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1.
Hu Y  Park KK  Yang L  Wei X  Yang Q  Cho KS  Thielen P  Lee AH  Cartoni R  Glimcher LH  Chen DF  He Z 《Neuron》2012,73(3):445-452
Loss of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) accounts for visual function deficits after optic nerve injury, but how axonal insults lead to neuronal death remains elusive. By using an optic nerve crush model that results in the death of the majority of RGCs, we demonstrate that axotomy induces differential activation of distinct pathways of the unfolded protein response in axotomized RGCs. Optic nerve injury provokes a sustained CCAAT/enhancer binding homologous protein (CHOP) upregulation, and deletion of CHOP promotes RGC survival. In contrast, IRE/XBP-1 is only transiently activated, and forced XBP-1 activation dramatically protects RGCs from axon injury-induced death. Importantly, such differential activations of CHOP and XBP-1 and their distinct effects on neuronal cell death are also observed in RGCs with other types of axonal insults, such as vincristine treatment and intraocular pressure elevation, suggesting a new protective strategy for neurodegeneration associated with axonal damage.  相似文献   

2.
Molecular insights into the selective vulnerability of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in optic neuropathies and after ocular trauma can lead to the development of novel therapeutic strategies aimed at preserving RGCs. However, little is known about what molecular contexts determine RGC susceptibility. In this study, we show the molecular mechanisms underlying the regional differential vulnerability of RGCs after optic nerve injury. We identified RGCs in the mouse peripheral ventrotemporal (VT) retina as the earliest population of RGCs susceptible to optic nerve injury. Mechanistically, the serotonin transporter (SERT) is upregulated on VT axons after injury. Utilizing SERT-deficient mice, loss of SERT attenuated VT RGC death and led to robust retinal axon regeneration. Integrin β3, a factor mediating SERT-induced functions in other systems, is also upregulated in RGCs and axons after injury, and loss of integrin β3 led to VT RGC protection and axon regeneration. Finally, RNA sequencing analyses revealed that loss of SERT significantly altered molecular signatures in the VT retina after optic nerve injury, including expression of the transmembrane protein, Gpnmb. GPNMB is rapidly downregulated in wild-type, but not SERT- or integrin β3-deficient VT RGCs after injury, and maintaining expression of GPNMB in RGCs via AAV2 viruses even after injury promoted VT RGC survival and axon regeneration. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that the SERT-integrin β3-GPNMB molecular axis mediates selective RGC vulnerability and axon regeneration after optic nerve injury.  相似文献   

3.
Dedicator of cytokinesis 3 (Dock3), a new member of the guanine nucleotide exchange factors for the small GTPase Rac1, promotes axon regeneration following optic nerve injury. In the present study, we found that Dock3 directly binds to the intracellular C-terminus domain of NR2B, an N-methyl-𝒟-aspartate (NMDA) receptor subunit. In transgenic mice overexpressing Dock3 (Dock3 Tg), NR2B expression in the retina was significantly decreased and NMDA-induced retinal degeneration was ameliorated. In addition, overexpression of Dock3 protected retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) from oxidative stress. We previously reported that glutamate/aspartate transporter (GLAST) is a major glutamate transporter in the retina, and RGC degeneration due to glutamate neurotoxicity and oxidative stress is observed in GLAST-deficient (KO) mice. In GLAST KO mice, the NR2B phosphorylation rate in the retina was significantly higher compared with Dock3 Tg:GLAST KO mice. Consistently, glaucomatous retinal degeneration was significantly improved in GLAST KO:Dock3 Tg mice compared with GLAST KO mice. These results suggest that Dock3 overexpression prevents glaucomatous retinal degeneration by suppressing both NR2B-mediated glutamate neurotoxicity and oxidative stress, and identifies Dock3 signaling as a potential therapeutic target for both neuroprotection and axonal regeneration.  相似文献   

4.
Goldfish retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) can regrow their axons after optic nerve injury. However, the reason why goldfish RGCs can regenerate after nerve injury is largely unknown at the molecular level. To investigate regenerative properties of goldfish RGCs, we divided the RGC regeneration process into two components: (1) RGC survival, and (2) axonal elongation processes. To characterize the RGC survival signaling pathway after optic nerve injury, we investigated cell survival/death signals such as Bcl-2 family members in the goldfish retina. Amounts of phospho-Akt (p-Akt) and phospho-Bad (p-Bad) in the goldfish retina rapidly increased four- to five-fold at the protein level by 3-5 days after nerve injury. Subsequently, Bcl-2 levels increased 1.7-fold, accompanied by a slight reduction in caspase-3 activity 10-20 days after injury. Furthermore, level of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), which activates the phosphatidyl inositol-3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt system, increased 2-3 days earlier than that of p-Akt in the goldfish retina. The cellular localization of these molecular changes was limited to RGCs. IGF-I treatment significantly induced phosphorylation of Akt, and strikingly induced neurite outgrowth in the goldfish retina in vitro. On the contrary, addition of the PI3K inhibitor wortmannin, and IGF-I antibody inhibited Akt phosphorylation and neurite outgrowth in an explant culture. Thus, we demonstrated, for the first time, the signal cascade for early upregulation of IGF-I, leading to RGC survival and axonal regeneration in adult goldfish retinas through PI3K/Akt system after optic nerve injury. The present data strongly indicate that IGF-I is one of the most important molecules for controlling regeneration of RGCs after optic nerve injury.  相似文献   

5.
6.

