| Literature DB >> 27941025 |
Taiji Ishii1, Takehiko Ueyama2, Michiko Shigyo3, Masaaki Kohta4, Takeshi Kondoh4, Tomoharu Kuboyama3, Tatsuya Uebi1, Takeshi Hamada1, David H Gutmann5, Atsu Aiba6, Eiji Kohmura4, Chihiro Tohda3, Naoaki Saito7.
Abstract
Astrogliosis (i.e. glial scar), which is comprised primarily of proliferated astrocytes at the lesion site and migrated astrocytes from neighboring regions, is one of the key reactions in determining outcomes after CNS injury. In an effort to identify potential molecules/pathways that regulate astrogliosis, we sought to determine whether Rac/Rac-mediated signaling in astrocytes represents a novel candidate for therapeutic intervention following CNS injury. For these studies, we generated mice with Rac1 deletion under the control of the GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein) promoter (GFAP-Cre;Rac1flox/flox). GFAP-Cre;Rac1flox/flox (Rac1-KO) mice exhibited better recovery after spinal cord injury and exhibited reduced astrogliosis at the lesion site relative to control. Reduced astrogliosis was also observed in Rac1-KO mice following microbeam irradiation-induced injury. Moreover, knockdown (KD) or KO of Rac1 in astrocytes (LN229 cells, primary astrocytes, or primary astrocytes from Rac1-KO mice) led to delayed cell cycle progression and reduced cell migration. Rac1-KD or Rac1-KO astrocytes additionally had decreased levels of GSPT1 (G1 to S phase transition 1) expression and reduced responses of IL-1β and GSPT1 to LPS treatment, indicating that IL-1β and GSPT1 are downstream molecules of Rac1 associated with inflammatory condition. Furthermore, GSPT1-KD astrocytes had cell cycle delay, with no effect on cell migration. The cell cycle delay induced by Rac1-KD was rescued by overexpression of GSPT1. Based on these results, we propose that Rac1-GSPT1 represents a novel signaling axis in astrocytes that accelerates proliferation in response to inflammation, which is one important factor in the development of astrogliosis/glial scar following CNS injury.Entities:
Keywords: CNS injury; GSPT1; Rac (Rac GTPase); astrocyte; cell cycle; cell migration; cell proliferation; glial cell; inflammation; mouse
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27941025 PMCID: PMC5270470 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M116.748871
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157