Neural Regeneration Flashcards

1
Q

true/false neither CNS or PNS neurons can regenerate

A

False, when peripheral axons are damaged, the proximal portions can partially or completely regenerate distally. (cell body can be in PNS or CNS).

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2
Q

what process tends to inhibit regeneration of central axons/neurons

A

glial scar formation

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3
Q

what can be expected up to 2 weeks post PNS axonal injury?

A

peripheral nucleus
loss of nissl substance (chromolysis)

wallerian degeneration

  • degen of axon and myelination sheath below the site of injury
  • ->debris phagocytosed by macrophage influx

–>Muscle Fibre Atrophy

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4
Q

What happens 3wks post PNS axonal injury

A

schwann cell proliferation, creating compact cord.

growing axon penetrates the compact cord.

–>muscle fibre atrophy continues

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5
Q

What can happen 3 months post PNS axonal injury? (successful cases)

A

successful regeneration
-electrical activity restored

—>muscle fibre regeneration!

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6
Q

What can happen 3 months post PNS axonal injury? (unsuccessful cases)

A

neuroma formation, bundling of axon at the site of injury

–>muscle fibre atrophied

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7
Q

T/F crushed and cut axons regenerate at the same rate

A

FALSE. repair is faster if axon is crushed rather than cut.

  • the better preserved the axonal alignment the easier is to regenerate.
  • in cut axons some may regenerate incorrectly, end up servicing the wrong conduits.
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8
Q

details of primary CNS spinal cord injury (incl Tx)

A

immediate.
injury due to physical damage –>cellular loss

Tx to minimize extent of primary damage. (ex tissue plasminogen activator for stroke)

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9
Q

details of secondary CNS spinal cord injury in short term (minutes/hours)

A

degenerative insults.

  • ischaemia
  • Ca 2+ influx
  • lipid peroxidation & free radical production
  • glutamate excitotoxicity
  • BBB breakdown
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10
Q

details of secondary CNS spinal cord injury over hours to days/weeks

A
  • immune cell infiltration, microglial activation

- cytokines, chemokines, metalloproteases

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11
Q

details of secondary CNS spinal cord injury over days/weeks

A
  • axonal degeneration
  • demyelination
  • apoptosis - neuronal and oligendendroglial
  • astrocytic gliosis and glial scar formation
  • syrinx cavity formation and meningeal fibroblast migration
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12
Q

strategies to repair the CNS?

A
  • protect surviving cells
  • regrowth of surviving neurons & remyelination
  • modulate astrocytic gliosis (wound repair and scar formation)
  • neural stem cells (mobilise endogenous cells, transplant exogenous cells)
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13
Q

what factors impede axonal regeneration and how to tx?

A

Problem: lack of trophic support
Solution: encourage axons to grow by providing growth promoting factors (neurotrophin: NGF, BDNF)

Prob: axon regrowth inhibited by wound environment
Soln: inhibit growth blocking factors. Ie astrocytic gliosis and glial scar; myelin inhibitors; developmental guidance molecules

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14
Q

Axonal plasticity vs axonal regeneration?

A

Plasticity described compensation by other uninjured axons to branch and service the conduits previously innervated by the injured axon.–>”axonal sprouting”

regeneration is complete renewal of injured axon

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15
Q

what does astrocytic gliosis cause?

A
  • upregulate astrocyte cytoskeleton proteins (GFAP).
  • secrete ECM (chondroiton sulfate proteoglycans)
  • secrete cytokines (IL-1, TNF-alpha) and growth factors (NGF/BDNF)
  • increase expression of development axon guidance molecules

–>glial scar formation–>forms a barrier between injury site and healthy site

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16
Q

how to inhibit astrocyte gliosis and improve regeneration?

A

blocking of astrocyte ECM via CSPG inhibition or collagen IV inihibition