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1.
Nitric oxide (NO) signaling results in both neurotoxic and neuroprotective effects in CNS and PNS neurons, respectively, after nerve lesioning. We investigated the role of NO signaling on optic nerve regeneration in the goldfish ( Carassius auratus ). NADPH diaphorase staining revealed that nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity was up-regulated primarily in the retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) 5–40 days after axotomy. Levels of neuronal NOS (nNOS) mRNA and protein also increased in the RGCs alone during this period. This period (5–40 days) overlapped with the process of axonal elongation during regeneration of the goldfish optic nerve. Therefore, we evaluated the effect of NO signaling molecules upon neurite outgrowth from adult goldfish axotomized RGCs in culture. NO donors and dibutyryl cGMP increased neurite outgrowth dose-dependently. In contrast, a nNOS inhibitor and small interfering RNA, specific for the nNOS gene, suppressed neurite outgrowth from the injured RGCs. Intra-ocular dibutyryl cGMP promoted the axonal regeneration from injured RGCs in vivo . None of these molecules had an effect on cell death/survival in this culture system. This is the first report showing that NO-cGMP signaling pathway through nNOS activation is involved in neuroregeneration in fish CNS neurons after nerve lesioning.  相似文献   

2.
Like other neurons of the central nervous system (CNS), retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) are normally unable to regenerate injured axons and instead undergo apoptotic cell death. This regenerative failure leads to lifelong visual deficits after optic nerve damage and is partially attributable to factors located in the inhibitory environment of the forming glial scar and myelin as well as to an insufficient intrinsic ability for axonal regrowth. In addition to its ophthalmological relevance, the optic nerve has long been used as a favorable paradigm for studying regenerative failure in the CNS as a whole. Findings over the last 15 years have shown that, under certain circumstances, mature RGCs can be transformed into an active regenerative state enabling these neurons to survive axotomy and to regenerate axons in the optic nerve. Moreover, combinatorial treatments overcoming the inhibitory environment of the glial scar and optic nerve myelin, together with approaches activating the intrinsic growth program, can further enhance the amount of regeneration in vivo. These findings are encouraging and open the possibility that clinically meaningful regenerationmay become achievable in the future.  相似文献   

3.
Su GH  Ye JX  You SW 《生理科学进展》2001,32(2):101-106
本综述重点阐述了移植周围神经或其组织成分雪旺细胞、成纤维细胞和神经营养因子,改善成年哺乳动物中枢神经系统抑制神经再生的微环境、增强受损神经元的内在再生潜力,以促进细胞损伤后的存活和轴突再生。  相似文献   

4.
The relationships of neurons and non-neuronal cells are vital for the maintenance and function of neurons. Trauma alters these relationships causing proliferation of non-neuronal cells and, in adult mammalian CNS, presumably disturbs the environmental support needed for regeneration. A supportive environment can be restored by introducing a regenerating nerve to injured mammalian CNS. This response is probably due, at least in part, to diffusible substances secreted by the non-neuronal cells. We have obtained diffusible substances from either regenerating fish optic nerves or neonatal rabbit optic nerves and applied them around crushed adult rabbit optic nerves. This manipulation caused the adult nerve to show regenerative changes: a general increase of protein synthesis in the retinas; selective increase in synthesis of a few polypeptides in the retinas; sprouting from the retinas in vitro; increased viability of nerve fibers as shown by HRP staining; and the appearance of growth cones adjacent to glial limitans in the injured nerves. We termed these diffusible, active substances "Growth Associated Triggering Factors" (GATFs). In addition to the phenomena described above, the active substances (obtained in the form of media conditioned by regenerating fish optic nerve or neonatal rabbit optic nerve) caused various other changes in the injured nerve itself: acceleration of non-neuronal cell proliferation; changes in the protein pattern, e.g. an increase in a 12 kDa polypeptide which might be a second mediator in the cascade of events leading to regeneration; increased laminin immunoreactive sites in the nerve; and the acquisition of growth supportive activity in media conditioned by the implanted injured nerves.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
CNS neurons, such as retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), do not normally regenerate injured axons, but instead undergo apoptotic cell death. Regenerative failure is due to inhibitory factors in the myelin and forming glial scar as well as due to an insufficient intrinsic capability of mature neurons to regrow axons. Nevertheless, RGCs can be transformed into an active regenerative state upon inflammatory stimulation (IS) in the inner eye, for instance by lens injury, enabling these RGCs to survive axotomy and to regenerate axons into the lesioned optic nerve. The beneficial effects of IS are mediated by various factors, including CNTF, LIF and IL-6. Consistently, IS activates various signaling pathways, such as JAK/STAT3 and PI3K/AKT/mTOR, in several retinal cell types. Using a conditional knockdown approach to specifically delete STAT3 in adult RGCs, we investigated the role of STAT3 in IS-induced neuroprotection and axon regeneration. Conditional STAT3 knockdown in RGCs did not affect the survival of RGCs after optic nerve injury compared with controls, but significantly reduced the neuroprotective effects of IS. STAT3 depletion significantly compromised CNTF-stimulated neurite growth in culture and IS-induced transformation of RGCs into an active regenerative state in vivo. As a consequence, IS-mediated axonal regeneration into the injured optic nerve was almost completely abolished in mice with STAT3 depleted in RGCs. In conclusion, STAT3 activation in RGCs is involved in neuroprotection and is a necessary prerequisite for optic nerve regeneration upon IS.  相似文献   

