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Integrin-Driven Axon Regeneration in the Spinal Cord Activates a Distinctive CNS Regeneration Program

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    0580785 - ÚEM 2024 RIV US eng J - Journal Article
    Cheah, M. - Cheng, Y. - Petrová, V. - Cimpean, Anda - Jendelová, Pavla - Swarup, V. - Woolf, C.J. - Geschwind, D.H. - Fawcett, James
    Integrin-Driven Axon Regeneration in the Spinal Cord Activates a Distinctive CNS Regeneration Program.
    Journal of Neuroscience. Roč. 43, č. 26 (2023), s. 4775-4794. ISSN 0270-6474. E-ISSN 1529-2401
    R&D Projects: GA MŠMT(CZ) EF15_003/0000419
    Institutional support: RVO:68378041
    Keywords : autophagy * axon regeneration * integrin * sensory * signaling * spinal cord
    OECD category: Neurosciences (including psychophysiology
    Impact factor: 5.3, year: 2022
    Method of publishing: Open access
    https://www.jneurosci.org/content/43/26/4775

    The peripheral branch of sensory dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons regenerates readily after injury unlike their central branch in the spinal cord. However, extensive regeneration and reconnection of sensory axons in the spinal cord can be driven by the expression of a9 integrin and its activator kindlin-1 (a9k1), which enable axons to interact with tenascin-C. To elucidate the mechanisms and downstream pathways affected by activated integrin expression and central regeneration, we conducted transcriptomic analyses of adult male rat DRG sensory neurons transduced with a9k1, and controls, with and without axotomy of the central branch. Expression of a9k1 without the central axotomy led to upregulation of a known PNS regeneration program, including many genes associated with peripheral nerve regeneration. Coupling a9k1 treatment with dorsal root axotomy led to extensive central axonal regeneration. In addition to the program upregulated by a9k1 expression, regeneration in the spinal cord led to expression of a distinctive CNS regeneration program, including genes associated with ubiquitination, autophagy, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), trafficking, and signaling. Pharmacological inhibition of these processes blocked the regeneration of axons from DRGs and human iPSC-derived sensory neurons, validating their causal contributions to sensory regeneration. This CNS regeneration-associated program showed little correlation with either embryonic development or PNS regeneration programs. Potential transcriptional drivers of this CNS program coupled to regeneration include Mef2a, Runx3, E2f4, and Yy1. Signaling from integrins primes sensory neurons for regeneration, but their axon growth in the CNS is associated with an additional distinctive program that differs from that involved in PNS regeneration.
    Permanent Link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0350404

     
     
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