. High- and low-exposure DAPI counterstaining reveals that these non–tPA-binding cells possess distinct brightly stained, regular-shaped nuclei and are therefore deemed viable. In contrast, arrows point to several tPA-binding cells that possess shrunken or irregular-shaped nuclei and are therefore considered injured. The binding of tPA to injured cells within the lesion was observed in experiments conducted on 3 separate mice. No comparable tPA-binding cells were found in sections that were incubated in the absence of recombinant tPA (not shown).

tPA binds to injured neurons ex vivo. NMDA was injected into the mouse striatum. Twenty-four hours later 1-mm coronal slices were prepared and incubated in 100 to 400 nM tPA overnight. Sections were then washed, fixed, and subjected to anti-tPA immunofluorescence (B,D,F) with a DAPI counterstain (A,C,E,G). A 40-μm scale bar is shown for panels A through D and a 20-μm scale bar, for panels E through G. (A,C) DAPI staining indicates a reduction in density of DAPI-positive cells following NMDA injection (compare ipsilateral [ipsi] with contralateral [contra] regions). (B,D) The contralateral striatum is devoid of tPA-binding cells, whereas numerous tPA-binding cells are present within the injured ipsilateral striatum. Panels E through G are the same section stained for tPA (F) and DAPI (E,G). Arrowheads point to healthy cells that do not bind tPA within the ipsilateral striatum. High- and low-exposure DAPI counterstaining reveals that these non–tPA-binding cells possess distinct brightly stained, regular-shaped nuclei and are therefore deemed viable. In contrast, arrows point to several tPA-binding cells that possess shrunken or irregular-shaped nuclei and are therefore considered injured. The binding of tPA to injured cells within the lesion was observed in experiments conducted on 3 separate mice. No comparable tPA-binding cells were found in sections that were incubated in the absence of recombinant tPA (not shown).

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