6.
The use of the visual system played a major role in the elucidation of molecular mechanisms controlling axonal regeneration in the injured CNS after trauma. In this model, CNTF was shown to be the most potent known neurotrophic factor for axonal regeneration in the injured optic nerve. To clarify the role of the downstream growth regulator Stat3, we analyzed axonal regeneration and neuronal survival after an optic nerve crush in adult mice. The infection of retinal ganglion cells with adeno-associated virus serotype 2 (AAV2) containing wild-type (Stat3-wt) or constitutively active (Stat3-ca) Stat3 cDNA promoted axonal regeneration in the injured optic nerve. Axonal growth was analyzed in whole-mounted optic nerves in three dimensions (3D) after tissue clearing. Surprisingly, with AAV2.Stat3-ca stimulation, axons elongating beyond the lesion site displayed very irregular courses, including frequent U-turns, suggesting massive directionality and guidance problems. The pharmacological blockade of ROCK, a key signaling component for myelin-associated growth inhibitors, reduced axonal U-turns and potentiated AAV2.Stat3-ca-induced regeneration. Similar results were obtained after the sustained delivery of CNTF in the axotomized retina. These results show the important role of Stat3 in the activation of the neuronal growth program for regeneration, and they reveal that axonal misguidance is a key limiting factor that can affect long-distance regeneration and target interaction after trauma in the CNS. The correction of axonal misguidance was associated with improved long-distance axon regeneration in the injured adult CNS.  相似文献   

7.
The ability of injured peripheral nerves to regenerate and reinnervate their original targets is a characteristic feature of the peripheral nervous system (PNS). On the other hand, neurons of the central nervous system (CNS), including retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axons, are incapable of spontaneous regeneration. In the adult PNS, axonal regeneration after injury depends on well-orchestrated cellular and molecular processes that comprise a highly reproducible series of degenerative reactions distal to the site of injury. During this fine-tuned process, named Wallerian degeneration, a remodeling of the distal nerve fragment prepares a permissive microenvironment that permits successful axonal regrowth originating from the proximal nerve fragment. Therefore, a multitude of adjusted intrinsic and extrinsic factors are important for surviving neurons, Schwann cells, macrophages and fibroblasts as well as endothelial cells in order to achieve successful regeneration. The aim of this review is to summarize relevant extrinsic cellular and molecular determinants of successful axonal regeneration in rodents that contribute to the regenerative microenvironment of the PNS.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Peptides derived from extracellular matrix proteins have the potential to function as potent therapeutic reagents to increase neuronal regeneration following central nervous system (CNS) injury, yet their efficacy as pharmaceutical reagents is dependent upon the expression of cognate receptors in the target tissue. This type of codependency is clearly observed in successful models of axonal regeneration in the peripheral nervous system, but not in the normally nonregenerating adult CNS. Successful regeneration is most closely correlated with the induction of integrins on the surface of peripheral neurons. This suggests that in order to achieve optimal neurite regrowth in the injured adult CNS, therapeutic strategies must include approaches that increase the number of integrins and other key receptors in damaged central neurons, as well as provide the appropriate growth-promoting peptides in a “regeneration cocktail.” In this review, we describe the ability of peptides derived from tenascin-C, fibronectin, and laminin-1 to influence neuronal growth. In addition, we also discuss the implications of peptide/receptor interactions for strategies to improve neuronal regeneration.  相似文献   

