Literature DB >> 21490201

The unusual response of serotonergic neurons after CNS Injury: lack of axonal dieback and enhanced sprouting within the inhibitory environment of the glial scar.

Alicia L Hawthorne1, Hongmei Hu, Bornali Kundu, Michael P Steinmetz, Christi J Wylie, Evan S Deneris, Jerry Silver.   

Abstract

Serotonergic neurons possess an enhanced ability to regenerate or sprout after many types of injury. To understand the mechanisms that underlie their unusual properties, we used a combinatorial approach comparing the behavior of serotonergic and cortical axon tips over time in the same injury environment in vivo and to growth-promoting or growth-inhibitory substrates in vitro. After a thermocoagulatory lesion in the rat frontoparietal cortex, callosal axons become dystrophic and die back. Serotonergic axons, however, persist within the lesion edge. At the third week post-injury, 5-HT+ axons sprout robustly. The lesion environment contains both growth-inhibitory chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) and growth-promoting laminin. Transgenic mouse serotonergic neurons specifically labeled by enhanced yellow fluorescent protein under control of the Pet-1 promoter/enhancer or cortical neurons were cultured on low amounts of laminin with or without relatively high concentrations of the CSPG aggrecan. Serotonergic neurons extended considerably longer neurites than did cortical neurons on low laminin and exhibited a remarkably more active growth cone on low laminin plus aggrecan during time-lapse imaging than did cortical neurons. Chondroitinase ABC treatment of laminin/CSPG substrates resulted in significantly longer serotonergic but not cortical neurite lengths. This increased ability of serotonergic neurons to robustly grow on high amounts of CSPG may be partially due to significantly higher amounts of growth-associated protein-43 and/or β1 integrin than cortical neurons. Blocking β1 integrin decreased serotonergic and cortical outgrowth on laminin. Determining the mechanism by which serotonergic fibers persist and sprout after lesion could lead to therapeutic strategies for both stroke and spinal cord injury.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21490201      PMCID: PMC3394675          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.6663-10.2011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  71 in total

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Authors:  Emeline Camand; Marie-Pierre Morel; Andréas Faissner; Constantino Sotelo; Isabelle Dusart
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Journal:  Arch Neurol       Date:  1973-07

5.  Structural and functional restoration by collateral sprouting of hippocampal 5-HT axons.

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6.  Organization of corticocortical connections in the parietal cortex of the rat.

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7.  Developmental organization of raphe serotonin neuron groups in the rat.

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Authors:  D Gospodarowicz; G Greenburg; J M Foidart; N Savion
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9.  Studies on the development and behavior of the dystrophic growth cone, the hallmark of regeneration failure, in an in vitro model of the glial scar and after spinal cord injury.

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  44 in total

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Review 7.  Therapeutic Hypothermia and Neuroprotection in Acute Neurological Disease.

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8.  High-resolution intravital imaging reveals that blood-derived macrophages but not resident microglia facilitate secondary axonal dieback in traumatic spinal cord injury.

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9.  Modulation of Receptor Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Sigma Increases Chondroitin Sulfate Proteoglycan Degradation through Cathepsin B Secretion to Enhance Axon Outgrowth.

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10.  Astrocyte scar formation aids central nervous system axon regeneration.

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