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1.
Schwann cells (SCs) are integral to peripheral nerve biology, contributing to saltatory conduction along axons, nerve and axon development, and axonal regeneration. SCs also provide a microenvironment favoring neural regeneration partially due to production of several neurotrophic factors. Dysfunction of SCs may also play an important role in the pathogenesis of peripheral nerve diseases such as diabetic peripheral neuropathy where hyperglycemia is often considered pathogenic. In order to study the impact of diabetes mellitus (DM) upon the regenerative capacity of adult SCs, we investigated the differential production of the neurotrophic factors nerve growth factor (NGF) and neurotrophin‐3 (NT3) by SCs harvested from the sciatic nerves of murine models of type 1 DM (streptozotocin treated C57BL/6J mice) and type 2 DM (LepR?/? or db/db mice) or non‐diabetic cohorts. In vitro, SCs from diabetic and control mice were maintained under similar hyperglycemic and euglycemic conditions respectively. Mature SCs from diabetic mice produced lower levels of NGF and NT3 under hyperglycemic conditions when compared to SCs in euglycemia. In addition, SCs from both DM and non‐DM mice appear to be incapable of insulin production, but responded to exogenous insulin with greater proliferation and heightened myelination potentiation. Moreover, SCs from diabetic animals showed poorer association with co‐cultured axons. Hyperglycemia had significant impact upon SCs, potentially contributing to the pathogenesis of diabetic peripheral neuropathy. GLIA 2013;61:1990–1999  相似文献   

2.
Axonal regeneration in the peripheral nervous system is greatly supported by Schwann cells (SCs). After nerve injury, SCs dedifferentiate to a progenitor‐like state and efficiently guide axons to their original target tissues. Contact and soluble factors participate in the crosstalk between SCs and axons during axonal regeneration. Here we show that dedifferentiated SCs secrete nano‐vesicles known as exosomes which are specifically internalized by axons. Surprisingly, SC‐derived exosomes markedly increase axonal regeneration in vitro and enhance regeneration after sciatic nerve injury in vivo. Exosomes shift the growth cone morphology to a pro‐regenerating phenotype and decrease the activity of the GTPase RhoA, involved in growth cone collapse and axon retraction. Altogether, our work identifies a novel mechanism by which SCs communicate with neighboring axons during regenerative processes. We propose that SC exosomes represent an important mechanism by which these cells locally support axonal maintenance and regeneration after nerve damage. GLIA 2013;61:1795–1806  相似文献   

3.
We used peripheral nerve allografts, already employed clinically to reconstruct devastating peripheral nerve injuries, to study Schwann cell (SC) plasticity in adult mice. By modulating the allograft treatment modality we were able to study migratory, denervated, rejecting, and reinnervated phenotypes in transgenic mice whose SCs expressed GFP under regulatory elements of either the S100b (S100-GFP) or nestin (Nestin-GFP) promoters. Well-differentiated SCs strongly expressed S100-GFP, while Nestin-GFP expression was stimulated by denervation, and in some cases, axons were constitutively labeled with CFP to enable in vivo imaging. Serial imaging of these mice demonstrated that untreated allografts were rejected within 20 days. Cold preserved (CP) allografts required an initial phase of SC migration that preceded axonal regeneration thus delaying myelination and maturation of the SC phenotype. Mice immunosuppressed with FK506 demonstrated mild subacute rejection, but the most robust regeneration of myelinated and unmyelinated axons and motor endplate reinnervation. While characterized by fewer regenerating axons, mice treated with the co-stimulatory blockade (CSB) agents anti-CD40L mAb and CTLAIg-4 demonstrated virtually no graft rejection during the 28 day experiment, and had significant increases in myelination, connexin-32 expression, and Akt phosphorylation compared with any other group. These results indicate that even with SC rejection, nerve regeneration can occur to some degree, particularly with FK506 treatment. However, we found that co-stimulatory blockade facilitate optimal myelin formation and maturation of SCs as indicated by protein expression of myelin basic protein (MBP), connexin-32 and phospho-Akt.  相似文献   

