Open Access
Open access
eLife, volume 10

Failures of nerve regeneration caused by aging or chronic denervation are rescued by restoring Schwann cell c-Jun

Laura J. Wagstaff 1
José Antonio Gómez-Sánchez 2
Shaline V Fazal 1
Georg Otto 3
Alastair M Kilpatrick 4
Kirolos G.F.T. Michael 1
Liam Yn Wong 1
K. H. Ma 5
Mark Turmaine 1
John Svaren 5
Tessa Gordon 6
Peter Arthur Farraj 7
Sergio Velasco-Aviles 2, 8
Hugo Cabedo 2, 8
Cristina Benito 1
Rhona Mirsky 1
Kristjan R. Jessen 1
Show full list: 17 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-01-21
Journal: eLife
scimago Q1
SJR3.932
CiteScore12.9
Impact factor6.4
ISSN2050084X
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
General Medicine
General Immunology and Microbiology
General Neuroscience
Abstract

After nerve injury, myelin and Remak Schwann cells reprogram to repair cells specialized for regeneration. Normally providing strong regenerative support, these cells fail in aging animals, and during chronic denervation that results from slow axon growth. This impairs axonal regeneration and causes significant clinical problems. In mice, we find that repair cells express reduced c-Jun protein as regenerative support provided by these cells declines during aging and chronic denervation. In both cases, genetically restoring Schwann cell c-Jun levels restores regeneration to control levels. We identify potential gene candidates mediating this effect and implicate Shh in the control of Schwann cell c-Jun levels. This establishes that a common mechanism, reduced c-Jun in Schwann cells, regulates success and failure of nerve repair both during aging and chronic denervation. This provides a molecular framework for addressing important clinical problems, suggesting molecular pathways that can be targeted to promote repair in the PNS.

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