10.
Peptides derived from extracellular matrix proteins have the potential to function as potent therapeutic reagents to increase neuronal regeneration following central nervous system (CNS) injury, yet their efficacy as pharmaceutical reagents is dependent upon the expression of cognate receptors in the target tissue. This type of codependency is clearly observed in successful models of axonal regeneration in the peripheral nervous system, but not in the normally nonregenerating adult CNS. Successful regeneration is most closely correlated with the induction of integrins on the surface of peripheral neurons. This suggests that in order to achieve optimal neurite regrowth in the injured adult CNS, therapeutic strategies must include approaches that increase the number of integrins and other key receptors in damaged central neurons, as well as provide the appropriate growth-promoting peptides in a "regeneration cocktail." In this review, we describe the ability of peptides derived from tenascin- C, fibronectin, and laminin-1 to influence neuronal growth. In addition, we also discuss the implications of peptide/receptor interactions for strategies to improve neuronal regeneration.  相似文献   

11.
This protocol details a tissue culture technique that allows for quantified regeneration studies on adult retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), that is, CNS neurons. The method may also allow for elucidation of molecular cues, for example of signals relevant in neuronal survival and axon regeneration. The procedure relies on fractioned stripe culture of previously injured retina in defined culture media. Naive dendritic cell contacts of RGCs are preserved, and the system is independent of growth factors. In contrast to other techniques, the protocol is based on tissue grown from adult animals; it dispenses immature co-cultures and evaluates the outgrowth of unmyelinated neurites in a milieu lacking CNS myelin. The technique is suitable for rodent retina from mouse or rat. A growth-conditioning injury of the optic nerve is set 10 days before retinal explantation. Explants are cultured for 5-7 days. Mere preparation of a single retina should be completed within 20 min.  相似文献   

12.
Recombinant adeno-associated viral (rAAV) vectors can be used to introduce neurotrophic genes into injured CNS neurons, promoting survival and axonal regeneration. Gene therapy holds much promise for the treatment of neurotrauma and neurodegenerative diseases; however, neurotrophic factors are known to alter dendritic architecture, and thus we set out to determine whether such transgenes also change the morphology of transduced neurons. We compared changes in dendritic morphology of regenerating adult rat retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) after long-term transduction with rAAV2 encoding: (i) green fluorescent protein (GFP), or (ii) bi-cistronic vectors encoding GFP and ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) or growth-associated protein-43 (GAP43). To enhance regeneration, rats received an autologous peripheral nerve graft onto the cut optic nerve of each rAAV2 injected eye. After 5-8 months, RGCs with regenerated axons were retrogradely labeled with fluorogold (FG). Live retinal wholemounts were prepared and GFP positive (transduced) or GFP negative (non-transduced) RGCs injected iontophoretically with 2% lucifer yellow. Dendritic morphology was analyzed using Neurolucida software. Significant changes in dendritic architecture were found, in both transduced and non-transduced populations. Multivariate analysis revealed that transgenic BDNF increased dendritic field area whereas GAP43 increased dendritic complexity. CNTF decreased complexity but only in a subset of RGCs. Sholl analysis showed changes in dendritic branching in rAAV2-BDNF-GFP and rAAV2-CNTF-GFP groups and the proportion of FG positive RGCs with aberrant morphology tripled in these groups compared to controls. RGCs in all transgene groups displayed abnormal stratification. Thus in addition to promoting cell survival and axonal regeneration, vector-mediated expression of neurotrophic factors has measurable, gene-specific effects on the morphology of injured adult neurons. Such changes will likely alter the functional properties of neurons and may need to be considered when designing vector-based protocols for the treatment of neurotrauma and neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