4.
Axon and Schwann cell partnership during nerve regrowth   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Regeneration of peripheral nerve involves an essential contribution by Schwann cells (SCs) in collaboration with regrowing axons. We examined such collaboration between new axons and Schwann cells destined to reform peripheral nerve trucks in a regeneration chamber bridging transected rat sciatic nerves. There was a highly intimate "dance" between axons that followed outgrowing and proliferating SCs. Axons without SCs only grew short distances and almost all axon processes had associated SC processes. When regeneration chambers were infused through an external access port with local mitomycin, a mitosis inhibitor, SC proliferation, migration and subsequent axon regrowth were dramatically reduced. Adding laminin to mitomycin did not reverse this regenerative lag and indicated that SCs provide more than laminin synthesis alone. Laminin infused alone supplemented endogenous laminin and facilitated first SC then axon regrowth. "Wrong way" misdirected axons were associated with misdirected SC processes and were more numerous in bridges exposed to mitomycin, but were fewer in laminin supplemented bridges. Later, by 21 days, there was myelinated axon repopulation of regenerative bridges but those exposed to mitomycin alone at early time points had substantial impairments in axon investment. Reforming peripheral nerve trucks involves a very close and intimate relationship between axons and SCs that must proliferate and migrate, facilitated by laminin.  相似文献   

5.
The profound morphofunctional changes that Schwann cells (SCs) undergo during their migration and elongation on axons, as well as during axon sorting, ensheathment, and myelination, require their close interaction with the surrounding laminin‐rich basal lamina. In contrast to myelinating central nervous system glia, SCs strongly and constitutively express the giant scaffolding protein AHNAK1, localized essentially underneath the outer, abaxonal plasma membrane. Using electron microscopy, we show here that in the sciatic nerve of ahnak1?/? mice the ultrastructure of myelinated, and unmyelinated (Remak) fibers is affected. The major SC laminin receptor β‐dystroglycan co‐immunoprecipitates with AHNAK1 shows reduced expression in ahnak1?/? SCs, and is no longer detectable in Cajal bands on myelinated fibers in ahnak1?/? sciatic nerve. Reduced migration velocity in a scratch wound assay of purified ahnak1?/? primary SCs cultured on a laminin substrate indicated a function of AHNAK1 in SC motility. This was corroborated by atomic force microscopy measurements, which revealed a greater mechanical rigidity of shaft and leading tip of ahnak1?/? SC processes. Internodal lengths of large fibers are decreased in ahnak1?/? sciatic nerve, and longitudinal extension of myelin segments is even more strongly reduced after acute knockdown of AHNAK1 in SCs of developing sciatic nerve. Together, our results suggest that by interfering in the cross‐talk between the transmembrane form of the laminin receptor dystroglycan and F‐actin, AHNAK1 influences the cytoskeleton organization of SCs, and thus plays a role in the regulation of their morphology and motility and lastly, the myelination process. GLIA 2014;62:1392–1406  相似文献   

6.
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8.
In the peripheral nervous system, Schwann cells (SCs) promote nerve regeneration by the secretion of trophic support molecules and the establishment of a supportive growth matrix. Elucidating factors that promote SC outgrowth following nerve injury is an important strategy for improving nerve regeneration. We identified the Netrin-1 receptors, Deleted in Colorectal Cancer (DCC) and Uncoordinated (Unc)5H2 as SC receptors that influence nerve regeneration by respectively promoting or inhibiting SC outgrowth. Significantly, we show both DCC and Unc5H2 receptors are distributed within SCs. In adult nerves, DCC is localized to the paranodes and Schmidt-Lantermann incisures of myelinating SCs, as well as along unmyelinated axons. After axotomy, DCC is prominently expressed in activated SCs at the regenerating nerve front. In contrast, Unc5H2 receptor is robustly distributed in myelinating SCs of the intact nerve and it is found at low levels in the SCs of the injury site. Local in vivo DCC siRNA mRNA knockdown at the growing tip of an injured nerve impaired SC activation and, in turn, significantly decreased axon regeneration. This forced DCC inhibition was associated with a dramatic reciprocal upregulation of Unc5H2 in the remaining SCs. Local Unc5H2 knockdown at the injury site, however, facilitated axon regrowth, indicating it has a role as an intrinsic brake to peripheral nerve regeneration. Our findings demonstrate that in adult peripheral nerves, SCs respond to DCC and Unc5H2 signaling, thereby promoting or hindering axon outgrowth and providing a novel mechanism for SC regulation during nerve regeneration.  相似文献   

