Nogo-A-Deficient Mice Reveal Strain-Dependent Differences in Axonal Regeneration
Open Access
- 24 May 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 26 (21) , 5591-5603
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.1103-06.2006
Abstract
Nogo-A, a membrane protein enriched in myelin of the adult CNS, inhibits neurite growth and regeneration; neutralizing antibodies or receptor blockers enhance regeneration and plasticity in the injured adult CNS and lead to improved functional outcome. Here we show that Nogo-A-specific knock-outs in backcrossed 129X1/SvJ and C57BL/6 mice display enhanced regeneration of the corticospinal tract after injury. Surprisingly, 129X1/SvJ Nogo-A knock-out mice had two to four times more regenerating fibers than C57BL/6 Nogo-A knock-out mice. Wild-type newborn 129X1/SvJ dorsal root gangliain vitrogrew a much higher number of processes in 3 d than C57BL/6 ganglia, confirming the stronger endogenous neurite growth potential of the 129X1/SvJ strain. cDNA microarrays of the intact and lesioned spinal cord of wild-type as well as Nogo-A knock-out animals showed a number of genes to be differentially expressed in the two mouse strains; many of them belong to functional categories associated with neurite growth, synapse formation, and inflammation/immune responses. These results show that neurite regenerationin vivo, under the permissive condition of Nogo-A deletion, and neurite outgrowthin vitrodiffer significantly in two widely used mouse strains and that Nogo-A is an important endogenous inhibitor of axonal regeneration in the adult spinal cord.Keywords
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