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The age factor in optic nerve regeneration: Intrinsic and extrinsic barriers hinder successful recovery in the short‐living killifish
Authors:Sophie Vanhunsel,Steven Bergmans,An Beckers,Isabelle Etienne,Tine Van   Bergen,Lies De Groef,Lieve Moons
Affiliation:1. Neural Circuit Development and Regeneration Research Group, Animal Physiology and Neurobiology Section, Department of Biology, KU Leuven, Leuven Belgium ; 2. Oxurion NV, Heverlee Belgium ; 3. Leuven Brain Institute, Leuven Belgium
Abstract:As the mammalian central nervous system matures, its regenerative ability decreases, leading to incomplete or non‐recovery from the neurodegenerative diseases and central nervous system insults that we are increasingly facing in our aging world population. Current neuroregenerative research is largely directed toward identifying the molecular and cellular players that underlie central nervous system repair, yet it repeatedly ignores the aging context in which many of these diseases appear. Using an optic nerve crush model in a novel biogerontology model, that is, the short‐living African turquoise killifish, the impact of aging on injury‐induced optic nerve repair was investigated. This work reveals an age‐related decline in axonal regeneration in female killifish, with different phases of the repair process being affected depending on the age. Interestingly, as in mammals, both a reduced intrinsic growth potential and a non‐supportive cellular environment seem to lie at the basis of this impairment. Overall, we introduce the killifish visual system and its age‐dependent regenerative ability as a model to identify new targets for neurorepair in non‐regenerating individuals, thereby also considering the effects of aging on neurorepair.
Keywords:African turquoise killifish   aging   axonal regeneration   central nervous system   optic nerve crush   short lifespan
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