9.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) support axon regeneration across artificial nerve bridges but their differentiative capacity and ability to promote nerve regeneration remains unclear. In this study, MSCs isolated from bone marrow of Sprague–Dawley rats were characterized by plastic adherence and pluripotency towards mesodermal lineages. Isolated undifferentiated MSCs (uMSCs) were stimulated towards a Schwann cell (SC) phenotype using specific growth factors, and cell marker analysis was performed to verify SC phenotype in vitro. Differentiation resulted in temporally dependent positive immunocytochemical staining for the SC markers, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), S100, and nerve growth factor receptor (NGFR), with maximal marker expression achieved after 6 days of treatment with differentiation media. Quantitative analysis demonstrated that ~ 50% of differentiated MSCs (dMSCs) have a SC phenotype. Using an indirect co-culture system, we compared the ability of dorsal root ganglion (DRG) cells to extend neurites in indirect contact with uMSCs and dMSCs as compared to SCs. The mean values of the longest length of the DRG neurites were the same for the dMSCs and SCs and significantly higher than the uMSC and DRG mono-culture systems (p < 0.05). In vivo, compared to an empty conduit, dMSC seeded collagen nerve conduits resulted in a greater number of sciatic motoneurons regenerating axons through the conduit into the distal nerve stump. We conclude that bone marrow-derived MSCs differentiate into a SC-phenotype that expresses SC markers transiently and sufficiently to support limited neurite outgrowth in vitro and axonal regeneration equivalent to that of SCs in vitro and in vivo. The nerve autograft remains the most effective conduit for supporting regeneration across nerve gaps.  相似文献   

10.
To compare nerve regeneration in young adult and aging mice, the right sciatic nerves of 6- and 24-month-old mice were crushed at the sciatic notch. Two weeks later, both groups of mice were perfused with an aldehyde solution, and, after additional fixation, the sciatic nerves were processed so that the transverse sections of each nerve subsequently studied by light and electron microscopy included the entire posterior tibial fascicle 5 mm distal to the crush site. The same level was sectioned in unoperated contralateral nerves; these nerves served as controls. Electron micrographs and the Bioquant Image Analysis System IV were used to measure areas of posterior tibial fascicles and count the number of myelinated axons, the number of unmyelinated axons, and their frequency in Schwann cell units. In aging mice, the total number of regenerating myelinated axons was significantly reduced, but totals of regenerating unmyelinated axons in aging and young adults did not differ significantly. In aging mice, the frequency of Schwann cells that contained a single unmyelinated axon was greater, suggesting that before myelination began, Schwann cell ensheathment of axons also was slowed. After axotomy by a crush injury, the area of the posterior tibial fascicle was less than that in young adults and the distal disintegration of myelin sheath remnants also appeared to be retarded. The results indicate that responses of neurons, axons, and Schwann cells could be important in slowing the regeneration of myelinated fibers found in sciatic nerves from aging mice.  相似文献   

11.
Increasing evidence indicates that sialic acid plays an important role during nerve regeneration. Sialic acids can be modified in vitro as well as in vivo using metabolic oligosaccharide engineering of the N-acyl side chain. N-Propionylmannosamine (ManNProp) increases neurite outgrowth and accelerates the reestablishment of functional synapses in vitro. We investigated the influence of systemic ManNProp application using a specific in vivo mouse model. Using mice expressing axonal fluorescent proteins, we quantified the extension of regenerating axons, the number of regenerating axons, the number of arborising axons and the number of branches per axon 5 days after injury. Sciatic nerves from non-expressing mice were grafted into those expressing yellow fluorescent protein. We began a twice-daily intraperitoneal application of either peracetylated ManNProp (200 mg/kg) or saline solution 5 days before injury, and continued it until nerve harvest (5 days after transection). ManNProp significantly increased the mean distance of axonal regeneration (2.49 mm vs. 1.53 mm; P < 0.005) and the number of arborizing axons (21% vs. 16%; P = 0.008) 5 days after sciatic nerve grafting. ManNProp did not affect the number of regenerating axons or the number of branches per arborizing axon. The biochemical glycoengineering of the N-acyl side chain of sialic acid might be a promising approach for improving peripheral nerve regeneration.  相似文献   

