| Literature DB >> 34827666 |
Elena Pompili1, Valerio De Franchis1, Claudia Giampietri1, Stefano Leone2, Elena De Santis1, Francesco Fornai3,4, Lorenzo Fumagalli1, Cinzia Fabrizi1.
Abstract
In contrast with the brain and spinal cord, peripheral nerves possess a striking ability to regenerate after damage. This characteristic of the peripheral nervous system is mainly due to a specific population of glial cells, the Schwann cells. Schwann cells promptly activate after nerve injury, dedifferentiate assuming a repair phenotype, and assist axon regrowth. In general, tissue injury determines the release of a variety of proteases which, in parallel with the degradation of their specific targets, also activate plasma membrane receptors known as protease-activated receptors (PARs). PAR1, the prototypical member of the PAR family, is also known as thrombin receptor and is present at the Schwann cell plasma membrane. This receptor is emerging as a possible regulator of the pro-regenerative capacity of Schwann cells. Here, we summarize the most recent literature data describing the possible contribution of PAR1 and PAR1-activating proteases in regulating the regeneration of peripheral nerves.Entities:
Keywords: PAR1; Schwann cells; peripheral nerve; protease-activated receptor; regeneration; thrombin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34827666 PMCID: PMC8615415 DOI: 10.3390/biom11111668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1PAR4 detected by immunofluorescence in S100b positive Schwann cells from human spinal nerves (Sciencell). The negative control was performed by replacing the primary antibodies with equivalent amounts of normal Igs. Scale bar is 5 µm.
Potential PAR1 activating proteases in peripheral nerve injury.
| PAR1 Activating Protease | SC Cultures | Peripheral Nerve | Cleavage Site |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thrombin | Low levels, increased release of neurotrophic factors [ | Low levels, enhanced regeneration [ | Canonical |
| High levels, decreased SC neurotrophic activity [ | High levels, reduced regeneration [ | ||
| FXa | Increased release of thrombin in a Schwannoma cell line [ | Inhibition of FXa restores motor function after injury [ | Canonical |
| FVIIa | Expressed in a Schwannoma cell line [ | Expressed at the nodes of Ranvier [ | Canonical |
| APC/EPCR | EPCR expression in a Schwannoma cell line [ | EPCR increased expression after crush injury [ | Canonical and noncanonical |
| Plasmin | Increase SC migration and wrapping of nerve fibers [ | tPA and uPA promote nerve regeneration after injury [ | Canonical and noncanonical |
| MMPs | Inhibit SC proliferation [ | Inhibit nerve regeneration [ | Canonical and noncanonical |
| MMP2 | Stimulation of SC migration [ | Noncanonical | |
| MMP3 | Inhibition of SC proliferation [ | In MMP3 KO mice, NMJ are preserved [ | Noncanonical |
| MMP8 | Localized at growth cones in nerve fibers [ | Canonical | |
| MMP9 | Inhibition of proliferation and trophic activity of SCs [ | Upregulated after nerve injury [ | Canonical and noncanonical |
Figure 2Schematic representation of canonical and noncanonical cleavage sites on the PAR1 N-terminus. PAR1 is canonically cleaved and activated by thrombin between R41 and S42. The same site is proteolitically cleaved by FXa, FVIIa, high levels of plasmin, and some MMPs. The cleavage of PAR1 at the noncanonical sites generally causes the disarming of the receptor. The canonical and noncanonical cleavage sites of the proteases reported in Table 1 are indicated.
Figure 3Proteases which have been reported to affect peripheral nerve regeneration after injury and that are also potential activators of PAR1.