Publication | Closed Access
Cdh1-APC Controls Axonal Growth and Patterning in the Mammalian Brain
362
Citations
16
References
2004
Year
Brain DevelopmentCdh1 Rna InterferenceCellular NeurobiologyCellular PhysiologySocial SciencesEpendymaExperimental NeuropathologyNeuroimmunologyCell SignalingAnaphase-promoting ComplexCdh1 KnockdownMolecular NeuroscienceNervous SystemCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionNeuroanatomyMammalian BrainNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyCentral Nervous SystemMedicineNeural Stem Cell
The anaphase-promoting complex (APC) is highly expressed in postmitotic neurons, but its function in the nervous system was previously unknown. We report that the inhibition of Cdh1-APC in primary neurons specifically enhanced axonal growth. Cdh1 knockdown in cerebellar slice overlay assays and in the developing rat cerebellum in vivo revealed cell-autonomous abnormalities in layer-specific growth of granule neuron axons and parallel fiber patterning. Cdh1 RNA interference in neurons was also found to override the inhibitory influence of myelin on axonal growth. Thus, Cdh1-APC appears to play a role in regulating axonal growth and patterning in the developing brain that may also limit the growth of injured axons in the adult brain.
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