13.
Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide and causes progressive visual impairment attributable to the dysfunction and death of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). Progression of visual field damage is slow and typically painless. Thus, glaucoma is often diagnosed after a substantial percentage of RGCs has been damaged. To date, clinical interventions are mainly restricted to the reduction of intraocular pressure (IOP), one of the major risk factors for this disease. However, the lowering of IOP is often insufficient to halt or reverse the progress of visual loss, underlining the need for the development of alternative treatment strategies. Several lines of evidence suggest that axonal damage of RGCs occurs primary at the optic nerve head, where axons appear to be most vulnerable. Axonal injury leads to the functional loss of RGCs and subsequently induces the death of the neurons. However, the detailed molecular mechanism(s) underlying IOP-induced optic nerve injury remain poorly understood. Moreover, whether glaucoma pathophysiology is primarily axonal, glial, or vascular remains unclear. Therefore, protective strategies to prevent further axonal and subsequent soma degeneration are of great importance to limit the progression of sight loss. In addition, strategies that stimulate injured RGCs to regenerate and reconnect axons with their central targets are necessary for functional restoration. The present review provides an overview of the context of glaucoma pathogenesis and surveys recent findings regarding potential strategies for axonal regeneration of RGCs and optic nerve repair, focusing on the role of cytokines and their downstream signaling pathways.  相似文献   

14.
The pathway from the retina to the brain in mammals provides a well-defined model system for investigation of not only surviving axotomy but also axonal regeneration of injured neurons. Here I introduce our recent works on axonal regeneration in the optic nerve (OpN) of adult cats. Fibers of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) extend beyond the crush site of OpN with injections of a macrophage stimulator (oxidized galectin-1) or a Rho kinase (ROCK) inhibitor (Y-39983 or Y-27632) while axonal extension is blocked with injection of saline. Elongation of crushed optic fibers, however, is slowed after 2 weeks. Transplantation of peripheral nerve makes RGCs regenerate their transected axons into a graft but regenerated fibers extend only a few mm in the brain. Effectiveness of combination of the drugs and treatments has to be verified in future.  相似文献   

15.
Neurotrophins play important roles in the response of adult neurons to injury. The intracellular signaling mechanisms used by neurotrophins to regulate survival and axon growth in the mature CNS in vivo are not well understood. The goal of this study was to define the role of the extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1/2 (Erk1/2) pathway in the survival and axon regeneration of adult rat retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), a prototypical central neuron population. We used recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) to selectively transduce RGCs with genes encoding constitutively active or wild-type mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 1 (MEK1), the upstream activator of Erk1/2. In combination with anterograde and retrograde tracing techniques, we monitored neuronal survival and axon regeneration in vivo. MEK1 gene delivery led to robust and selective transgene expression in multiple RGC compartments including cell bodies, dendrites, axons and targets in the brain. Furthermore, MEK1 activation induced in vivo phosphorylation of Erk1/2 in RGC bodies and axons. Quantitative analysis of cell survival demonstrated that Erk1/2 activation promoted robust RGC neuroprotection after optic nerve injury. In contrast, stimulation of the Erk1/2 pathway was not sufficient to induce RGC axon growth beyond the lesion site. We conclude that the Erk1/2 pathway plays a key role in the survival of axotomized mammalian RGCs in vivo, and that activation of other signaling components is required for axon regeneration in the growth inhibitory CNS environment.  相似文献   

16.
Adult axons in the mammalian central nervous system do not elicit spontaneous regeneration after injury, although many affected neurons have survived the neurotrauma. However, axonal regeneration does occur under certain conditions. These conditions include: (a) modification of regrowth environment, such as supply of peripheral nerve bridges and transplantation of Schwann cells or olfactory ensheathing glia to the injury site; (b) application of neurotrophic factors at the cell soma and axon tips; (c) blockade of growth-inhibitory molecules such as Nogo-A, myelin-associated glycoprotein, and oligodendrocyte-myelin glycoprotein; (d) prevention of chondroitin-sulfate-proteoglycans-related scar tissue formation at the injury site using chondroitinase ABC; and (e) elevation of intrinsic growth potential of injured neurons via increasing intra-cellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate level. A large body of evidence suggests that these conditions achieve enhanced neuronal survival and axonal regeneration through sometimes over-lapping and sometimes distinct signal transduction mechanisms, depending on the targeted neuronal populations and intervention circumstances. This article reviews the available information on signal transduction pathways underlying neurotrophic-factor-mediated neuronal survival and neurite outgrowth/axonal regeneration. Better understanding of signaling transduction is important in helping us develop practical therapeutic approaches for encouraging neuronal survival and axonal regeneration after traumatic injury in clinical context.  相似文献   