12.
The gold standard for peripheral nerve regeneration uses a sensory autograft to bridge a motor/sensory defect site. For motor nerves to regenerate, Schwann cells (SC) myelinate the newly grown axon. Sensory SCs have a reduced ability to produce myelin, partially explaining low success rates of autografts. This issue is masked in pre‐clinical research by the excessive use of the rat sciatic nerve defect model, utilizing a mixed nerve with motor and sensory SCs. Aim of this study was to utilize extracorporeal shockwave treatment as a novel tool to influence SC phenotype. SCs were isolated from motor, sensory and mixed rat nerves and in vitro differences between them were assessed concerning initial cell number, proliferation rate, neurite outgrowth as well as ability to express myelin. We verified the inferior capacity of sensory SCs to promote neurite outgrowth and express myelin‐associated proteins. Motor Schwann cells demonstrated low proliferation rates, but strongly reacted to pro‐myelination stimuli. It is noteworthy for pre‐clinical research that sciatic SCs are a strongly mixed culture, not representing one or the other. Extracorporeal shockwave treatment (ESWT), induced in motor SCs an increased proliferation profile, while sensory SCs gained the ability to promote neurite outgrowth and express myelin‐associated markers. We demonstrate a strong phenotype commitment of sciatic, motor, and sensory SCs in vitro, proposing the experimental use of SCs from pure cultures to better mimic clinical situations. Furthermore we provide arguments for using ESWT on autografts to improve the regenerative capacity of sensory SCs.  相似文献   

13.
The role of neurotrophin-4/5 (NT-4/5) in the enhancement of axon regeneration in peripheral nerves produced by treadmill training was studied in mice. Common fibular nerves of animals of the H strain of thy-1-YFP mice, in which a subset of axons in peripheral nerves is marked by the presence of yellow fluorescent protein, were cut and surgically repaired using nerve grafts from non-fluorescent mice. Lengths of profiles of fluorescent regenerating axons were measured using optical sections made through whole mounts of harvested nerves. Measurements from mice that had undergone 1 h of daily treadmill training at modest speed (10 m/min) were compared with those of untrained (control) mice. Modest treadmill training resulted in fluorescent axon profiles that were nearly twice as long as controls at 1, 2 and 4 week survival times. Similar enhanced regeneration was found when cut nerves of wild type mice were repaired with grafts from NT-4/5 knockout mice or grafts made acellular by repeated freezing/thawing. No enhancement was produced by treadmill training in NT-4/5 knockout mice, irrespective of the nature of the graft used to repair the cut nerve. Much as had been observed previously for the effects of brief electrical stimulation, the effects of treadmill training on axon regeneration in cut peripheral nerves are independent of changes produced in the distal segment of the cut nerve and depend on the promotion of axon regeneration by changes in NT-4/5 expression by cells in the proximal nerve segment.  相似文献   

14.
It is still controversial to what extent elongation of regenerating sensory axons depends on proliferating Schwann cells (SCs) in an injured peripheral nerve. We hypothesized that such regeneration was independent of SC support early after nerve injury, but later became SC-dependent. The sural nerve in rats was crushed, and freezing destroyed cells but not their basal laminae (BL) in the distal nerve segment. Sensory axon elongation was assessed by the nerve pinch test and their abundance was examined immunohistochemically. Sensory axons regenerated fairly rapidly during the first week even if SC migration was prevented. Thereafter, they ceased to elongate and withdrew until their terminals contacted the SCs migrating from the proximal nerve segment. Intrinsic neuronal capacity for growth without cell support, however, had not been lost. Rather, progressive degradation of the former SC BL and loss of laminin in the acellular segment arrested axon growth. Further elongation occurred only when SC migration was possible, corroborating our hypothesis. Sensory neurons continued to elongate and maintain their axons in spite of deteriorating growth substratum if, prior to injury the axons had been allowed to sprout into the denervated skin. Previous sprouting exposed the sensory neurons to high levels of NGF.  相似文献   

