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1.
Local protein synthesis in nerve growth cones has been suggested, but how it is controlled remains largely unknown. We found eukaryotic elongation factor-2 (eEF2), a key component of mRNA translation, in growth cones by immunocytochemistry. While phosphorylated eEF2 was weakly distributed in advancing growth cones, eEF2 phosphorylation was increased by high potassium-evoked calcium influx. In the growth cone, calcium elevation increased eEF2 kinase (EF2K), a calcim-calmodulin-dependent enzyme. Calcium also decreased the level of phosphorylated p70-S6 kinase (S6K), a kinase known to inhibit EF2K. Moreover, calcium elevation decreased total eEF2 in growth cones. Since phosphorylated eEF2 inhibits mRNA translation, calcium elevation appears to inhibit mRNA translation in growth cones by a synergistic mechanism involving regulation of EF2K, S6K, and eEF2 itself. Time-lapse imaging showed that calcium elevation induced growth arrest of neurites. The inhibitory effect on mRNA translation may thus be involved in the regulation of neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

2.
Collapsin response mediator protein 1 (CRMP1) and CRMP2 have been known as mediators of extracellular guidance cues such as semaphorin 3A and contribute to cytoskeletal reorganization in the axonal pathfinding process. To date, how CRMP1 and CRMP2 focally regulate axonal pathfinding in the growth cone has not been elucidated. To delineate the local functions of these CRMPs, we carried out microscale‐chromophore‐assisted light inactivation (micro‐CALI), which enables investigation of localized molecular functions with highly spatial and temporal resolutions. Inactivation of either CRMP1 or CRMP2 in the neurite shaft led to arrested neurite outgrowth. Micro‐CALI of CRMP2 in the central domain of the growth cones consistently arrested neurite outgrowth, whereas micro‐CALI of CRMP1 in the same region caused significant lamellipodial retraction, followed by retardation of neurite outgrowth. Focal inactivation of CRMP1 in its half region of the growth cone resulted in the growth cone turning away from the irradiated site. Conversely, focal inactivation of CRMP2 resulted in the growth cone turning toward the irradiated site. These findings suggest different functions for CRMP1 and CRMP2 in growth cone behavior and neurite outgrowth. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2012  相似文献   

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4.
In vivo, kinase C phosphorylation of the growth-associated protein GAP-43 is spatially and temproally associated with the proximity of growing axons to their targets. Here we have used dissociated dorsal root ganglia (DRG)s and an antibody specific for the phosphorylated form of GAP-43 to demonstrate that neurite regeneration in culture also begins in the absence of detectable levels of phosphorylated GAP-43. Since the β isoform of kinase C was found to be enriched in growth cones before stably phosphorylated GAP-43 was detected, it may normally be inactive during initial neurite outgrowth; however, premature phosphorylation of GAP-43 could be stimulated in newly dissociated DRGs by plating them on cultures in which phosphorylation had already been initiated; media conditioned by such cultures caused no response suggesting an effect of either cell-cell or cell-substrate contact. Increased GAP-43 phosphorylation correlated with a reduced extent of neurite outgrowth but not with the rate at which individual growth cones translocated so that motile growth cones contained very low levels of phosphorylated GAP-43, whereas stationary growth cones showed much more immunoreactivity. Downregulation of kinase C by phorbol ester prevented increased GAP-43 phosphorylation and led to growth cone collapse. Finally, phosphorylated GAP-43 was found to be differently distributed within growth cones. Increased immunoreactivity was frequently observed in the neck of the growth cone and was heterogeneously distributed in lamellae and filopodia. These results, which demonstrate the dynamic regulation of GAP-43 phosphorylation in individual growth cones, are discussed with reference to the association between changes in growth cone shape and the ability to translocate and change direction. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

