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Publication : NF-κB controls axonal regeneration and degeneration through cell-specific balance of RelA and p50 in the adult CNS.

First Author  Haenold R Year  2014
Journal  J Cell Sci Volume  127
Issue  Pt 14 Pages  3052-65
PubMed ID  24860143 Mgi Jnum  J:302685
Mgi Id  MGI:6509417 Doi  10.1242/jcs.140731
Citation  Haenold R, et al. (2014) NF-kappaB controls axonal regeneration and degeneration through cell-specific balance of RelA and p50 in the adult CNS. J Cell Sci 127(Pt 14):3052-65
abstractText  NF-kappaB is dually involved in neurogenesis and brain pathology. Here, we addressed its role in adult axoneogenesis by generating mutations of RelA (p65) and p50 (also known as NFKB1) heterodimers of canonical NF-kappaB. In addition to RelA activation in astrocytes, optic nerve axonotmesis caused a hitherto unrecognized induction of RelA in growth-inhibitory oligodendrocytes. Intraretinally, RelA was induced in severed retinal ganglion cells and was also expressed in bystander Muller glia. Cell-type-specific deletion of transactivating RelA in neurons and/or macroglia stimulated axonal regeneration in a distinct and synergistic pattern. By contrast, deletion of the p50 suppressor subunit promoted spontaneous and post-injury Wallerian degeneration. Growth effects mediated by RelA deletion paralleled a downregulation of growth-inhibitory Cdh1 (officially known as FZR1) and upregulation of the endogenous Cdh1 suppressor EMI1 (officially known as FBXO5). Pro-degenerative loss of p50, however, stabilized retinal Cdh1. In vitro, RelA deletion elicited opposing pro-regenerative shifts in active nuclear and inactive cytoplasmic moieties of Cdh1 and Id2. The involvement of NF-kappaB and cell-cycle regulators such as Cdh1 in regenerative processes of non-replicative neurons suggests novel mechanisms by which molecular reprogramming might be executed to stimulate adult axoneogenesis and treat central nervous system (CNS) axonopathies.
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