4.7 Review

Advancing Our Understanding of the Chronically Denervated Schwann Cell: A Potential Therapeutic Target?

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom12081128

Keywords

peripheral nerve injury; Schwann cells; peripheral nerve regeneration; nerve injury; c-Jun; chronic Schwann cell denervation

Funding

  1. UK Regenerative Medicine Programme (UKRMP Platform grant Acellular/Smart Materials-3D Architecture) [MR/R015651/1]

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Patients with major peripheral nerve injury have poor recovery outcomes due to slow axonal regeneration and deterioration in the ability of the distal stump to support axonal growth. Schwann cells play a crucial role in nerve regeneration, but chronic denervation leads to instability in their repair phenotype and hinders regeneration support. Recent research on the cellular machinery, particularly the role of c-Jun, has opened opportunities for therapeutic intervention to support prolonged neural regeneration.
Outcomes for patients following major peripheral nerve injury are extremely poor. Despite advanced microsurgical techniques, the recovery of function is limited by an inherently slow rate of axonal regeneration. In particular, a time-dependent deterioration in the ability of the distal stump to support axonal growth is a major determinant to the failure of reinnervation. Schwann cells (SC) are crucial in the orchestration of nerve regeneration; their plasticity permits the adoption of a repair phenotype following nerve injury. The repair SC modulates the initial immune response, directs myelin clearance, provides neurotrophic support and remodels the distal nerve. These functions are critical for regeneration; yet the repair phenotype is unstable in the setting of chronic denervation. This phenotypic instability accounts for the deteriorating regenerative support offered by the distal nerve stump. Over the past 10 years, our understanding of the cellular machinery behind this repair phenotype, in particular the role of c-Jun, has increased exponentially, creating opportunities for therapeutic intervention. This review will cover the activation of the repair phenotype in SC, the effects of chronic denervation on SC and current strategies to 'hack' these cellular pathways toward supporting more prolonged periods of neural regeneration.

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