5.
In larval lamprey, descending brain neurons, which regenerate their axons following spinal cord injury, were isolated and examined in cell culture to identify some of the factors that regulate neurite outgrowth. Focal application of 5 mM or 25 mM L-glutamate to single growth cones inhibited outgrowth of the treated neurite, but other neurites from the same neuron were not inhibited, an effect that has not been well studied for neurons in other systems. Glutamate-induced inhibition of neurite outgrowth was abolished by 10 mM kynurenic acid. Application of high potassium media to growth cones inhibited neurite outgrowth, an effect that was blocked by 2 mM cobalt or 100 microM cadmium, suggesting that calcium influx via voltage-gated channels contributes to glutamate-induced regulation of neurite outgrowth. Application of glutamate to growth cones in the presence of 2 microM omega-conotoxin MVIIC (CTX) still inhibited neurite outgrowth, while CTX blocked high potassium-induced inhibition of neurite outgrowth. Thus, CTX blocked virtually all of the calcium influx resulting from depolarization. To our knowledge, this is the first direct demonstration that calcium influx via ligand-gated ion channels can contribute to regulation of neurite outgrowth. Finally, focal application of glutamate to the cell bodies of descending brain neurons inhibited outgrowth of multiple neurites from the same neuron, and this is the first demonstration that multiple neurites can be regulated in this fashion. Signaling mechanisms involving intracellular calcium, similar to those shown here, may be important for regulating axonal regeneration following spinal cord injury in the lamprey.  相似文献   

6.
We investigated the effects of calcium removal and calcium ionophores on the behavior and ultrastructure of cultured chick dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons to identify possible mechanisms by which calcium might regulate neurite outgrowth. Both calcium removal and the addition of calcium ionophores A23187 or ionomycin blocked outgrowth in previously elongating neurites, although in the case of calcium ionophores, changes in growth cone shape and retraction of neurites were also observed. Treatment with calcium ionophores significantly increased growth cone calcium. The ability of the microtubule stabilizing agent taxol to block A23187-induced neurite retraction and the ability of the actin stabilizing agent phalloidin to reverse both A23187-induced growth cone collapse and neurite retraction suggested that calcium acted on the cytoskeleton. Whole mount electron micrographs revealed an apparent disruption of actin filaments in the periphery (but not filopodia) of growth cones that were exposed to calcium ionophores in medium with normal calcium concentrations. This effect was not seen in cells treated with calcium ionophores in calcium-free medium or cells treated with the monovalent cation ionophore monensin, indicating that these effects were calcium specific. Ultrastructure of Triton X-100 extracted whole mounts further indicated that both microtubules and microfilaments may be more stable or extraction resistant after treatments which lower intracellular calcium. Taken together, the data suggest that calcium may control neurite elongation at least in part by regulating actin filament stability, and support a model for neurite outgrowth involving a balance between assembly and disassembly of the cytoskeleton.  相似文献   

7.
The rat adrenal pheochromocytoma PC12 cell line is one of the traditional models for the study of neurite outgrowth and growth cone behavior. To clarify to what extent PC12 neurite terminals can be compared to neuronal growth cones, we have analyzed their morphology and protein distribution in fixed PC12 cells by immunocytochemistry. Our results show that that PC12 cells display a special kind of neurite terminal that includes a varicosity in close association with a growth cone. This hybrid terminal, or “varicone”, is characterized by the expression of specific markers not typically present in neuronal growth cones. For example, we show that calpain-2 is a specific marker of varicones and can be detected even before the neurite develops. Our data also shows that a fraction of PC12 neurites end in regular growth cones, which we have compared to hippocampal neurites as a control. We also report the extraordinary incidence of varicones in the literature referred to as “growth cones”. In summary, we provide evidence of two different kinds of neurite terminals in PC12 cells, including a PC12-specific terminal, which implies that care must be taken when using them as a model for neuronal growth cones or neurite outgrowth.  相似文献   