Background

We have used optic nerve injury as a model to study early signaling events in neuronal tissue following axonal injury. Optic nerve injury results in the selective death of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). The time course of cell death takes place over a period of days with the earliest detection of RGC death at about 48 hr post injury. We hypothesized that in the period immediately following axonal injury, there are changes in the soma that signal surrounding glia and neurons and that start programmed cell death. In the current study, we investigated early changes in cellular signaling and gene expression that occur within the first 6 hrs post optic nerve injury.

Results

We found evidence of cell to cell signaling within 30 min of axonal injury. We detected differences in phosphoproteins and gene expression within the 6 hrs time period. Activation of TNFα and glutamate receptors, two pathways that can initiate cell death, begins in RGCs within 6 hrs following axonal injury. Differential gene expression at 6 hrs post injury included genes involved in cytokine, neurotrophic factor signaling (Socs3) and apoptosis (Bax).

Conclusion

We interpret our studies to indicate that both neurons and glia in the retina have been signaled within 30 min after optic nerve injury. The signals are probably initiated by the RGC soma. In addition, signals activating cellular death pathways occur within 6 hrs of injury, which likely lead to RGC degeneration.  相似文献   

7.
Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) die by apoptosis after optic nerve injury. A number of reports have separately shown changes in pro-apoptotic proteins such as the Bcl-2 family members following optic nerve injury. However, induction time of these apoptotic signals has not been identified due to different treatments of the optic nerve, and insufficient time intervals for measurements. Therefore, the stream of cell death signals is not well understood. In the present study, we systematically reinvestigated a detailed time course of these cell death/survival signals in the rat retina after optic nerve crush, to determine the signal cascade leading to RGC apoptosis. The most conspicuous changes detected in the retina were the rapid inactivation of phospho-Akt and phospho-Bad proteins 2-3 days after optic nerve damage, and the subsequent gradual activation of Bax protein and caspase-3 activity accompanied by cell loss of RGCs 6 days after nerve injury. Cellular localization of these molecular changes was limited to RGCs. Furthermore, amount of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I), an activator of the phosphatidyl inositol-3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt system, was initially decreased from RGCs 1-2 days just prior to the inactivation of phospho-Akt by optic nerve crush. Conversely, supplementation with IGF-I into the rat retina induced upregulation of phospho-Akt expression and cell survival of RGCs both in vitro and in vivo. Thus, injury to the optic nerve might induce early changes in cellular homeostasis with a plausible loss of trophic support for injured RGCs. Actually, IGF-I drastically enhanced neurite outgrowth from adult rat RGCs via a wortmannin-dependent mechanism in a retinal explant culture. Our data strongly indicate that IGF-I is a key molecule that induces RGC apoptosis or RGC survival and regeneration in the retina during the early stage of optic nerve injury.  相似文献   

