Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/45524
Title: Retinal axon regeneration in the lizard Gallotia galloti in the presence of CNS myelin and oligodendrocytes
Authors: Lang, Dirk M.
Monzón-Mayor, Maximina 
Bandtlow, Christine E.
Stuermer, Claudia A.O.
Keywords: Central-Nervous-System
Dorsal-Root Ganglion
Growth Cone Collapse
Rat Spinal-Cord
Neurite Growth, et al
Issue Date: 1998
Publisher: 0894-1491
Journal: GLIA 
Abstract: Retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axons in lizards (reptiles) were found to regenerate after optic nerve injury. To determine whether regeneration occurs because the visual pathway has growth-supporting glia cells or whether RGC axons regrow despite the presence of neurite growth-inhibitory components, the substrate properties of lizard optic nerve myelin and of oligodendrocytes were analyzed in vitro, using rat dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. In addition, the response of lizard RGC axons upon contact with rat and reptilian oligodendrocytes or with myelin proteins from the mammalian central nervous system (CNS) was monitored. Lizard optic nerve myelin inhibited extension of rat DRG neurites, and lizard oligodendrocytes elicited DRG; growth cone collapse. Both effects were partially reversed by antibody IN-1 against mammalian 35/250 kD neurite growth inhibitors, and IN-1 stained myelinated fiber tracts in the lizard CNS. However, lizard RGC growth cones grew freely across oligodendrocytes from the rat and the reptilian CNS. Mammalian CNS myelin proteins reconstituted into liposomes and added to elongating lizard RGC axons caused at most a transient collapse reaction. Growth cones always recovered within an hour and regrew.Thus, lizard CNS myelin and oligodendrocytes possess nonpermissive substrate properties for DRG neurons-like corresponding structures and cells in the mammalian CNS, including mammalian-like neurite growth inhibitors. Lizard RGC axons, however, appear to be far less sensitive to these inhibitory substrate components and therefore may be able to regenerate through the visual pathway despite the presence of myelin and oligodendrocytes that block growth of DRG neurites. (C) 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/45524
ISSN: 0894-1491
DOI: 10.1002/(SICI)1098-1136(199805)23:1<61::AID-GLIA6>3.0.CO;2-7
Source: GLIA[ISSN 0894-1491],v. 23, p. 61-74
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