Publication | Open Access
A Functional Role for Intra-Axonal Protein Synthesis during Axonal Regeneration from Adult Sensory Neurons
338
Citations
87
References
2001
Year
Functional RoleCytoskeletonPeripheral NerveCellular NeurobiologyCellular PhysiologySocial SciencesProtein SynthesisNeuroregenerationIntra-axonal Protein SynthesisNeurogenesisIntradendritic Protein SynthesisMolecular NeuroscienceMorphogenesisAdult Sensory NeuronsNeural Tissue EngineeringNervous SystemCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyNeuroanatomyAxonal RegenerationNeuroscienceMolecular NeurobiologyCentral Nervous SystemMedicineNeural Stem Cell
Although intradendritic protein synthesis has been documented in adult neurons, the question of whether axons actively synthesize proteins remains controversial. Adult sensory neurons that are conditioned by axonal crush can rapidly extend processes in vitro by regulating the translation of existing mRNAs (Twiss et al., 2000). These regenerating processes contain axonal but not dendritic proteins. Here we show that these axonal processes of adult sensory neurons cultured after conditioning injury contain ribosomal proteins, translational initiation factors, and rRNA. Pure preparations of regenerating axons separated from the DRG cell bodies can actively synthesize proteins in vitro and contain ribosome-bound beta-actin and neurofilament mRNAs. Blocking protein synthesis in these regenerating sensory axons causes a rapid retraction of their growth cones when communication with the cell body is blocked by axotomy or colchicine treatment. These findings indicate that axons of adult mammalian neurons can synthesize proteins and suggest that, under some circumstances, intra-axonal translation contributes to structural integrity of the growth cone in regenerating axons. By immunofluorescence, translation factors, ribosomal proteins, and rRNA were also detected in motor axons of ventral spinal roots analyzed after 7 d in vivo after a peripheral axonal crush injury. Thus, adult motor neurons are also likely capable of intra-axonal protein synthesis in vivo after axonal injury.
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