Specific inhibition of ADAM17/TACE promotes neurogenesis in the injured motor cortex.
Noelia Geribaldi-DoldánManuel CarrascoMaribel Murillo-CarreteroSamuel Domínguez-GarcíaFrancisco J García-CózarJuan Pedro Muñoz-MirandaValme Del Río-GarcíaCristina VerásteguiCarmen CastroPublished in: Cell death & disease (2018)
Brain injuries in the adult mammalian brain are accompanied by a fast neurogenic response inside neurogenic niches. However, this response does not contribute to the generation of new neurons within damaged tissues like the cerebral cortex, which are essentially non-neurogenic. This occurs because injuries create a hostile environment that favors gliogenesis. Overexpression and sequential activation of the ADAM17/TGFα/EGFR signaling cascade are crucial for the generation of this gliogenic/non-neurogenic environment. Here, we demonstrate that chronic local infusion of a general metalloprotease inhibitor in areas of traumatic cortical injury in adult mice moderately increased the number of neuroblasts around the lesion, by facilitating the survival of neuroblasts and undifferentiated progenitors, which had migrated to the perilesional area from the subventricular zone. Next, we generated a dominant-negative version of ADAM17 metalloprotease, consisting of a truncated protein containing only the pro-domain (ADAM17-Pro). Specific inhibition of ADAM17 activity by ADAM17-Pro overexpression increased the generation of new neurons in vitro. Local overexpression of ADAM17-Pro in injured cortex in vivo, mediated by lentiviral vectors, dramatically increased the number of neuroblasts observed at the lesion 14 days after injury. Those neuroblasts were able to differentiate into cholinergic and GABAergic neurons 28 days after injury. We conclude that ADAM17 is a putative target to develop new therapeutic tools for the treatment of traumatic brain injury.
Keyphrases
- spinal cord injury
- traumatic brain injury
- spinal cord
- cell proliferation
- anti inflammatory
- small cell lung cancer
- gene expression
- functional connectivity
- resting state
- white matter
- transcription factor
- low dose
- cerebral ischemia
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- multiple sclerosis
- type diabetes
- gene therapy
- signaling pathway
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- insulin resistance
- blood brain barrier
- tyrosine kinase
- psychometric properties
- transforming growth factor
- childhood cancer
- free survival
- drug induced