Akt/protein kinase B prevents injury-induced motoneuron death and accelerates axonal regeneration

K Namikawa, M Honma, K Abe, M Takeda… - Journal of …, 2000 - Soc Neuroscience
K Namikawa, M Honma, K Abe, M Takeda, K Mansur, T Obata, A Miwa, H Okado, H Kiyama
Journal of Neuroscience, 2000Soc Neuroscience
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 …
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.
Soc Neuroscience