Changes within maturing neurons limit axonal regeneration in the developing spinal cord.

J Neurobiol

Department of Neuroscience, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, USA.

Published: March 2006

Embryonic birds and mammals display a remarkable ability to regenerate axons after spinal injury, but then lose this ability during a discrete developmental transition. To explain this transition, previous research has emphasized the emergence of myelin and other inhibitory factors in the environment of the spinal cord. However, research in other CNS tracts suggests an important role for neuron-intrinsic limitations to axon regeneration. Here we re-examine this issue quantitatively in the hindbrain-spinal projection of the embryonic chick. Using heterochronic cocultures we show that maturation of the spinal cord environment causes a 55% reduction in axon regeneration, while maturation of hindbrain neurons causes a 90% reduction. We further show that young neurons transplanted in vivo into older spinal cord can regenerate axons into myelinated white matter, while older axons regenerate poorly and have reduced growth cone motility on a variety of growth-permissive ligands in vitro, including laminin, L1, and N-cadherin. Finally, we use video analysis of living growth cones to directly document an age-dependent decline in the motility of brainstem axons. These data show that developmental changes in both the spinal cord environment and in brainstem neurons can reduce regeneration, but that the effect of the environment is only partial, while changes in neurons by themselves cause a nearly complete reduction in regeneration. We conclude that maturational events within neurons are a primary cause for the failure of axon regeneration in the spinal cord.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/neu.20224DOI Listing

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