ABSTRACT
Fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-1 is increased in particular brain regions after birth, suggesting an involvement of some regulatory neuronal circuits. To address the neuronal activity responsible for FGF-1 synthesis, effects of various neurotransmitter receptor activation on cellular FGF-1 content were examined using cultured rat cortical neurons. Histamine, glutamate, carbachol, serotonin or gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) caused an increase of FGF-1 content. Because this effect was mimicked by (1) N-methyl-D-aspartate, a glutamatergic agonist; (2) Ca(2+) ionophore; (3) depolarization with high concentration of KCl, but was abolished in Ca(2+)-free medium, Ca(2+) influx was thought to trigger FGF-1 synthesis. Such Ca(2+)-mediated enhancement of FGF-1 synthesis, however, did not occur in the presence of norepinephrine (NE), but was restored by KT-5720, an inhibitor of protein kinase A (PKA), suggesting an interplay between Ca(2+)-activated and cAMP/PKA signals for neuronal FGF-1 synthesis. This mechanism was proved to function in vivo by stimulation of FGF-1 expression in neurons of the cerebral cortex after intracerebral administration of propranolol, an antagonist of adrenergic beta receptors. This demonstrates that FGF-1 synthesis is essentially upregulated by Ca(2+) influx through excitatory neuronal activities, but such an effect is abolished by neurotransmission that evokes cAMP/PKA signals. FGF-1 produced is thought to act on establishment and maintenance of particular neuronal circuits in the brain, which may be one of the ways neurotransmitters regulate brain function.