8.
In recent years autophagy modulation has been shown to reduce or increase neuronal cell death in several models of neurodegeneration. How autophagy exerts these dual effects is currently unknown. Here we review recent evidence from our laboratory demonstrating that autophagy can protect the cell soma after axonal traumatic injury. Damage in the optic nerve induces retinal ganglion cell (RGC) death in glaucoma and other retinal diseases and is often modeled by axotomy of the optic nerve in laboratory animals. Using this well-known model of RGC degeneration we show that autophagy is strongly upregulated following the insult and before cell death. Enhancement of autophagy by pharmacological treatment with rapamycin decreases the number of degenerating neurons. Conversely, axotomy in Atg4B (-/-) mice increases the number of dying cells in the retinal ganglion cell layer. Similar findings were observed in Atg5 (flox/flox) mice following specific downregulation of the autophagy regulator ATG5 in RGCs, by intravitreal injection of a cre-expressing vector. Taken together, these findings point to a cytoprotective role of autophagy following axonal damage in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) are neurons that relay visual signals from the retina to the brain. The RGC cell bodies reside in the retina and their fibers form the optic nerve. Full transection (axotomy) of the optic nerve is an extra-retinal injury model of RGC degeneration. Optic nerve transection permits time-kinetic studies of neurodegenerative mechanisms in neurons and resident glia of the retina, the early events of which are reported here. One day after injury, and before atrophy of RGC cell bodies was apparent, glia had increased levels of phospho-Akt, phospho-S6, and phospho-ERK1/2; however, these signals were not detected in injured RGCs. Three days after injury there were increased levels of phospho-Rb and cyclin A proteins detected in RGCs, whereas these signals were not detected in glia. DNA hyperploidy was also detected in RGCs, indicative of cell cycle re-entry by these post-mitotic neurons. These events culminated in RGC death, which is delayed by pharmacological inhibition of the MAPK/ERK pathway. Our data show that a remote injury to RGC axons rapidly conveys a signal that activates retinal glia, followed by RGC cell cycle re-entry, DNA hyperploidy, and neuronal death that is delayed by preventing glial MAPK/ERK activation. These results demonstrate that complex and variable neuro-glia interactions regulate healthy and injured states in the adult mammalian retina.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) are central nervous system (CNS) neurons that transmit visual information from the retina to the brain. Apoptotic RGC degeneration causes visual impairment that can be modeled by optic nerve crush. Neuronal apoptosis is also a salient feature of CNS trauma, ischemia (stroke), and diseases of the CNS such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Optic nerve crush induces the apoptotic cell death of ~ 70% of RGCs within the first 14 days after injury. This model is particularly attractive for studying adult neuron apoptosis because the time-course of RGC death is well established and axon regeneration within the myelinated optic nerve can be concurrently evaluated. Here, we performed a large scale iTRAQ proteomic study to identify and quantify proteins of the rat retina at 1, 3, 4, 7, 14, and 21 days after optic nerve crush. In total, 337 proteins were identified, and 110 were differentially regulated after injury. Of these, 58 proteins were upregulated (>1.3 ×), 46 were downregulated (<0.7 ×), and 6 showed both positive and negative regulation over 21 days, relative to normal retinas. Among the differentially expressed proteins, Thymosin-β4 showed an early upregulation at 3 days, the time-point that immediately precedes the induction of RGC apoptosis after injury. We examined the effect of exogenous Thymosin-β4 administration on RGC death after optic nerve injury. Intraocular injections of Thymosin-β4 significantly increased RGC survival by ~ 3-fold compared to controls and enhanced axon regeneration after crush, demonstrating therapeutic potential for CNS insults. Overall, our study identified numerous proteins that are differentially regulated at key time-points after optic nerve crush, and how the temporal profiles of their expression parallel RGC death. This data will aid in the future development of novel therapeutics to promote neuronal survival and regeneration in the adult CNS.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Nogo-A is a well-known myelin-enriched inhibitory protein for axonal growth and regeneration in the central nervous system (CNS). Besides oligodendrocytes, our previous data revealed that Nogo-A is also expressed in subpopulations of neurons including retinal ganglion cells, in which it can have a positive role in the neuronal growth response after injury, through an unclear mechanism. In the present study, we analyzed the opposite roles of glial versus neuronal Nogo-A in the injured visual system. To this aim, we created oligodendrocyte (Cnp-Cre+/−xRtn4/Nogo-Aflox/flox) and neuron-specific (Thy1-Cretg+xRtn4flox/flox) conditional Nogo-A knock-out (KO) mouse lines. Following complete intraorbital optic nerve crush, both spontaneous and inflammation-mediated axonal outgrowth was increased in the optic nerves of the glia-specific Nogo-A KO mice. In contrast, neuron-specific deletion of Nogo-A in a KO mouse line or after acute gene recombination in retinal ganglion cells mediated by adeno-associated virus serotype 2.Cre virus injection in Rtn4flox/flox animals decreased axon sprouting in the injured optic nerve. These results therefore show that selective ablation of Nogo-A in oligodendrocytes and myelin in the optic nerve is more effective at enhancing regrowth of injured axons than what has previously been observed in conventional, complete Nogo-A KO mice. Our data also suggest that neuronal Nogo-A in retinal ganglion cells could participate in enhancing axonal sprouting, possibly by cis-interaction with Nogo receptors at the cell membrane that may counteract trans-Nogo-A signaling. We propose that inactivating Nogo-A in glia while preserving neuronal Nogo-A expression may be a successful strategy to promote axonal regeneration in the CNS.In the adult mammalian central nervous system (CNS), axons have a very limited capacity to regenerate after traumatic injury. This lack of axonal regeneration is thought to be mainly due to the presence of growth-inhibiting molecules in the injured CNS environment1, 2 and due to the low intrinsic growth capacity of mature neurons.3Nogo-A is a well-studied inhibitory protein for axonal growth, plasticity and regeneration after CNS injury.4, 5 Nogo-A is predominantly expressed in oligodendrocytes in the adult CNS, where it is thought to stabilize the neuronal circuits in healthy conditions and to inhibit neurite growth and plasticity after lesion.2 Neutralizing Nogo-A by function-blocking antibodies or genetic knockout (KO) has been shown to improve axonal sprouting and regeneration in the injured spinal cord and brain.6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11In addition to oligodendrocytes and myelin, Nogo-A is expressed in growing and immature neurons, as well as in some adult neurons.12, 13 Neurons express Nogo-A receptors such as the Nogo-66 receptor 1 (NgR1)14 and the Nogo-A-Δ20-specific sphingosine 1-phosphate receptor 2 (S1PR2).15 They can co-express them along with Nogo-A,13 an observation that raises the possibility of cis-interactions between the ligand and its receptors within or at the cell surface of the same cell. This mechanism has previously been described for axonal guidance molecules such as Ephrins and Semaphorins, and could have a major role in the neuronal response to extracellular growth inhibitors during development.16, 17In the adult CNS, the expression of neuronal Nogo-A remains elevated mainly in plastic regions such as in the hippocampus, olfactory bulb or neocortex, and in the dorsal root ganglia.12 Nogo-A and NgR1 were shown to regulate synaptic plasticity, for example, long-term potentiation in the hippocampus and in the sensory-motor cortex,18, 19, 20, 21, 22 whereas the effects of neuronal Nogo-A after injury are not yet well understood. During development, neuronal Nogo-A influences neuronal migration,23, 24 survival,25, 26 cell spreading and neurite growth.27, 28 In injured adult retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), silencing neuronal Nogo-A resulted in a marked reduction of regenerative sprouting and decreased expression of growth-associated molecules.29 Furthermore, in the optic nerve, axonal regeneration was not improved in conventional Nogo-A KO animals, in which both glial and neuronal Nogo-A were deleted.29 The present study therefore aimed to investigate whether glial and neuronal Nogo-A differently influence axonal growth in vivo using cell type-specific Nogo-A KO mouse lines and adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated recombination of the Nogo-A gene in neurons. The results show that significantly more axons grew through the lesion site in the oligodendrocyte-specific Nogo-A KO mice. In contrast, neuron-specific ablation of Nogo-A in RGCs reduced the number of regenerating axons after optic nerve crush injury (ONC). In summary, we show that inactivating Nogo-A specifically in oligodendrocytes appears to be the most successful strategy to promote axonal regeneration in the adult optic nerve.  相似文献   

