| Literature DB >> 31663116 |
Bo Li1, Zhijie Wang2, Mei Yu3, Xu Wang1, Xin Wang4, Chuanjie Chen5, Zheng Zhang6, Meiling Zhang4, Chao Sun1, Chenxi Zhao1, Qiang Li1,7, Wei Wang1, Tianyi Wang6, Liang Zhang8, Guangzhi Ning1,9, Shiqing Feng1,9.
Abstract
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating disease. Strategies that enhance the intrinsic regenerative ability are very important for the recovery of SCI to radically prevent the occurrence of sensory disorders. Epidermal growth factor (EGF) showed a limited effect on the growth of primary sensory neuron neurites due to the degradation of phosphorylated-epidermal growth factor receptor (p-EGFR) in a manner dependent on Casitas B-lineage lymphoma (CBL) (an E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase). MiR-22-3p predicted from four databases could target CBL to inhibit the expression of CBL, increase p-EGFR levels and neurites length via STAT3/GAP43 pathway rather than Erk1/2 axis. EGF, EGFR, and miR-22-3p were downregulated sharply after injury. In vivo miR-22-3p Agomir application could regulate CBL/p-EGFR/p-STAT3/GAP43/p-GAP43 axis, and restore spinal cord sensory conductive function. This study clarified the mechanism of the limited promotion effect of EGF on adult primary sensory neuron neurite and targeting miR-22-3p could be a novel strategy to treat sensory dysfunction after SCI.Entities:
Keywords: casitas b-lineage lymphoma; epidermal growth factor; epidermal growth factor receptor; miR-22-3p; primary sensory neuron; spinal cord injury
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31663116 DOI: 10.1002/jcp.29338
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Physiol ISSN: 0021-9541 Impact factor: 6.384