The peripheral nervous system has an astonishing ability to regenerate following a compression or crush injury;however,the potential for full repair following a transection injury is much less.Currently,the major clin...The peripheral nervous system has an astonishing ability to regenerate following a compression or crush injury;however,the potential for full repair following a transection injury is much less.Currently,the major clinical challenge for peripheral nerve repair come from long gaps between the proximal and distal nerve stumps,which prevent regenerating axons reaching the distal nerve.Precise axon targeting during nervous system development is controlled by families of axon guidance molecules including Netrins,Slits,Ephrins and Semaphorins.Several recent studies have indicated key roles of Netrin1,Slit3 and EphrinB2 signalling in controlling the formation of new nerve bridge tissue and precise axon regeneration after peripheral nerve transection injury.Inside the nerve bridge,nerve fibroblasts express EphrinB2 while migrating Schwann cells express the receptor EphB2.EphrinB2/EphB2 signalling between nerve fibroblasts and migrating Schwann cells is required for Sox2 upregulation in Schwann cells and the formation of Schwann cell cords within the nerve bridge to allow directional axon growth to the distal nerve stump.Macrophages in the outermost layer of the nerve bridge express Slit3 while migrating Schwann cells and regenerating axons express the receptor Robo1;within Schwann cells,Robo1 expression is also Sox2-dependent.Slit3/Robo1 signalling is required to keep migrating Schwann cells and regenerating axons inside the nerve bridge.In addition to the Slit3/Robo1 signalling system,migrating Schwann cells also express Netrin1 and regenerating axons express the DCC receptor.It appears that migrating Schwann cells could also use Netrin1 as a guidance cue to direct regenerating axons across the peripheral nerve gap.Engineered neural tissues have been suggested as promising alternatives for the repair of large peripheral nerve gaps.Therefore,understanding the function of classic axon guidance molecules in nerve bridge formation and their roles in axon regeneration could be highly beneficial in developing engineered neural tissue for more effective peripheral nerve repair.展开更多
The Slit family of axon guidance cues act as repulsive molecules for precise axon pathfinding and neuronal migration during nervous system development through interactions with specific Robo receptors.Although we prev...The Slit family of axon guidance cues act as repulsive molecules for precise axon pathfinding and neuronal migration during nervous system development through interactions with specific Robo receptors.Although we previously reported that Slit1–3 and their receptors Robo1 and Robo2 are highly expressed in the adult mouse peripheral nervous system,how this expression changes after injury has not been well studied.Herein,we constructed a peripheral nerve injury mouse model by transecting the right sciatic nerve.At 14 days after injury,quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction was used to detect mRNA expression of Slit1–3 and Robo1–2 in L4–5 spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia,as well as the sciatic nerve.Immunohistochemical analysis was performed to examine Slit1–3,Robo1–2,neurofilament heavy chain,F4/80,and vimentin in L4–5 spinal cord,L4 dorsal root ganglia,and the sciatic nerve.Co-expression of Slit1–3 and Robo1–2 in L4 dorsal root ganglia was detected by in situ hybridization.In addition,Slit1–3 and Robo1–2 protein expression in L4–5 spinal cord,L4 dorsal root ganglia,and sciatic nerve were detected by western blot assay.The results showed no significant changes of Slit1–3 or Robo1–2 mRNA expression in the spinal cord within 14 days after injury.In the dorsal root ganglion,Slit1–3 and Robo1–2 mRNA expression were initially downregulated within 4 days after injury;however,Robo1–2 mRNA expression returned to the control level,while Slit1–3 mRNA expression remained upregulated during regeneration from 4–14 days after injury.In the sciatic nerve,Slit1–3 and their receptors Robo1–2 were all expressed in the proximal nerve stump;however,Slit1,Slit2,and Robo2 were barely detectable in the nerve bridge and distal nerve stump within 14 days after injury.Slit3 was highly ex-pressed in macrophages surrounding the nerve bridge and slightly downregulated in the distal nerve stump within 14 days after injury.Robo1 was upregulated in vimentin-positive cells and migrating Schwann cells inside the nerve bridge.Robo1 was also upregulated in Schwann cells of the distal nerve stump within 14 days after injury.Our findings indicate that Slit3 is the major ligand expressed in the nerve bridge and distal nerve stump during peripheral nerve regeneration,and Slit3/Robo signaling could play a key role in peripheral nerve repair after injury.This study was approved by Plymouth University Animal Welfare Ethical Review Board (approval No.30/3203) on April 12,2014.展开更多
