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The Struggle to Make CNS Axons Regenerate: Why Has It Been so Difficult?
JW. Fawcett,
Language English Country United States
Document type Journal Article, Review
Grant support
MR/R004463/1
Medical Research Council - United Kingdom
MR/R004544/1
Medical Research Council - United Kingdom
Centre of Reconstructive Neuroscience", registration number CZ.02.1.01/0.0./0.0/15_003/0000419
Czech ministry of education
NLK
ProQuest Central
from 1997-01-01 to 1 year ago
Medline Complete (EBSCOhost)
from 2009-08-01 to 1 year ago
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
from 1997-01-01 to 1 year ago
- MeSH
- Axonal Transport physiology MeSH
- Axons physiology MeSH
- Central Nervous System cytology physiology MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Neural Inhibition physiology MeSH
- Neurogenesis physiology MeSH
- Protein Biosynthesis physiology MeSH
- Nerve Regeneration physiology MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Animals MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Review MeSH
Axon regeneration in the CNS is inhibited by many extrinsic and intrinsic factors. Because these act in parallel, no single intervention has been sufficient to enable full regeneration of damaged axons in the adult mammalian CNS. In the external environment, NogoA and CSPGs are strongly inhibitory to the regeneration of adult axons. CNS neurons lose intrinsic regenerative ability as they mature: embryonic but not mature neurons can grow axons for long distances when transplanted into the adult CNS, and regeneration fails with maturity in in vitro axotomy models. The causes of this loss of regeneration include partitioning of neurons into axonal and dendritic fields with many growth-related molecules directed specifically to dendrites and excluded from axons, changes in axonal signalling due to changes in expression and localization of receptors and their ligands, changes in local translation of proteins in axons, and changes in cytoskeletal dynamics after injury. Also with neuronal maturation come epigenetic changes in neurons, with many of the transcription factor binding sites that drive axon growth-related genes becoming inaccessible. The overall aim for successful regeneration is to ensure that the right molecules are expressed after axotomy and to arrange for them to be transported to the right place in the neuron, including the damaged axon tip.
References provided by Crossref.org
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