8.
Although myelin-associated neurite outgrowth inhibitors express their effects through RhoA/Rho-kinase, the downstream targets of Rho-kinase remain unknown. We examined the involvement of myosin II, which is one of the downstream targets of Rho-kinase, by using blebbistatin – a specific myosin II inhibitor – and small interfering RNA targeting two myosin II isoforms, namely, MIIA and MIIB. We found that neurite outgrowth inhibition by repulsive guidance molecule (RGMa) was mediated via myosin II, particularly MIIA, in cerebellar granule neurons. RGMa induced myosin light chain (MLC) phosphorylation by a Rho-kinase-dependent mechanism. After spinal cord injury in rats, phosphorylated MLC in axons around the lesion site was up-regulated, and this effect depends on Rho-kinase activity. Further, RGMa-induced F-actin reduction in growth cones and growth cone collapse were mediated by MIIA. We conclude that Rho-kinase-dependent activation of MIIA via MLC phosphorylation induces F-actin reduction and growth cone collapse and the subsequent neurite retraction/outgrowth inhibition triggered by RGMa.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The activity of filopodia and lamellipodia determines the advance, motility, adhesion, and sensory capacity of neuronal growth cones. The shape and dynamics of these highly motile structures originate from the continuous reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton in response to extracellular signals. The small GTPases, Rac1, Rho, and CDC42, regulate the organization of actin filament structures in nonneuronal cells; yet, their role in growth cone motility and neurite outgrowth is poorly understood. We investigated in vitro the function of Rac1 in neurite outgrowth and differentiation by introducing purified recombinant mutants of Rac1 into primary chick embryo motor neurons via trituration. Endogenous Rac1 was expressed in growth cone bodies as well as in the tips and shafts of filopodia, where it often colocalized with actin filament structures. The introduction of constitutively active Rac1 resulted in an increase in rhodamine–phalloidin staining, presumably from an accumulation of actin filaments in growth cones, while dominant negative Rac1 caused a decrease in rhodamine–phalloidin staining. Nevertheless, both Rac1 mutants retarded growth cone advance, and hence attenuated neurite outgrowth and inhibited differentiation of neurites into axons and dendrites on laminin and fibronectin. In contrast, on poly-D -lysine, neither Rac1 mutant affected growth cone advance, neurite outgrowth, or neurite differentiation despite inducing similar changes in the amount of rhodamine–phalloidin staining in growth cones. Our data demonstrate that Rac1 regulates actin filament organization in neuronal growth cones and is pivotal for β1 integrin–mediated growth cone advance, but not for growth on poly-D lysine. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 37: 524–540, 1998  相似文献   

11.
12.
Neurite extension and retraction are very important processes in the formation of neuronal networks. A strategy for fostering axonal regrowth/regeneration of injured adult neurons is attractive therapeutically for various diseases such as traumatic brain injury, stroke and Alzheimer's disease. The Rho family of small GTPases, including Rac and Cdc42 have been shown to be involved in promoting neurite outgrowth. On the other hand, activation of RhoA induces collapse of growth cone and retraction of neurites. Rho‐associated kinase (ROCK) an effector molecule of RhoA, is downstream of a number of axonal outgrowth and growth cone collapse inhibition mechanisms. In the present study, we sought to identify the role of ROCK in neurite outgrowth in PC12 cells. Y27632, a specific inhibitor of ROCK, induced a robust increase in neurite outgrowth in these cells within 24–48 h as visualized by phase contrast microscopy. Staining with FITC‐tubulin or phalloidin show extended neurites in PC12 cells treated with Y27632, comparable to that with 100 ng/mL of NGF. Assessment of other biochemical markers of neurite outgrowth such as GAP43, neurofilament and tyrosine hydroxylase phosphorylation further indicates that inhibition of ROCK in PC12 cells causes differentiation of these cells to a neuronal phenotype.  相似文献   

13.
Hallmarks of neuronal differentiation are neurite sprouting, extension, and branching. We previously showed that increased expression of CTP:phosphocholine cytidylyltransferase beta2 (CTbeta2), an isoform of a key phosphatidylcholine (PC) biosynthetic enzyme, accompanies neurite outgrowth (Carter, J. M., Waite, K. A., Campenot, R. B., Vance, J. E., and Vance, D. E. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 44988-44994). CTbeta2 mRNA is highly expressed in the brain. We show that CTbeta2 is abundant in axons of rat sympathetic neurons and retinal ganglion cells. We used RNA silencing to decrease CTbeta2 expression in PC12 cells differentiated by nerve growth factor. In CTbeta2-silenced cells, numbers of primary and secondary neurites were markedly reduced, suggesting that CTbeta2 facilitates neurite outgrowth and branching. However, the length of individual neurites was significantly increased, and the total amount of neuronal membrane was unchanged. Neurite branching of PC12 cells is known to be inhibited by activation of Akt and promoted by the Akt inhibitor LY294002. Our experiments showed that LY294002 increases neurite sprouting and branching in control PC12 cells but not in CTbeta2-deficient cells. CTbeta2 was not phosphorylated in vitro by Akt. However, inhibition of Cdk5 by roscovitine blocked CTbeta2 phosphorylation and reduced neurite outgrowth and branching. These results highlight the importance of CTbeta2 in neurons for promoting neurite outgrowth and branching and represent the first identification of a lipid biosynthetic enzyme that facilitates these functions.  相似文献   

