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Lesion of the rat entorhinal cortex denervates the outer molecular layer of the fascia dentata followed by layer-specific axonal sprouting of uninjured fibers in the denervated zone. One of the candidate molecules regulating the laminar-specific sprouting response in the outer molecular layer is the transmembrane chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan NG2. NG2 is found in glial scars and has been suggested to impede axonal regeneration following injury of the spinal cord. The present study adressed the question whether NG2 could also regulate axonal growth in denervated areas of the brain. Therefore, (1) changes in NG2 mRNA and NG2 protein levels, (2) the cellular and the extracellular localisation of the molecule, (3) the identity of NG2 expressing cells, and (4) the generation of NG2-positive cells were studied in the rat fascia dentata before and following entorhinal deafferentation. Laser microdissection was employed to selectively harvest the denervated molecular layer and combined with quantitative reverse transcription-PCR to measure changes in NG2 mRNA amount (6h, 12h, 2d, 4d, 7d post lesion). The study revealed increases of NG2 mRNA at day 2 (2.5-fold) and day 4 (2-fold) post lesion. Immunocytochemistry was used to detect changes in NG2 protein distribution (1d, 4d, 7d, 10d, 14d, 30d, 6 months post lesion). NG2 staining was increased in the denervated outer molecular layer at 1 day post lesion, reached a maximum at 10 days post lesion, and returned to control levels within 6 month. Interestingly, the accumulation of NG2 protein was strongly restricted to the denervated outer molecular layer forming a border to the unaffected inner molecular layer. Using electron microscopy, NG2-immunoprecipitate was localized not only on glial surfaces and in the extracellular matrix but also in the vicinity of neuronal profiles indicating that NG2 is secreted following denervation. Double-labelings of NG2-immunopositive cells with markers for astrocytes, microglia/macrophages, and oligodendrocytes suggested that NG2-cells are a distinct glial subpopulation before and after entorhinal deafferentation. Bromodeoxyuridine-labeling revealed that some of the NG2-positive cells are postlesional generated. Taken together, the data revealed a layer-specific upregulation of NG2 in the denervated outer molecular layer of the fascia dentata that coincides with the sprouting response of uninjured fibers. This suggests that NG2 could regulate lesion-induced axonal growth in denervated areas of the brain.