首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
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   

4.
Semaphorin 3E/collapsin-5 inhibits growing retinal axons   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
During development, the formation of neural networks is reflected by the oriented extension of neurites. Using retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) as a model, we identified the yet uncharacterized chick semaphorin Sema3E/collapsin-5 as a repulsive cue for outgrowing axons. Sema3E/collapsin-5 was highly regulated during retinal histogenesis, with peak expression during the period of intraretinal axon growth. Polymerase chain reaction analysis demonstrated Sema3E/collapsin-5 mRNA in retina layers, from which RGC axons are excluded. Neither isolated RGCs nor purified retinal Müller glia cells synthesized Sema3E/collapsin-5. Sema3E/collapsin-5 receptor sites were visualized by alkaline phosphatase fusion proteins in the axon-rich optic fiber layer. Time-lapse video recording of chick in vitro cultures revealed a growth cone collapsing activity of recombinant Sema3E/collapsin-5. This effect was specific for RGCs, since dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons of the peripheral nervous system were not affected. Comparison with Sema3A/collapsin-1 displayed a reciprocal specificity, because Sema3A/collapsin-1 hampered exclusively DRG but not RGC growth cones. The collapsing effect was mediated by low cGMP levels, but not cAMP, as revealed by a set of agonists. In summary, the data suggest a possible role of chick Sema3E/collapsin-5 in restricting growth of retinal ganglion cell axons to the optic fiber layer.  相似文献   

5.

Aims

Activation of retinal microglial cells (RMCs) is known to contribute to retinal ganglion cell (RGC) death after optic nerve injury. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of intravenous injection of α-crystallin on RGC survival and RMC activation in a rat model of optic nerve crush.

Main methods

RGCs were retrogradely labeled with fluorogold. Rats were intravenously injected with normal saline or α-crystallin (0.05 g/kg, 0.5 g/kg, and 5 g/kg) at 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, and 12 days after the optic nerve crush. Activated RMCs were characterized using immunofluorescence labeling with CD11b, and TNF-α and iNOS expression was detected using immunoblot analyses. We analyzed the morphology and numbers of RGC and RMC 2 and 4 weeks after injury using fluorescence and confocal microscopy.

Key findings

The number of RGCs decreased after optic nerve injury, accompanied by significantly increased numbers of activated RMCs. Intravenous injection of α-crystallin decreased the number of RMCs, and enhanced the number of RGCs compared to saline injection. α-Crystallin administration inhibited TNF-α and iNOS protein expression induced by optic nerve injury.

Significance

Our results suggest that α-crystallin promotes RGC survival and inhibits RMC activation. Intravenous injection of α-crystallin could be a possible strategy for the treatment of optic nerve injury.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
8.

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   

9.
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   

10.
Unlike in mammals, fish retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) have a capacity to repair their axons even after optic nerve transection. In our previous study, we isolated a tissue type transglutaminase (TG) from axotomized goldfish retina. The levels of retinal TG (TG(R)) mRNA increased in RGCs 1-6weeks after nerve injury to promote optic nerve regeneration both in vitro and in vivo. In the present study, we screened other types of TG using specific FITC-labeled substrate peptides to elucidate the implications for optic nerve regeneration. This screening showed that the activity of only cellular coagulation factor XIII (cFXIII) was increased in goldfish optic nerves just after nerve injury. We therefore cloned a full-length cDNA clone of FXIII A subunit (FXIII-A) and studied temporal changes of FXIII-A expression in goldfish optic nerve and retina during regeneration. FXIII-A mRNA was initially detected at the crush site of the optic nerve 1h after injury; it was further observed in the optic nerve and achieved sustained long-term expression (1-40days after nerve injury). The cells producing FXIII-A were astrocytes/microglial cells in the optic nerve. By contrast, the expression of FXIII-A mRNA and protein was upregulated in RGCs for a shorter time (3-10days after nerve injury). Overexpression of FXIII-A in RGCs achieved by lipofection induced significant neurite outgrowth from unprimed retina, but not from primed retina with pretreatment of nerve injury. Addition of extracts of optic nerves with injury induced significant neurite outgrowth from primed retina, but not from unprimed retina without pretreatment of nerve injury. The transient increase of cFXIII in RGCs promotes neurite sprouting from injured RGCs, whereas the sustained increase of cFXIII in optic nerves facilitates neurite elongation from regrowing axons.  相似文献   