15.
16.
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   

17.
Zhu WL  Shi HS  Wang SJ  Wu P  Ding ZB  Lu L 《Journal of neurochemistry》2011,118(6):1075-1086
The reactive oxygen species (ROS) superoxide has been recognized as a critical signal triggering retinal ganglion cell (RGC) death after axonal injury. Although the downstream targets of superoxide are unknown, chemical reduction of oxidized sulfhydryls has been shown to be neuroprotective for injured RGCs. On the basis of this, we developed novel phosphine-borane complex compounds that are cell permeable and highly stable. Here, we report that our lead compound, bis (3-propionic acid methyl ester) phenylphosphine borane complex 1 (PB1) promotes RGC survival in rat models of optic nerve axotomy and in experimental glaucoma. PB1-mediated RGC neuroprotection did not correlate with inhibition of stress-activated protein kinase signaling, including apoptosis stimulating kinase 1 (ASK1), c-jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK) or p38. Instead, PB1 led to a striking increase in retinal BDNF levels and downstream activation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1/2 (ERK1/2) pathway. Pharmacological inhibition of ERK1/2 entirely blocked RGC neuroprotection induced by PB1. We conclude that PB1 protects damaged RGCs through activation of pro-survival signals. These data support a potential cross-talk between redox homeostasis and neurotrophin-related pathways leading to RGC survival after axonal injury.  相似文献   

18.
19.
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   

20.
Calretinin is a calcium-binding protein which participates in a variety of functions including calcium buffering and neuronal protection. It also serves as a developmental marker of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). In order to study the role of calretinin in the development and regeneration of RGCs, we have studied its pattern of expression in the retina at different developmental stages, as well as during optic nerve regeneration by means of immunohistochemistry. During development, calretinin is found for the first time in RGCs when they connect with the optic tectum. Optic nerves from adult zebrafish were crushed and after different survival times, calretinin expression in the retina, optic nerve tract and optic tectum was studied. From the day of crushing to 10 days later, calretinin expression was found to be downregulated within RGCs and their axons, as was also observed during the early developmental stages of RGCs, when they are not committed to a definite cell phenotype. Moreover, 13 days after lesion, when the regenerating axons arrived at the optic tectum, a recovery of calretinin immunoreactivity within the RGCs was observed. These results indicate that calretinin may play an important role during optic nerve regeneration, Thus, the down-regulation of Calretinin during the growth of the RGC axons towards the target during development as well as during their regeneration after injury, indicates that an increase the availability of cytosolic calcium is integral to axon outgrowth thus recapitulating the pattern observed during development.  相似文献   

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