文摘The peripheral nervous system has an astonishing ability to regenerate following a compression or crush injury;however,the potential for full repair following a transection injury is much less.Currently,the major clinical challenge for peripheral nerve repair come from long gaps between the proximal and distal nerve stumps,which prevent regenerating axons reaching the distal nerve.Precise axon targeting during nervous system development is controlled by families of axon guidance molecules including Netrins,Slits,Ephrins and Semaphorins.Several recent studies have indicated key roles of Netrin1,Slit3 and EphrinB2 signalling in controlling the formation of new nerve bridge tissue and precise axon regeneration after peripheral nerve transection injury.Inside the nerve bridge,nerve fibroblasts express EphrinB2 while migrating Schwann cells express the receptor EphB2.EphrinB2/EphB2 signalling between nerve fibroblasts and migrating Schwann cells is required for Sox2 upregulation in Schwann cells and the formation of Schwann cell cords within the nerve bridge to allow directional axon growth to the distal nerve stump.Macrophages in the outermost layer of the nerve bridge express Slit3 while migrating Schwann cells and regenerating axons express the receptor Robo1;within Schwann cells,Robo1 expression is also Sox2-dependent.Slit3/Robo1 signalling is required to keep migrating Schwann cells and regenerating axons inside the nerve bridge.In addition to the Slit3/Robo1 signalling system,migrating Schwann cells also express Netrin1 and regenerating axons express the DCC receptor.It appears that migrating Schwann cells could also use Netrin1 as a guidance cue to direct regenerating axons across the peripheral nerve gap.Engineered neural tissues have been suggested as promising alternatives for the repair of large peripheral nerve gaps.Therefore,understanding the function of classic axon guidance molecules in nerve bridge formation and their roles in axon regeneration could be highly beneficial in developing engineered neural tissue for more effective peripheral nerve repair.
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China,No.81371353(to XPD)
文摘The Slit family of axon guidance cues act as repulsive molecules for precise axon pathfinding and neuronal migration during nervous system development through interactions with specific Robo receptors.Although we previously reported that Slit1–3 and their receptors Robo1 and Robo2 are highly expressed in the adult mouse peripheral nervous system,how this expression changes after injury has not been well studied.Herein,we constructed a peripheral nerve injury mouse model by transecting the right sciatic nerve.At 14 days after injury,quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction was used to detect mRNA expression of Slit1–3 and Robo1–2 in L4–5 spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia,as well as the sciatic nerve.Immunohistochemical analysis was performed to examine Slit1–3,Robo1–2,neurofilament heavy chain,F4/80,and vimentin in L4–5 spinal cord,L4 dorsal root ganglia,and the sciatic nerve.Co-expression of Slit1–3 and Robo1–2 in L4 dorsal root ganglia was detected by in situ hybridization.In addition,Slit1–3 and Robo1–2 protein expression in L4–5 spinal cord,L4 dorsal root ganglia,and sciatic nerve were detected by western blot assay.The results showed no significant changes of Slit1–3 or Robo1–2 mRNA expression in the spinal cord within 14 days after injury.In the dorsal root ganglion,Slit1–3 and Robo1–2 mRNA expression were initially downregulated within 4 days after injury;however,Robo1–2 mRNA expression returned to the control level,while Slit1–3 mRNA expression remained upregulated during regeneration from 4–14 days after injury.In the sciatic nerve,Slit1–3 and their receptors Robo1–2 were all expressed in the proximal nerve stump;however,Slit1,Slit2,and Robo2 were barely detectable in the nerve bridge and distal nerve stump within 14 days after injury.Slit3 was highly ex-pressed in macrophages surrounding the nerve bridge and slightly downregulated in the distal nerve stump within 14 days after injury.Robo1 was upregulated in vimentin-positive cells and migrating Schwann cells inside the nerve bridge.Robo1 was also upregulated in Schwann cells of the distal nerve stump within 14 days after injury.Our findings indicate that Slit3 is the major ligand expressed in the nerve bridge and distal nerve stump during peripheral nerve regeneration,and Slit3/Robo signaling could play a key role in peripheral nerve repair after injury.This study was approved by Plymouth University Animal Welfare Ethical Review Board (approval No.30/3203) on April 12,2014.