14.
Growth cone fractions isolated from neonatal [postnatal day 3 (P3)] rat forebrain contain GABAergic growth cones as demonstrated by immunofluorescence staining with monospecific antibodies to gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). HPLC analysis shows that GABAergic growth cones release this endogenous GABA when stimulated with high K+. Endogenous GABA release is Ca2(+)-independent and, in this respect, similar to that seen previously with [3H]GABA. Isolated growth cone fractions also exhibit a K(+)-stimulated, Ca2(+)-independent release of endogenous taurine. None of the other amino acids shown to be present in isolated growth cone fractions were released, including glutamate, aspartate, and glycine. A population of dissociated cerebral cortical neurones prepared from P1 rat forebrain were GABA-immunoreactive after 1 day in culture. The cell body, neurites, and growth cones of these neurones were all stained with GABA antibodies. At this time in culture, neurones did not stain with either of two antibodies to synaptic vesicle antigens, i.e., p65 and synaptophysin. Growth cones isolated from P3 rat forebrain were also not immunoreactive with these antibodies. After about 8 days in culture, when neurones had established extensive networks of long, varicose axons and elaborately branched dendrites, many neurones and their neurites were immunoreactive for GABA antibodies. At this time in culture, p65 and synaptophysin antibodies did stain neuronal cell bodies and particularly their varicose axons. Dendrites were not stained with synaptic vesicle antibodies. These results suggest that GABAergic neurones synthesize GABA during neurite outgrowth and that GABA is present in, and can be released from, the growth cones of these neurones. The presence of GABA in GABAergic growth cones is not associated with synaptic vesicles, which explains the Ca2+ independency of both endogenous and [3H]GABA release from these growth cones.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Corticospinal axon outgrowth in vivo and the ability to sprout or regenerate after injury decline with age. This developmental decline in growth potential has been correlated with an increase in inhibitory myelin‐associated proteins in older spinal cord. However, previous results have shown that sprouting of corticospinal fibers after contralateral lesions begins to diminish prior to myelination, suggesting that a decrease in growth promoting and/or an increase in inhibitory molecules in spinal gray matter may also regulate corticospinal axon outgrowth. To address this possibility, we carried out in vitro experiments to measure neurite outgrowth from explants of 1‐day‐old hamster forelimb sensorimotor cortex that were plated onto membrane carpets or membrane stripe assays prepared from white or gray matter of 1‐to 22‐day‐old cervical spinal cord. On uniform carpets and in the stripe assays cortical neurites grew robustly on young but not older membranes from both white and gray matter. Mixtures of membranes from 1‐ and 15‐day spinal cord inhibited neurite outgrowth, suggesting that the presence of inhibitory molecules in the 15‐day cord overwhelmed permissive or growth promoting molecules in membranes from 1‐day cord. Video microscopic observations of growth cone behaviors on membrane stripe assays transferred to glass coverslips supported this view. Cortical growth cones repeatedly collapsed at borders between permissive substrates (laminin or young membrane stripes) and nonpermissive substrates (older membrane stripes). Growth cones either turned away from the older membranes or reduced their growth rates. These results suggest that molecules in both the gray and white matter of the developing spinal cord can inhibit cortical neurite outgrowth. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 39: 393–406, 1999  相似文献   