11.
Growth/differentiation factor-15 (GDF-15) is a distant member of the transforming growth factor-β superfamily and is ubiquitously expressed in the central nervous system. It is prominently upregulated in cerebral cortical and ischemic lesion paradigms. GDF-15 robustly promotes the survival of lesioned nigrostriatal dopaminergic neurons in vivo; GDF-15-deficient mice exhibit progressive postnatal motor and sensory neuron losses implying essential functions of GDF-15 in neuronal survival. We show that GDF-15 mRNA and protein are, respectively, six-fold and three-fold upregulated in the murine retina at 1 day after optic nerve crush, slightly elevated mRNA levels being maintained until day 28. However, the magnitude and time course of retinal ganglion cell (RGC) death are indistinguishable in knockout and control mice. Selected mRNAs implicated in the regulation of the death vs. survival of RGCs, including ATF3, Bad, Bcl-2 and caspase-8, were similarly regulated in both knockout and control retinae. Immunohistochemistry for tyrosine hydroxylase and choline acetyltransferase revealed no differences in staining patterns in the two genotypes. mRNA and protein levels of galanin, a putative neuroprotective factor and positive regulator of neuron survival and axonal regeneration, were prominently upregulated after crush in knockout retinae at day 3, as compared with control retinae, suggesting that GDF-15 acts as a physiological regulator of galanin. GDF-15 is therefore prominently upregulated in the retina after optic nerve crush but does not directly interfere with the magnitude and temporal progression of RGC death.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Semaphorins not only function in axon guidance during development but also contribute to various other biological processes. We have now examined the expression of semaphorin 3A (Sema3A) and its receptor components neuropilin 1 (Npn1) and plexin A (PlxA) during development of the mouse retina. Immunohistofluorescence analysis revealed that the expression patterns of Sema3A and Npn1 were similar during embryonic and postnatal development. The expression pattern of PlxA was also similar to those of Sema3A and Npn1 during embryonic and early postnatal (before eye opening) developments. However, the pattern of PlxA expression changed markedly after eye opening, with the expression disappearing from the optic nerve and increasing in intensity in the retinal pigment epithelium. Immunoprecipitation analysis showed that Sema3A interacted with PlxA in the retinal pigment epithelial cell line ARPE19 but not in the retinal ganglion cell line RGC5, whereas the opposite pattern of association was apparent for Sema3A and Npn1. Given that atmospheric oxygen is thought to play a role in the differentiation and maintenance of various ocular cell types, our results suggest that Sema3A-PlxA signalling activated by an effect of ambient oxygen on PlxA expression may contribute to differentiation of the retinal pigment epithelium. Copyright ? 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

14.
Differential regulation of Brn3b is essential for the Retinal Ganglion Cell (RGC) development in the two phases of retinal histogenesis. This biphasic Brn3b regulation is required first, during early retinal histogenesis for RGC fate specification and secondly, during late histogenesis, where Brn3b is needed for RGC axon guidance and survival. Here, we have looked into how the regulation of Brn3b at these two stages happens. We identified two miRNAs, miR‐23a and miR‐374, as regulators of Brn3b expression, during the early stage of RGC development. Temporal expression pattern of miR‐23a during E10–19, PN1–7, and adult retina revealed an inverse relation with Brn3b expression. Though miR‐374 did not show such a pattern, its co‐expression with miR‐23a evidently inhibited Brn3b. We further substantiated these findings by ex vivo overexpression of these miRNAs in E14 mice retina and found that miR‐23a and miR‐374 together brings about a change in Brn3b expression pattern in ganglion cell layer (GCL) of the developing retina. From our results, it appears that the combined expression of these miRNAs could be regulating the timing of the wave of Brn3b expression required for early ganglion cell fate specification and later for its survival and maturation into RGCs. Taken together, here we provide convincing evidences for the existence of a co‐ordinated mechanism by miRNAs to down regulate Brn3b that will ultimately regulate the development of RGCs from their precursors. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 74: 1155–1171, 2014  相似文献   

15.
To investigate the short-and long-term effects of axotomy on the survival of central nervous system (CNS) neurons in adult rats, retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) were labelled retrogradely with the persistent market diI and their axons interrupted in the optic nerve (ON) by intracranial crush 8 or 10 mm from the eye or in intraorbital cut 0.5 or 3 mm from the eye. Labelled RGCs were counted in flat-mounted retinas at intervals from 2 weeks to 20 months after axotomy. Two major patterns of RGC loss were observed: (1) an inital abrupt loss that was confined to the first 2 weeks after injury and was more severe when the ON was cut close to the eye; (2) a slower, persistent decline in RGC densities with one-half survival times that ranged from approximately 1 month after intraorbital ON cut to 6 months after intracranial ON crush. A small population of RGCs (approximately 5%) survived for as long as 20 months after intraorbital axotomy. The initial loss of axotomized RGCs presumably results from time-limited perturbations related to the position of the ON injury. A. persistent lack of terminal connectivity between RGCs and their targets in the brain may contribute to the subsequent, more protracted RGC loss, but the differences between intraorbital cut and intracranial crush suggest that additional mechanisms are involved. It is unclear whether the various injury-related processes set in motion in both the ON and the retina exert random effects on all RGCs or act preferentially on subpopulations of these neurons. © 1993 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

