The cell intrinsic factors that determine whether a neuron regenerates or undergoes apoptosis in response to axonal injury are not well defined. Here we show that the mixed-lineage dual leucine zipper kinase (DLK) is an essential upstream mediator of both of these divergent outcomes in the same cell type. Optic nerve crush injury leads to rapid elevation of DLK protein, first in the axons of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and then in their cell bodies. DLK is required for the majority of gene expression changes in RGCs initiated by injury, including induction of both proapoptotic and regeneration-associated genes. Deletion of DLK in retina results in robust and sustained protection of RGCs from degeneration after optic nerve injury. Despite this improved survival, the number of axons that regrow beyond the injury site is substantially reduced, even when the tumor suppressor phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) is deleted to enhance intrinsic growth potential. These findings demonstrate that these seemingly contradictory responses to injury are mechanistically coupled through a DLK-based damage detection mechanism.A xonal damage results in significant neuronal cell death and axon degeneration, often leading to permanent functional deficits. For example, optic nerve crush rapidly induces a stress response in retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) that includes profound alterations in gene expression patterns (1) and ultimately leads to apoptosis of these neurons (2). As axon injury may occur a significant distance from the cell body, it has been proposed that retrograde molecular motors play a critical role in conveying damage signals to the nucleus, allowing the cell to respond to damage (3). Attenuation of this transport mechanism has been shown to reduce degeneration, suggesting that the ability of the nucleus to detect an insult is an essential component of the injury response (4).Recent data suggest that dual leucine zipper kinase (DLK) is an essential component of the neuronal response to axon damage. DLK protein is present in axons, and protein levels are increased in response to axonal injury (5). Loss of DLK has been shown to protect distal axons from Wallerian degeneration (6) and to abrogate stress-induced retrograde c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) signaling through interaction with the scaffolding protein JNK-interacting protein 3 (JIP3) (7-9). In many instances, injury-induced JNK activation in neurons results in apoptosis through phosphorylation of activator protein 1 (AP-1) transcription factors such as c-Jun, which initiates a proapoptotic gene expression program (10, 11). Consistent with this, genetic deletion of JNK2 and/or JNK3 is sufficient to protect neurons from degeneration in a range of CNS injury models, including axotomy (12-14), although the role of DLK in these contexts is not known.In contrast, DLK has been shown to regulate axon regeneration after axonal injury in adult peripheral nerves (9) and invertebrate systems (5, 15). The mechanism underlying the divergence between these apoptotic and reg...
The intrinsic properties of mammalian spinal motoneurons provide them with the capability to produce high rates of sustained firing in response to transient inputs (bistability). Even though it has been suggested that a persistent dendritic calcium current is responsible for the depolarizing drive underlying this firing property, such a current has not been demonstrated in these cells. In this study, calcium currents are recorded from functionally mature mouse spinal motoneurons using somatic whole-cell patch-clamp techniques. Under these conditions a component of the current demonstrated kinetics consistent with a current originating at a site spatially segregated from the soma. In response to step commands this component was seen as a late-onset, low amplitude persistent current whilst in response to depolarizing-repolarizing ramp commands a low voltage clockwise current hysteresis was recorded. Simulations using a neuromorphic motoneuron model could reproduce these currents only if a noninactivating calcium conductance was placed in the dendritic compartments. Pharmacological studies demonstrated that both the late-onset and hysteretic currents demonstrated sensitivity to both dihydropyridines and the L-channel activator FPL-64176. Furthermore, the alpha1D subunits of L-type calcium channels were immunohistochemically demonstrated on motoneuronal dendrites. It is concluded that there are dendritically located L-type channels in mammalian motoneurons capable of mediating a persistent depolarizing drive to the soma and which probably mediate the bistable behaviour of these cells.
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