17.
Factors inside and outside neurons control the process of axonal growth and regeneration. Recently, it has become apparent that neurons are determined intrinsically for their ability to grow axons. In the mammalian CNS, the intrinsic machinery of neurons that triggers the growth of axons during early embryonic stages is shut down at a certain point in development; as a consequence, axon elongation and regeneration cannot occur in postnatal life. The proto-oncogene Bcl-2 has been recognized to act as a key regulator for the program of axon elongation inside neurons. However, expressing the gene Bcl-2 in CNS neurons is not sufficient to induce nerve regeneration in the adult CNS, eliminating the inhibitory mechanism in the mature CNS environment is still required. Recently, the formation of glia scar has been reported to be the major limiting factor in the CNS environment that blocks nerve regeneration. These new discoveries challenge the classical view of nerve regeneration in the mammalian CNS. It opens up a new dimension in the study of the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases.  相似文献   

18.
Injury to the rat sciatic nerve leads to the induction of nerve growth factor (NGF) receptors on the denervated Schwann cells and their disappearance on the regenerating axons of the axotomized, normally NGF-sensitive sensory and sympathetic neurons. This disappearance in the axonal expression and retrograde transport of NGF receptors is associated with a similarly dramatic reduction in the axonal uptake and retrograde transport of NGF following axotomy and during regeneration. In view of the massive NGF synthesis occurring in the injured nerve, these results suggest that, while sensory and sympathetic neurons are the primary targets of NGF in the normal peripheral nervous system, the denervated Schwann cells may become its primary target in the aftermath of nerve injury.  相似文献   

19.
Unlike mammals, teleost fish are able to mount an efficient and robust regenerative response following optic nerve injury. Although it is clear that changes in gene expression accompany axonal regeneration, the extent of this genomic response is not known. To identify genes involved in successful nerve regeneration, we analyzed gene expression in zebrafish retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) regenerating their axons following optic nerve injury. Microarray analysis of RNA isolated by laser capture microdissection from uninjured and 3-day post-optic nerve injured RGCs identified 347 up-regulated and 29 down-regulated genes. Quantitative RT-PCR and in situ hybridization were used to verify the change in expression of 19 genes in this set. Gene ontological analysis of the data set suggests regenerating neurons up-regulate genes associated with RGC development. However, not all regeneration-associated genes are expressed in differentiating RGCs indicating the regeneration is not simply a recapitulation of development. Knockdown of six highly induced regeneration-associated genes identified two, KLF6a and KLF7a, that together were necessary for robust RGC axon re-growth. These results implicate KLF6a and KLF7a as important mediators of optic nerve regeneration and suggest that not all induced genes are essential to mount a regenerative response.  相似文献   

20.
Nogo-A, an axonal growth inhibitory protein known to be mostly present in CNS myelin, was upregulated in retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) after optic nerve injury in adult mice. Nogo-A increased concomitantly with the endoplasmic reticulum stress (ER stress) marker C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP), but CHOP immunostaining and the apoptosis marker annexin V did not co-localize with Nogo-A in individual RGC cell bodies, suggesting that injury-induced Nogo-A upregulation is not involved in axotomy-induced cell death. Silencing Nogo-A with an adeno-associated virus serotype 2 containing a short hairpin RNA (AAV2.shRNA-Nogo-A) or Nogo-A gene ablation in knock-out (KO) animals had little effect on the lesion-induced cell stress or death. On the other hand, Nogo-A overexpression mediated by AAV2.Nogo-A exacerbated RGC cell death after injury. Strikingly, however, injury-induced sprouting of the cut axons and the expression of growth-associated molecules were markedly reduced by AAV2.shRNA-Nogo-A. The axonal growth in the optic nerve activated by the intraocular injection of the inflammatory molecule Pam3Cys tended to be lower in Nogo-A KO mice than in WT mice. Nogo-A overexpression in RGCs in vivo or in the neuronal cell line F11 in vitro promoted regeneration, demonstrating a positive, cell-autonomous role for neuronal Nogo-A in the modulation of axonal regeneration.  相似文献   

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