16.
Optic nerve transection results in retinal ganglion cell (RGC) death in adult mammals, after the alteration of gene expression of RGCs. To elucidate the molecular mechanism by which axotomy induces RGC death, we isolated the molecules up-regulated after optic nerve transection. One of these, axotomy-related [corrected] gene (ARG)357, an 898-amino-acid [corrected] protein containing a complete serine-threonine kinase domain, was isolated from a subtraction library of the rat retina. The sequence showed that this gene was a rat homolog of human c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) inhibitory kinase and so belonged to the germinal center kinase-VIII subfamily of Sterile20s protein kinase. We designated ARG357 as rat JNK inhibitory kinase (JIK). Rat JIK was expressed ubiquitously in various tissues and was highly expressed in the retina, with selective expression in RGCs. After axotomy, BimEL and Hrk, which are BH3-only proteins, and rat JIK were up-regulated in RGCs. Overexpression of rat JIK in neuronal cells up-regulated the expression of BimEL, but not that of Hrk. These results indicate that JIK may contribute to axotomy-induced RGC death by up-regulating the expression of BH3-only protein.  相似文献   

17.
Glaucoma is characterized by the loss of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and optic nerve fibres. Previous studies noted fewer RGCs after immunization with ocular antigens at 28 days. It is known that changes in extracellular matrix (ECM) components conduct retina and optic nerve degeneration. Here, we focused on the remodelling of tenascin‐C and phosphacan/receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase β/ζ in an autoimmune glaucoma model. Rats were immunized with optic nerve homogenate (ONA) or S100B protein (S100). Controls received sodium chloride (Co). After 14 days, no changes in RGC number were noted in all groups. An increase in GFAP mRNA expression was observed in the S100 group, whereas no alterations were noted via immunohistochemistry in both groups. Extracellular matrix remodelling was analyzed after 3, 7, 14 and 28 days. Tenascin‐C and 473HD immunoreactivity in retinae and optic nerves was unaltered in both immunized groups at 3 days. At 7 days, tenascin‐C staining increased in both tissues in the ONA group. Also, in the optic nerves of the S100 group, an intense tenascin‐C staining could be shown. In the retina, an increased tenascin‐C expression was also observed in ONA animals via Western blot. 473HD immunoreactivity was elevated in the ONA group in both tissues and in the S100 optic nerves at 7 days. At 14 days, tenascin‐C and 473HD immunoreactivity was up‐regulated in the ONA retinae, whereas phosphacan expression was up‐regulated in both groups. We conclude that remodelling of tenascin‐C and phosphacan occurred shortly after immunization, already before RGC loss. We assume that both ECM molecules represent early indicators of neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

18.
Retinal ganglion cell (RGC) loss after optic nerve damage is a hallmark of certain human ophthalmic diseases including ischemic optic neuropathy (ION) and glaucoma. In a rat model of optic nerve transection, in which 80% of RGCs are eliminated within 14 days, caspase-2 was found to be expressed and cleaved (activated) predominantly in RGC. Inhibition of caspase-2 expression by a chemically modified synthetic short interfering ribonucleic acid (siRNA) delivered by intravitreal administration significantly enhanced RGC survival over a period of at least 30 days. This exogenously delivered siRNA could be found in RGC and other types of retinal cells, persisted inside the retina for at least 1 month and mediated sequence-specific RNA interference without inducing an interferon response. Our results indicate that RGC apoptosis induced by optic nerve injury involves activation of caspase-2, and that synthetic siRNAs designed to inhibit expression of caspase-2 represent potential neuroprotective agents for intervention in human diseases involving RGC loss.  相似文献   

19.
To determine mechanisms of structural plasticity in adult CNS neurons, we investigated the expression of immediate early genes (IEGs) in the rat retina. Gene products of different IEG families (JUN and FOS proteins) and cAMP-responsive element binding protein (CREBP) were examined by immunohistochemistry under three different paradigms. Normal rats which were not axotomized were compared with axotomized animals, where retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) were axotomized by intraorbital optic nerve cut and retrogradely labeled with fluorogold (FG). Under these circumstances, RGCs show only transient sprouting, followed by continuous retrograde RGC degeneration. In the third group, after the optic nerve lesion, adult rats additionally received a sciatic nerve graft to the transected optic nerve stump. This allows some RGCs to regenerate an axon into the grafted nerve. In both groups, the time course of RGC survival and JUN, CREB, and FOS protein expression was monitored. In normal animals, JUN-Immunoreactivity (JUN-Ir) was not detectable in the retinal ganglion cell layer. JUN-Ir was induced in about 70% of all FG-positive RGCs 5 days after axotomy. The expression of JUN-Ir started to decline 8 days after axotomy. Only a few JUN-Ir-positive RGCs were found after 2 weeks. In transplanted animals, however, the numbers of JUN-Ir-positive RGCs were significantly higher 2 and 3 weeks after transplantation compared to animals that exclusively received axotomy. Furthermore, in grafted rats about 70% of the regenerating RGCs expressed JUN-Ir 2 weeks after grafting as compared to only 38% JUN-positive RGCs among the surviving but not regenerating RGCs. In normal animals CREBP-Ir was constitutively expressed in nearly all cells of the retinal ganglion cell layer. The decline in number of CREBP-Ir-positive cells paralleled the axotmy-induced RGC death. FOS-Ir-positive cells were not found in the ganglion cell layer at any time. These results demonstrate a selective and transient JUN expression of RGCs after axotomy which is sustained during axonal regeneration. This suggests that sciatic nerve grafts are able to regulate the expression of JUN proteins in axotomized RGCs of adult rats. 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号