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L1, β1 integrin, and cadherins mediate axonal regeneration in the embryonic spinal cord

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROBIOLOGY
Volume 66, Issue 14, Pages 1564-1583

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS INC
DOI: 10.1002/neu.20311

Keywords

spinal cord; brainstem; axon regeneration; integrin; L1; N-cadherin

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Funding

  1. NICHD NIH HHS [HD19950] Funding Source: Medline

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Embryonic birds and mammals are capable of axon regeneration after spinal cord injury, but this ability is lost during a discrete developmental transition. We recently showed that changes within maturing neurons, as opposed to changes solely in the spinal cord environment, significantly restrict axon regeneration during development. The developmental changes within neurons that limit axon regeneration remain unclear. One gap in knowledge is the identity of the adhesive receptors that embryonic neurons use to extend axons in the spinal cord. Here we test the roles of Ll/NgCAM, beta 1 integrin, and cadherins, using a coculture system in which embryonic chick brainstem neurons regenerate axons into an explant of embryonic spinal cord. By in vivo and in vitro methods, we found that brainstem neurons reduce axonal expression of L1 as they mature. Disrupting either L1 or beta 1 integrin function individually in our coculture system partially inhibition growth of brainstem axons in spinal cords, while disrupting cadherin function alone had no effect. However, when all three adhesive receptors were blocked simultaneously, axon growth in the spinal cord was reduced by 90%. Using immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization we show that during the period when neurons lose their regenerative capacity they reduce expression of mRNA for N-cadherin, and reduce axonal L1/NgCAM protein through a post-transcriptional mechanism. These data show that embryonic neurons use L1/NgCAM, beta 1 integrin, and cadherin receptors for axon regeneration in the embryonic spinal cord, and raise the possibility that a reduced expression of these essential receptors may contribute to the low-regenerative capacity of older neurons. (c) 2006 Wiley Periodicals. Inc.

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