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result(s) for
"Axotomy"
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Long-Term Imaging of Caenorhabditis elegans Using Nanoparticle-Mediated Immobilization
2013
One advantage of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans as a model organism is its suitability for in vivo optical microscopy. Imaging C. elegans often requires animals to be immobilized to avoid movement-related artifacts. Immobilization has been performed by application of anesthetics or by introducing physical constraints using glue or specialized microfluidic devices. Here we present a method for immobilizing C. elegans using polystyrene nanoparticles and agarose pads. Our technique is technically simple, does not expose the worm to toxic substances, and allows recovery of animals. We evaluate the method and show that the polystyrene beads increase friction between the worm and agarose pad. We use our method to quantify calcium transients and long-term regrowth in single neurons following axotomy by a femtosecond laser.
Journal Article
Neurotoxic reactive astrocytes are induced by activated microglia
by
Buckwalter, Marion S.
,
Bohlen, Christopher J.
,
Dawson, Valina L.
in
631/378/2596
,
631/378/2596/1308
,
Animals
2017
Reactive astrocytes are strongly induced by central nervous system (CNS) injury and disease, but their role is poorly understood. Here we show that a subtype of reactive astrocytes, which we termed A1, is induced by classically activated neuroinflammatory microglia. We show that activated microglia induce A1 astrocytes by secreting Il-1α, TNF and C1q, and that these cytokines together are necessary and sufficient to induce A1 astrocytes. A1 astrocytes lose the ability to promote neuronal survival, outgrowth, synaptogenesis and phagocytosis, and induce the death of neurons and oligodendrocytes. Death of axotomized CNS neurons
in vivo
is prevented when the formation of A1 astrocytes is blocked. Finally, we show that A1 astrocytes are abundant in various human neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer’s, Huntington’s and Parkinson’s disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and multiple sclerosis. Taken together these findings help to explain why CNS neurons die after axotomy, strongly suggest that A1 astrocytes contribute to the death of neurons and oligodendrocytes in neurodegenerative disorders, and provide opportunities for the development of new treatments for these diseases.
A reactive astrocyte subtype termed A1 is induced after injury or disease of the central nervous system and subsequently promotes the death of neurons and oligodendrocytes.
The production and roles of reactive astrocytes
Different types of reactive astrocyte are generated after various injuries and insults to the brain, but less is known about what these astrocyte subtypes do. Here, Shane Liddelow
et al
. describe how these reactive astrocytes are induced by neuroinflammatory microglia. The authors also explore the functional roles of reactive astrocytes in the progression of disease or damaged states, and show that A1 astrocytes contribute to the death of neurons in the central nervous system under certain conditions.
Journal Article
A Fully Automated Microfluidic Femtosecond Laser Axotomy Platform for Nerve Regeneration Studies in C. elegans
2014
Femtosecond laser nanosurgery has been widely accepted as an axonal injury model, enabling nerve regeneration studies in the small model organism, Caenorhabditis elegans. To overcome the time limitations of manual worm handling techniques, automation and new immobilization technologies must be adopted to improve throughput in these studies. While new microfluidic immobilization techniques have been developed that promise to reduce the time required for axotomies, there is a need for automated procedures to minimize the required amount of human intervention and accelerate the axotomy processes crucial for high-throughput. Here, we report a fully automated microfluidic platform for performing laser axotomies of fluorescently tagged neurons in living Caenorhabditis elegans. The presented automation process reduces the time required to perform axotomies within individual worms to ∼17 s/worm, at least one order of magnitude faster than manual approaches. The full automation is achieved with a unique chip design and an operation sequence that is fully computer controlled and synchronized with efficient and accurate image processing algorithms. The microfluidic device includes a T-shaped architecture and three-dimensional microfluidic interconnects to serially transport, position, and immobilize worms. The image processing algorithms can identify and precisely position axons targeted for ablation. There were no statistically significant differences observed in reconnection probabilities between axotomies carried out with the automated system and those performed manually with anesthetics. The overall success rate of automated axotomies was 67.4±3.2% of the cases (236/350) at an average processing rate of 17.0±2.4 s. This fully automated platform establishes a promising methodology for prospective genome-wide screening of nerve regeneration in C. elegans in a truly high-throughput manner.
Journal Article
Axon regeneration requires coordinate activation of p38 and JNK MAPK pathways
2011
Signaling pathways essential for axon regeneration, but not for neuron development or function, are particularly well suited targets for therapeutic intervention. We find that the parallel PMK-3(p38) and KGB-1(JNK) MAPK pathways must be coordinately activated to promote axon regeneration. Axon regeneration fails if the activity of either pathway is absent. These two MAPKs are coregulated by the E3 ubiquitin ligase RPM-1(Phr1) via targeted degradation of the MAPKKKs DLK-1 and MLK-1 and by the MAPK phosphatase VHP-1(MKP7), which negatively regulates both PMK-3(p38) and KGB-1(JNK).
