| Literature DB >> 22363260 |
Smriti Patodia1, Gennadij Raivich.
Abstract
Following axotomy, the activation of multiple intracellular signaling cascades causes the expression of a cocktail of regeneration-associated transcription factors which interact with each other to determine the fate of the injured neurons. The nerve injury response is channeled through manifold and parallel pathways, integrating diverse inputs, and controlling a complex transcriptional output. Transcription factors form a vital link in the chain of regeneration, converting injury-induced stress signals into downstream protein expression via gene regulation. They can regulate the intrinsic ability of axons to grow, by controlling expression of whole cassettes of gene targets. In this review, we have investigated the functional roles of a number of different transcription factors - c-Jun, activating transcription factor 3, cAMP response element binding protein, signal transducer, and activator of transcription-3, CCAAT/enhancer binding proteins β and δ, Oct-6, Sox11, p53, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cell, and ELK3 - in peripheral nerve regeneration. Studies involving use of conditional mutants, microarrays, promoter region mapping, and different injury paradigms, have enabled us to understand their distinct as well as overlapping roles in achieving anatomical and functional regeneration after peripheral nerve injury.Entities:
Keywords: ATF3; DRG; STAT3; axotomy; c-Jun; facial nerve; neurite; regeneration; transcription
Year: 2012 PMID: 22363260 PMCID: PMC3277281 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2012.00008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Figure 1Cellular signaling in successful regeneration, from early sensors of injury, to cytoplasmic signals, transcription, and downstream effectors (Modified Raivich, .
Transcription factor deletions and peripheral nerve regeneration: effects of global (G) and cell-type specific (cts) knockouts (KO).
| Transcription factor G KO or CTS KO | KO phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Neuronal c-Jun (CTS) | Strongly reduced target re-innervation | Raivich et al. ( |
| Schwann cell c-Jun (CTS) | Severely impaired axonal regeneration | Ruff et al. ( |
| Jun 2A (G) | Cellular atrophy | Ruff et al. ( |
| Jun 4A (G) | Moderately reduced target re-innervation and functional recovery | Patodia et al. (unpublished) |
| ATF3 (G) | Enhanced speed of regeneration in mice constitutively expressing ATF3 in DRGs | Seijffers et al. ( |
| CREB (G) | Impaired axonal/neurite growth | Lonze et al. ( |
| Neuronal STAT3 (CTS) | Strongly reduced target re-innervation | Bareyre et al. ( |
| C/EBPβ (G) | Reduced expression of microtubule Tα1 α tubulin and growth cone protein GAP-43 | Nadeau et al. ( |
| C/EBPδ (G) | Impaired axonal growth and reduced response to conditioning lesion | Magoulas and Lopez-de Heredia ( |
| Sox 11 (CTS) | Reduced regeneration after nerve crush | Jankowski et al. ( |
| p53 (G) | Growth cone collapse | Di Giovanni et al. ( |