Akt/Protein Kinase B Prevents Injury-Induced Motoneuron Death and Accelerates Axonal Regeneration

Kazuhiko Namikawa, Masaru Honma(University Dermatology), Kōji Abe, Masumi Takeda(Asahikawa Medical College Hospital), Khalil Mansur, Tatsuo Obata, Akiko Miwa(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Haruo Okado(Japan Science and Technology Agency), Hiroshi Kiyama(Japan Science and Technology Agency)
Journal of Neuroscience
April 15, 2000
Cited by 242Open Access
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Abstract

Motoneurons require neurotrophic factors for their survival and axonal projection during development, as well as nerve regeneration. By using the axotomy-induced neuronal death paradigm and adenovirus-mediated gene transfer, we attempted to gain insight into the functional significances of major growth factor receptor downstream cascades, Ras-extracellular signal-regulated kinase (Ras-ERK) pathway and phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase-Akt (PI3K-Akt) pathway. After neonatal hypoglossal nerve transection, the constitutively active Akt-overexpressing neurons could survive as well as those overexpressing Bcl-2, whereas the constitutively active ERK kinase (MEK)-overexpressing ones failed to survive. A dominant negative Akt experiment demonstrated that inhibition of Akt pathway hastened axotomy-induced neuronal death in the neonate. In addition, the dominant active Akt-overexpressing adult hypoglossal neurons showed accelerated axonal regeneration after axotomy. These results suggest that Akt plays dual roles in motoneuronal survival and nerve regeneration in vivo and that PI3K-Akt pathway is probably more vital in neuronal survival after injury than Ras-ERK pathway.


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