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Publication : Augmenting fibronectin levels in injured adult CNS promotes axon regeneration in vivo.

First Author  Lukomska A Year  2024
Journal  Exp Neurol Volume  379
Pages  114877 PubMed ID  38944331
Mgi Jnum  J:353035 Mgi Id  MGI:7708840
Doi  10.1016/j.expneurol.2024.114877 Citation  Lukomska A, et al. (2024) Augmenting fibronectin levels in injured adult CNS promotes axon regeneration in vivo. Exp Neurol 379:114877
abstractText  In an attempt to repair injured central nervous system (CNS) nerves/tracts, immune cells are recruited into the injury site, but endogenous response in adult mammals is insufficient for promoting regeneration of severed axons. Here, we found that a portion of retinal ganglion cell (RGC) CNS projection neurons that survive after optic nerve crush (ONC) injury are enriched for and upregulate fibronectin (Fn)-interacting integrins Itga5 and ItgaV, and that Fn promotes long-term survival and long-distance axon regeneration of a portion of axotomized adult RGCs in culture. We then show that, Fn is developmentally downregulated in the axonal tracts of optic nerve and spinal cord, but injury-activated macrophages/microglia upregulate Fn while axon regeneration-promoting zymosan augments their recruitment (and thereby increases Fn levels) in the injured optic nerve. Finally, we found that Fn's RGD motif, established to interact with Itga5 and ItgaV, promotes long-term survival and long-distance axon regeneration of adult RGCs after ONC in vivo, with some axons reaching the optic chiasm when co-treated with Rpl7a gene therapy. Thus, experimentally augmenting Fn levels in the injured CNS is a promising approach for therapeutic neuroprotection and axon regeneration of at least a portion of neurons.
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