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Publication : Diminished Schwann cell repair responses underlie age-associated impaired axonal regeneration.

First Author  Painter MW Year  2014
Journal  Neuron Volume  83
Issue  2 Pages  331-343
PubMed ID  25033179 Mgi Jnum  J:261280
Mgi Id  MGI:6108908 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2014.06.016
Citation  Painter MW, et al. (2014) Diminished Schwann cell repair responses underlie age-associated impaired axonal regeneration. Neuron 83(2):331-343
abstractText  The regenerative capacity of the peripheral nervous system declines with age. Why this occurs, however, is unknown. We demonstrate that 24-month-old mice exhibit an impairment of functional recovery after nerve injury compared to 2-month-old animals. We find no difference in the intrinsic growth capacity between aged and young sensory neurons in vitro or in their ability to activate growth-associated transcriptional programs after injury. Instead, using age-mismatched nerve transplants in vivo, we show that the extent of functional recovery depends on the age of the nerve graft, and not the age of the host. Molecular interrogation of the sciatic nerve reveals that aged Schwann cells (SCs) fail to rapidly activate a transcriptional repair program after injury. Functionally, aged SCs exhibit impaired dedifferentiation, myelin clearance, and macrophage recruitment. These results suggest that the age-associated decline in axonal regeneration results from diminished Schwann cell plasticity, leading to slower myelin clearance.
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