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Axon growth across a lesion site along a preformed guidance pathway in the brain
Authors:Jin Ying  Ziemba Kristine S  Smith George M
Affiliation:Department of Physiology, Spinal Cord and Brain Injury Research Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40536, USA. yjin2@email.uky.edu
Abstract:Our previous studies showed that axonal outgrowth from dorsal root ganglia (DRG) transplants in the adult rat brain could be directed toward a specific target location using a preformed growth-supportive pathway. This pathway induced axon growth within the corpus callosum across the midline to the opposite hemisphere. In this study, we examined whether such pathways would also support axon growth either through or around a lesion of the corpus callosum. Pathways expressing GFP, NGF, or FGF2/NGF were set up by multiple injections of adenovirus along the corpus callosum. Each pathway included the transplantation site in the left corpus callosum, 2.8 mm away from the midline, and a target site in the right corpus callosum, 2.5 mm from the midline. At the same time, a 1 mm lesion was made through the corpus callosum at the midline in an anteroposterior direction. A group of control animals received lesions and Ad-NGF injections only at the transplant and target sites, without a bridging pathway. DRG cell suspensions from postnatal day 1 or 2 rats were injected at the transplantation site three to four days later. Two weeks after transplantation, brain sections were stained using an anti-CGRP antibody. The CGRP+ axons were counted at 0.5 mm and 1.5 mm from the lesion site in both hemispheres. Few axons grew past the lesion in animals with control pathways, but there was robust axon growth across the lesion site in the FGF2/NGF and NGF-expressing pathways. This study indicated that preformed NGF and combination guidance pathways support more axon growth past a lesion in the adult mammalian brain.
Keywords:Axon growth   Dorsal root ganglion (DRG)   Transplantation   Neurotrophic factors   Gene therapy   Brain injury
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