17.
K Sobue  K Kanda 《Neuron》1989,3(3):311-319
We have used biochemical and immunocytochemical techniques to investigate the possible involvement of membrane cytoskeletal elements such as alpha-actinin, calspectin (brain spectrin or fodrin), and actin in growth cone activities. During NGF-induced differentiation of PC12 cells, alpha-actinin increased in association with neurite outgrowth and was predominantly distributed throughout the entire growth cone and the distal portion of neurites. Filopodial movements were sensitive to Ca2+ flux. Two types of alpha-actinin, with Ca2(+)-sensitive and -insensitive actin binding abilities, were identified in the differentiated cells. Ca2(+)-sensitive alpha-actinin and actin filaments were concentrated in filopodia. The Ca2(+)-insensitive protein was distributed from the body of the growth cone to the distal portion of neurites, corresponding to the substratum-adhesive sites. The location of calspectin in growth cones was similar to that of the Ca2(+)-insensitive alpha-actinin. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that Ca2(+)-sensitive alpha-actinin and actin filaments are involved in Ca2(+)-dependent filopodial movement and Ca2(+)-insensitive alpha-actinin and calspectin are associated with adhesion of growth cones.  相似文献   

18.
Neurite extension and branching are affected by activity-dependent modulation of intracellular Ca2+, such that an optimal window of [Ca2+] is required for outgrowth. Our understanding of the molecular mechanisms regulating this optimal [Ca2+]i remains unclear. Taking advantage of the large growth cone size of cultured primary neurons from pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis combined with dsRNA knockdown, we show that neuronal calcium sensor-1 (NCS-1) regulates neurite extension and branching, and activity-dependent Ca2+ signals in growth cones. An NCS-1 C-terminal peptide enhances only neurite branching and moderately reduces the Ca2+ signal in growth cones compared with dsRNA knockdown. Our findings suggest that at least two separate structural domains in NCS-1 independently regulate Ca2+ influx and neurite outgrowth, with the C-terminus specifically affecting branching. We describe a model in which NCS-1 regulates cytosolic Ca2+ around the optimal window level to differentially control neurite extension and branching.  相似文献   

19.
Collapsin response mediator protein 2 (CRMP-2) enhances the advance of growth cones by regulating microtubule assembly and Numb-mediated endocytosis. We previously showed that Rho kinase phosphorylates CRMP-2 during growth cone collapse; however, the roles of phosphorylated CRMP-2 in growth cone collapse remain to be clarified. Here, we report that CRMP-2 phosphorylation by Rho kinase cancels the binding activity to the tubulin dimer, microtubules, or Numb. CRMP-2 binds to actin, but its binding is not affected by phosphorylation. Electron microscopy revealed that CRMP-2 localizes on microtubules, clathrin-coated pits, and actin filaments in dorsal root ganglion neuron growth cones, while phosphorylated CRMP-2 localizes only on actin filaments. The phosphomimic mutant of CRMP-2 has a weakened ability to enhance neurite elongation. Furthermore, ephrin-A5 induces phosphorylation of CRMP-2 via Rho kinase during growth cone collapse. Taken together, these results suggest that Rho kinase phosphorylates CRMP-2, and inactivates the ability of CRMP-2 to promote microtubule assembly and Numb-mediated endocytosis, during growth cone collapse.  相似文献   

20.
Nerve growth factor (NGF) produces both rapid and delayed cellular responses that are involved in neuronal differentiation. Neurite formation, a conspicuous delayed response, is accompanied by phosphorylation of β-tubulin in PC12 cells. The present work provides further characterization of the phospho form of β-tubulin in this neuronal model system with regard to isotype, cellular localization, and the circumstances that favor its formation. The results indicate that neuron-specific type III β-tubulin (βIII-tubulin) is selectively affected during neurite formation. This phosphorylation occurs relatively late in the NGF signal transduction cascade and increases progressively with increasing duration of NGF treatment concomitant with more extensive neurite growth. The subcellular distribution of βIII-tubulin is not markedly different from that of total tubulin, but the phosphorylated protein is uniquely associated with microtubules that are calcium and cold labile. Although NGF is capable of inducing phosphorylation of βIII-tubulin, it is not necessarily sufficient. Based on experiments that employ either nonpermissive substrate conditions or microtubule-depolymerizing drugs, this phosphorylation requires neurite outgrowth. Direct measurements of the phospho form in neurites versus cell bodies by means of a microculture system indicate that phosphorylated βIII-tubulin is enriched in neurites. The enrichment of phospho-βIII-tubulin in calcium- and cold-labile polymer within neurites and its near absence in nonneurite bearing, NGF-treated cells suggests a role for this posttranslationally modified protein in the regulation of dynamic microtubules involved in neurite formation. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

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