Journal Article
Molecular and cellular identification of the immune response in peripheral ganglia following nerve injury
2018
Background
Neuroinflammation accompanies neural trauma and most neurological diseases. Axotomy in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) leads to dramatic changes in the injured neuron: the cell body expresses a distinct set of genes known as regeneration-associated genes, the distal axonal segment degenerates and its debris is cleared, and the axons in the proximal segment form growth cones and extend neurites. These processes are orchestrated in part by immune and other non-neuronal cells. Macrophages in ganglia play an integral role in supporting regeneration. Here, we explore further the molecular and cellular components of the injury-induced immune response within peripheral ganglia.
Methods
Adult male wild-type (WT) and
Ccr2
−/−
mice were subjected to a unilateral transection of the sciatic nerve and axotomy of the superior cervical ganglion (SCG). Antibody arrays were used to determine the expression of chemokines and cytokines in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) and SCG. Flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry were utilized to identify the cellular composition of the injury-induced immune response within ganglia.
Results
Chemokine expression in the ganglia differed 48 h after nerve injury with a large increase in macrophage inflammatory protein-1γ in the SCG but not in the DRG, while C-C class chemokine ligand 2 was highly expressed in both ganglia. Differences between WT and
Ccr2
−/−
mice were also observed with increased C-C class chemokine ligand 6/C10 expression in the WT DRG compared to C-C class chemokine receptor 2 (CCR2)
−/−
DRG and increased CXCL5 expression in CCR2
−/−
SCG compared to WT. Diminished macrophage accumulation in the DRG and SCG of
Ccr2
−/−
mice was found compared to WT ganglia 7 days after nerve injury. Interestingly, neutrophils were found in the SCG but not in the DRG. Cytokine expression, measured 7 days after injury, differed between ganglion type and genotype. Macrophage activation was assayed by colabeling ganglia with the anti-inflammatory marker CD206 and the macrophage marker CD68, and an almost complete colocalization of the two markers was found in both ganglia.
Conclusions
This study demonstrates both molecular and cellular differences in the nerve injury-induced immune response between DRG and SCG and between WT and
Ccr2
−/−
mice.
Journal Article
Microglia lacking a peroxisomal β-oxidation enzyme chronically alter their inflammatory profile without evoking neuronal and behavioral deficits
by
Van Damme, Philip
,
Beckers, Lien
,
Geric, Ivana
in
Ataxia
,
Auditory evoked potentials
,
Avoidance learning
2019
Background
Microglia play a central role in most neurological disorders, but the impact of microgliosis on brain environment and clinical functions is not fully understood. Mice lacking multifunctional protein-2 (MFP2), a pivotal enzyme in peroxisomal β-oxidation, develop a fatal disorder characterized by motor problems similar to the milder form of MFP2 deficiency in humans. The hallmark of disease in mice is the chronic proliferation of microglia in the brain, but molecular pathomechanisms that drive rapid clinical deterioration in human and mice remain unknown. In the present study, we identified the effects of specific deletion of MFP2 from microglia in the brain on immune responses, neuronal functioning, and behavior.
Methods
We created a novel
Cx3cr1-Mfp2
−/−
mouse model and studied the impact of MFP2 deficiency on microglial behavior at different ages using immunohistochemistry and real-time PCR. Pro- and anti-inflammatory responses of
Mfp2
−/−
microglia were assessed in vitro and in vivo after stimulation with IL-1β/INFγ and IL-4 (in vitro) and LPS and IL-4 (in vivo). Facial nerve axotomy was unilaterally performed in
Cx3cr1-Mfp2
−/−
and control mice, and microglial functioning in response to neuronal injury was subsequently analyzed by histology and real-time PCR. Finally, neuronal function, motor function, behavior, and cognition were assessed using brainstem auditory evoked potentials, grip strength and inverted grid test, open field exploration, and passive avoidance learning, respectively.
Results
We found that
Mfp2
−/−
microglia in a genetically intact brain environment adopt an inflammatory activated and proliferative state. In addition, we found that acute inflammatory and neuronal injury provoked normal responses of
Mfp2
−/−
microglia in
Cx3cr1-Mfp2
−/−
mice during the post-injury period. Despite chronic pro-inflammatory microglial reactivity,
Cx3cr1-Mfp2
−/−
mice exhibited normal neuronal transmission, clinical performance, and cognition.
Conclusion
Our data demonstrate that MFP2 deficiency in microglia causes intrinsic dysregulation of their inflammatory profile, which is not harmful to neuronal function, motor function, and cognition in mice during their first year of life.