15.
To investigate the effects of neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) on postnatal proprioceptive neurons and their targets, transgenic mice were generated that use the myosin light chain 1 (mlc) promoter to overexpress NT-3 in skeletal muscle. Ribonuclease protection assays revealed that NT-3 overexpression in hindlimb skeletal muscle began at embryonic day 14 (E14) and continued throughout adulthood. Overexpression of NT-3 during late embryogenesis resulted in increased numbers of large sensory and small fusimotor axons. Within a week of birth, mlc/NT-3 mice retract their limbs to the torso when lifted by the tail. Footprint analysis revealed that mlc/NT-3 mice had significant abnormalities in their gait compared with wild-types. Beam walking and rotorod analysis confirmed the poor limb control by mlc/NT-3 mice. These locomotive deficits progressively worsened with age and were likely related to the formation of morphologically abnormal muscle spindles. The most common spindle anomaly was the presence of excessive intrafusal bag fibers within individual muscle spindles. To assess the role of NT-3 in recovery from nerve injury, sciatic nerve crushes were performed in young adult mice. Two days after injury, mlc/NT-3 mice displayed significantly improved sciatic functional indexes and a significant increase in muscle spindles that remained associated with axons. The latter finding suggests that excess NT-3 in muscle may retard the degeneration of proprioceptive axons after nerve crush. Long-term survival after nerve injury in mlc/NT-3 mice did not induce further changes in spindle number or morphology. These findings demonstrate that, in addition to promoting embryonic proprioceptive neuron survival, postnatal overexpression of NT-3 in muscle leads to abnormal spindle formation and deficits in locomotive control. However, our results also show that NT-3 may be therapeutic for proprioceptive axons immediately after nerve injury by delaying axon degeneration.  相似文献   

16.
In injured adult neurons, the process of axonal regrowth and reestablishment of the neuronal function have to be activated. We assessed in this study whether RhoA, a key regulator of neurite elongation, is activated after injury to the peripheral nervous system. RhoA is activated in motoneurons but not in Schwann cells after mouse sciatic nerve injury. To examine whether the activation of RhoA and its effector, Rho-kinase, retards axon regeneration of injured motoneurons, we employed a Rho-kinase inhibitor, fasudil. Amplitudes of distally evoked compound muscle action potentials are increased significantly faster after axonal injury in mice treated with fasudil compared with controls. Histological analysis shows that fasudil treatment increases the number of regenerating axons with large diameter, suggesting that axon maturation is facilitated by Rho-kinase inhibition. In addition, fasudil does not suppress the myelination of regenerating axons. These findings suggest that RhoA/Rho-kinase may be a practical molecular target to enhance axonal regeneration in human peripheral neuropathies.  相似文献   

17.
The characteristic response of Schwann cells (SC) accompanies peripheral nerve injury and regeneration. To elucidate their role, the question of whether or not regenerating axons can elongate across the segments of a peripheral nerve devoid of SC was investigated. Rat sciatic nerve was crushed so that the continuity of SC basal laminae was not interrupted. A segment about 15 mm long distal to the crush was either repeatedly frozen/thawed to eliminate SC or scalded by moist heat which, in addition, denatured the proteins in the SC basal laminae, too. Both sensory and motor axons grew rapidly across the frozen/thawed segment of the nerve. Their rate of elongation was reduced by only 30% in comparison to control crushed nerves. SC were not present along the path of growing axons adhering tightly to the bare SC basal laminae. The rate of elongation of regenerating sensory and motor axons in scalded nerve segments was eight times lower than in control crushed nerves. SC were present in that part of the scalded region that had been invaded by the regenerating axons but no further distally. These results suggest that acellular basal laminae of SC provide very good, although not optimal, conditions for elongation of regenerating sensory and motor axons. If biochemical integrity of the basal lamina is destroyed, the regenerating axons must be accompanied or preceded by viable SC. and axon elongation rate is significantly reduced.  相似文献   

