Cell and tissue research
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SCO-spondin is a large-molecular mass glycoprotein, secreted by the subcommissural organ (SCO), which has been implicated in neuronal development during ontogeny of the central nervous system. The expression of SCO-spondin is not restricted to the SCO but it also occurs in the floor plate, a key structure participating in neuronal differentiation and patterning of the neural tube. ⋯ The study of floor plate explants and their conditioned media allowed us to demonstrate that: (1) organ-cultured floor plate cells are actively secretory for up to 25 days; (2) SCO-spondin gene is actively transcribed and translated by the cultured floor plate cells; (3) SCO-spondin is released into the culture medium via the apical cell pole; and (4) upon release, SCO-spondin does not aggregate in the conditioned medium but remains soluble. Furthermore, in the cultured floor plate cells, SCO-spondin may be secreted through a route bypassing the Golgi apparatus.