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STAT3 Controls the Long-Term Survival and Phenotype of Repair Schwann Cells during Nerve Regeneration

After nerve injury, Schwann cells convert to a phenotype specialized to promote repair. But during the slow process of axonal regrowth, these repair Schwann cells gradually lose their regeneration-supportive features and eventually die. Although this is a key reason for the frequent regeneration fai...

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Autores principales: Benito, Cristina, Davis, Catherine M., Gomez-Sanchez, Jose A., Turmaine, Mark, Meijer, Dies, Poli, Valeria, Mirsky, Rhona, Jessen, Kristjan R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Society for Neuroscience 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5413174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28320842
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3481-16.2017
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author Benito, Cristina
Davis, Catherine M.
Gomez-Sanchez, Jose A.
Turmaine, Mark
Meijer, Dies
Poli, Valeria
Mirsky, Rhona
Jessen, Kristjan R.
author_facet Benito, Cristina
Davis, Catherine M.
Gomez-Sanchez, Jose A.
Turmaine, Mark
Meijer, Dies
Poli, Valeria
Mirsky, Rhona
Jessen, Kristjan R.
author_sort Benito, Cristina
collection PubMed
description After nerve injury, Schwann cells convert to a phenotype specialized to promote repair. But during the slow process of axonal regrowth, these repair Schwann cells gradually lose their regeneration-supportive features and eventually die. Although this is a key reason for the frequent regeneration failures in humans, the transcriptional mechanisms that control long-term survival and phenotype of repair cells have not been studied, and the molecular signaling underlying their decline is obscure. We show, in mice, that Schwann cell STAT3 has a dual role. It supports the long-term survival of repair Schwann cells and is required for the maintenance of repair Schwann cell properties. In contrast, STAT3 is less important for the initial generation of repair Schwann cells after injury. In repair Schwann cells, we find that Schwann cell STAT3 activation by Tyr705 phosphorylation is sustained during long-term denervation. STAT3 is required for maintaining autocrine Schwann cell survival signaling, and inactivation of Schwann cell STAT3 results in a striking loss of repair cells from chronically denervated distal stumps. STAT3 inactivation also results in abnormal morphology of repair cells and regeneration tracks, and failure to sustain expression of repair cell markers, including Shh, GDNF, and BDNF. Because Schwann cell development proceeds normally without STAT3, the function of this factor appears restricted to Schwann cells after injury. This identification of transcriptional mechanisms that support long-term survival and differentiation of repair cells will help identify, and eventually correct, the failures that lead to the deterioration of this important cell population. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Although injured peripheral nerves contain repair Schwann cells that provide signals and spatial clues for promoting regeneration, the clinical outcome after nerve damage is frequently poor. A key reason for this is that, during the slow growth of axons through the proximal parts of injured nerves repair, Schwann cells gradually lose regeneration-supporting features and eventually die. Identification of signals that sustain repair cells is therefore an important goal. We have found that in mice the transcription factor STAT3 protects these cells from death and contributes to maintaining the molecular and morphological repair phenotype that promotes axonal regeneration. Defining the molecular mechanisms that maintain repair Schwann cells is an essential step toward developing therapeutic strategies that improve nerve regeneration and functional recovery.
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spelling pubmed-54131742017-05-16 STAT3 Controls the Long-Term Survival and Phenotype of Repair Schwann Cells during Nerve Regeneration Benito, Cristina Davis, Catherine M. Gomez-Sanchez, Jose A. Turmaine, Mark Meijer, Dies Poli, Valeria Mirsky, Rhona Jessen, Kristjan R. J Neurosci Research Articles After nerve injury, Schwann cells convert to a phenotype specialized to promote repair. But during the slow process of axonal regrowth, these repair Schwann cells gradually lose their regeneration-supportive features and eventually die. Although this is a key reason for the frequent regeneration failures in humans, the transcriptional mechanisms that control long-term survival and phenotype of repair cells have not been studied, and the molecular signaling underlying their decline is obscure. We show, in mice, that Schwann cell STAT3 has a dual role. It supports the long-term survival of repair Schwann cells and is required for the maintenance of repair Schwann cell properties. In contrast, STAT3 is less important for the initial generation of repair Schwann cells after injury. In repair Schwann cells, we find that Schwann cell STAT3 activation by Tyr705 phosphorylation is sustained during long-term denervation. STAT3 is required for maintaining autocrine Schwann cell survival signaling, and inactivation of Schwann cell STAT3 results in a striking loss of repair cells from chronically denervated distal stumps. STAT3 inactivation also results in abnormal morphology of repair cells and regeneration tracks, and failure to sustain expression of repair cell markers, including Shh, GDNF, and BDNF. Because Schwann cell development proceeds normally without STAT3, the function of this factor appears restricted to Schwann cells after injury. This identification of transcriptional mechanisms that support long-term survival and differentiation of repair cells will help identify, and eventually correct, the failures that lead to the deterioration of this important cell population. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Although injured peripheral nerves contain repair Schwann cells that provide signals and spatial clues for promoting regeneration, the clinical outcome after nerve damage is frequently poor. A key reason for this is that, during the slow growth of axons through the proximal parts of injured nerves repair, Schwann cells gradually lose regeneration-supporting features and eventually die. Identification of signals that sustain repair cells is therefore an important goal. We have found that in mice the transcription factor STAT3 protects these cells from death and contributes to maintaining the molecular and morphological repair phenotype that promotes axonal regeneration. Defining the molecular mechanisms that maintain repair Schwann cells is an essential step toward developing therapeutic strategies that improve nerve regeneration and functional recovery. Society for Neuroscience 2017-04-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5413174/ /pubmed/28320842 http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3481-16.2017 Text en Copyright © 2017 Benito, Davis et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium provided that the original work is properly attributed.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Benito, Cristina
Davis, Catherine M.
Gomez-Sanchez, Jose A.
Turmaine, Mark
Meijer, Dies
Poli, Valeria
Mirsky, Rhona
Jessen, Kristjan R.
STAT3 Controls the Long-Term Survival and Phenotype of Repair Schwann Cells during Nerve Regeneration
title STAT3 Controls the Long-Term Survival and Phenotype of Repair Schwann Cells during Nerve Regeneration
title_full STAT3 Controls the Long-Term Survival and Phenotype of Repair Schwann Cells during Nerve Regeneration
title_fullStr STAT3 Controls the Long-Term Survival and Phenotype of Repair Schwann Cells during Nerve Regeneration
title_full_unstemmed STAT3 Controls the Long-Term Survival and Phenotype of Repair Schwann Cells during Nerve Regeneration
title_short STAT3 Controls the Long-Term Survival and Phenotype of Repair Schwann Cells during Nerve Regeneration
title_sort stat3 controls the long-term survival and phenotype of repair schwann cells during nerve regeneration
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5413174/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28320842
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3481-16.2017
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