18.
Schwann cells (SCs), the primary glia in the peripheral nervous system (PNS), display remarkable plasticity in that fully mature SCs undergo dedifferentiation and convert to repair SCs upon nerve injury. Dedifferentiated SCs provide essential support for PNS regeneration by producing signals that enhance the survival and axon regrowth of damaged neurons, but the identities of neurotrophic factors remain incompletely understood. Here we show that SCs express and secrete progranulin (PGRN), depending on the differentiation status of SCs. PGRN expression and secretion markedly increased as primary SCs underwent dedifferentiation, while PGRN secretion was prevented by administration of cAMP, which induced SC differentiation. We also found that sciatic nerve injury, a physiological trigger of SC dedifferentiation, induced PGRN expression in SCs in vivo. These results suggest that dedifferentiated SCs express and secrete PGRN that functions as a paracrine factor to support the survival and axon growth of neighboring neurons after injury.  相似文献   

19.
Introduction: This study evaluated whether Schwann cells (SCs) from different nerve sources transplanted into cold‐preserved acellular nerve grafts (CP‐ANGs) would improve functional regeneration compared with nerve isografts. Methods: SCs isolated and expanded from motor and sensory branches of rat femoral and sciatic nerves were seeded into 14mm CP‐ANGs. Growth factor expression, axonal regeneration, and functional recovery were evaluated in a 14‐mm rat sciatic injury model and compared with isografts. Results: At 14 days, motor or sensory‐derived SCs increased expression of growth factors in CP‐ANGs versus isografts. After 42 days, histomorphometric analysis found CP‐ANGs with SCs and isografts had similar numbers of regenerating nerve fibers. At 84 days, muscle force generation was similar for CP‐ANGs with SCs and isografts. SC source did not affect nerve fiber counts or muscle force generation. Conclusions: SCs transplanted into CP‐ANGs increase functional regeneration to isograft levels; however SC nerve source did not have an effect. Muscle Nerve 49 : 267–276, 2014  相似文献   

20.
Studies in regenerating goldfish optic nerves indicate that RNA may be axonally transported during optic nerve regeneration14, 18, 19. The present study was performed to determine if the axonal migration of RNA could be demonstrated during regeneration of the rat sciatic nerve.Rats, which had only the left sciatic nerve crushed 10 days earlier, were injected bilaterally with [3H]uridine into the spinal cord at segmental levels L5 and L6, thus labeling ventral horn cells giving rise to the sciatic nerve. Six, 14 and 20 days later rats were sacrificed by cardiac perfusion of saline followed by 10% formaldehyde. Formaldehyde-precipitable radioactivity, identified as [3H]RNA, was 4–5 times greater in the regenerating sciatic nerve compared to the normal nerve and moved without impediment beyond the point of the crush into the regenerating portion of the nerve.The axonal migration of free unincorporated labeled RNA precursors was also demonstrated, raising the possibility that the distribution of [3H]RNA along the sciatic nerve might be entirely extra-axonal; i.e., free [3H]uridine is taken up by Schwann cells from the axon where it is incorporated into [3H]RNA. This interpretation of the data would also result in the appearance of a proximodistal distribution of RNA associated radioactivity. To determine whether any sciatic nerve [3H]RNA was due to axonal transport, rats which had only the left sciatic nerve crushed 10 days earlier were injected bilaterally with [3H]uridine into the spinal cord. Fourteen days after injection, rats were sacrificed and radioactivity present in the nerve was confirmed as RNA by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Radioactivity in the various RNA species 14 days after intraspinal injection showed the following distribution: 28 + 18S RNA — normal39.3%±2.1; regenerating45.4%±1.6; 4S RNA — normal43.0%±1.3; regenerating46.8%±2.7. Similar characterization of sciatic nerve RNA 1 or 3 days following the intravenous administration of [3H]uridine gave the following distribution: 28 + 18S RNA — normal72.4%±3.0; regenerating75.0%±3.6; 4S RNA — normal7.7%±1.3; regenerating10.7%±0.8.The intraspinal injection of [3H]uridine would label Schwann cell RNA and, in addition, any species of intra-axonal RNA, while intravenous injections would label Schwann cell RNA and not axonal RNA. If 4S RNA is in the axon, one would predict relatively more labeled 4S RNA following intraspinal injections than following intravenous injections. The data demonstrate an enrichment of 4S RNA in both normal and regenerating rat sciatic nerve following the intraspinal but not following the intravenous injection of labeled precursor. Therefore, we suggest that 4S RNA migrates axonally in both normal and regenerating sciatic nerves of rats.  相似文献   

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