Journal Article
Axotomy results in an increase in Thy-1 protein in the 35-day-old rat supraoptic nucleus
2023
We demonstrated previously that the hypothalamic supraoptic nucleus (SON) undergoes an axonal sprouting response following a unilateral lesion of the hypothalamo-neurohypophysial tract in a 35-day-old rat to repopulate the partially denervated neural lobe (NL). However, no sprouting occurs following the same injury in a 125-day-old rat. We previously reported a significant increase in Thy-1 protein in the SON of a 125-day-old rat compared to a 35-day-old rat in the absence of injury. Thy-1 is a cell surface glycoprotein shown to inhibit axonal outgrowth following injury; however, we did not look at axotomy’s effect on Thy-1 in the SON. Therefore, we sought to determine the integrin ligands that bind Thy-1 in the SON and how axotomy impacts Thy-1. Like what others have shown, the co-immunoprecipitation analysis demonstrated that Thy-1 interacts with αvß3 and αvß5 integrin dimers in the SON. We used western blot analysis to examine protein levels of Thy-1 and integrin subunits following injury in the 35- and 125-day-old rat SON and NL. Our results demonstrated that Thy-1 protein levels increase in the lesion SON in a 35-day-old rat. The quantitative dual-fluorescent analysis showed that the increase in Thy-1 in the lesion SON occurred in astrocytes. There was no change in Thy-1 or integrin protein levels following injury in the 125-day-old following injury. Furthermore, the axotomy significantly decreased Thy-1 protein levels in the NL of both 35- and 125-day-old rats. These results provide evidence that Thy-1 protein levels are injury dependent in the magnocellular neurosecretory system.
Journal Article
Elusive roles for reactive astrocytes in neurodegenerative diseases
by
Ceyzériat, Kelly
,
Escartin, Carole
,
Ben Haim, Lucile
in
Alzheimer’s disease
,
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
,
Astrocytes
2015
Astrocytes play crucial roles in the brain and are involved in the neuroinflammatory response. They become reactive in response to virtually all pathological situations in the brain such as axotomy, ischemia, infection, and neurodegenerative diseases (ND). Astrocyte reactivity was originally characterized by morphological changes (hypertrophy, remodeling of processes) and the overexpression of the intermediate filament glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). However, it is unclear how the normal supportive functions of astrocytes are altered by their reactive state. In ND, in which neuronal dysfunction and astrocyte reactivity take place over several years or decades, the issue is even more complex and highly debated, with several conflicting reports published recently. In this review, we discuss studies addressing the contribution of reactive astrocytes to ND. We describe the molecular triggers leading to astrocyte reactivity during ND, examine how some key astrocyte functions may be enhanced or altered during the disease process, and discuss how astrocyte reactivity may globally affect ND progression. Finally we will consider the anticipated developments in this important field. With this review, we aim to show that the detailed study of reactive astrocytes may open new perspectives for ND.
Journal Article
Axonal G3BP1 stress granule protein limits axonal mRNA translation and nerve regeneration
2018
Critical functions of intra-axonally synthesized proteins are thought to depend on regulated recruitment of mRNA from storage depots in axons. Here we show that axotomy of mammalian neurons induces translation of stored axonal mRNAs via regulation of the stress granule protein G3BP1, to support regeneration of peripheral nerves. G3BP1 aggregates within peripheral nerve axons in stress granule-like structures that decrease during regeneration, with a commensurate increase in phosphorylated G3BP1. Colocalization of G3BP1 with axonal mRNAs is also correlated with the growth state of the neuron. Disrupting G3BP functions by overexpressing a dominant-negative protein activates intra-axonal mRNA translation, increases axon growth in cultured neurons, disassembles axonal stress granule-like structures, and accelerates rat nerve regeneration in vivo.
G3BP1 is
RasGAP SH3 domain binding protein 1
that interacts with 48S pre-initiation complex when translation is stalled. Here, Twiss and colleagues show that neuronal G3BP1 can negatively regulate axonal mRNA translation, and inhibit axonal regeneration after injury.
Journal Article
Novel Insights into NeuN: from Neuronal Marker to Splicing Regulator
by
Yin, Qing
,
Hou, Zhi
,
Huang, Chen
in
Alternative Splicing
,
Animals
,
Antigens, Nuclear - physiology
2016
Neuronal nuclei (NeuN) is a well-recognized “marker” that is detected exclusively in post-mitotic neurons and was initially identified through an immunological screen to produce neuron-specific antibodies. Immunostaining evidence indicates that NeuN is distributed in the nuclei of mature neurons in nearly all parts of the vertebrate nervous system. NeuN is highly conserved among species and is stably expressed during specific stages of development. Therefore, NeuN has been considered to be a reliable marker of mature neurons for the past two decades. However, this role has been challenged by recent studies indicating that NeuN staining is variable and even absent during certain diseases and specific physiological states. More importantly, despite the widespread use of the anti-NeuN antibody, the natural identity of the NeuN protein remained elusive for 17 years. NeuN was recently eventually identified as an epitope of Rbfox3, which is a novel member of the Rbfox1 family of splicing factors. This identification might provide a novel perspective on NeuN expression during both physiological and pathological conditions. This review summarizes the current progress on the biochemical identity and biological significance of NeuN and recommends caution when applying NeuN immunoreactivity as a definitive marker of mature neurons in certain diseases and specific physiological states.
Journal Article