Abstract

ABSTRACTNeural damage is a devastating outcome of physical trauma. The glia are one of the main effectors of neuronal repair in the nervous system, but the dynamic interactions between peripheral neurons and Schwann cells during injury and regeneration remain incompletely characterized. Here, we combine laser microsurgery, genetic analysis, high-resolution intravital imaging and lattice light-sheet microscopy to study the interaction between Schwann cells and sensory neurons in a zebrafish model of neurotrauma. We found that chronic denervation by neuronal ablation leads to Schwann-cell death, whereas acute denervation by axonal severing does not affect the overall complexity and architecture of the glia. Neuronal-circuit regeneration begins when Schwann cells extend bridging processes to close the injury gap. Regenerating axons grow faster and directionally after the physiological clearing of distal debris by the Schwann cells. This might facilitate circuit repair by ensuring that axons are guided through unoccupied spaces within bands of Büngner towards their original peripheral target. Accordingly, in the absence of Schwann cells, regenerating axons are misrouted, impairing the re-innervation of sensory organs. Our results indicate that regenerating axons use haptotaxis as a directional cue during the reconstitution of a neural circuit. These findings have implications for therapies aimed at neurorepair, which will benefit from preserving the architecture of the peripheral glia during periods of denervation.

Highlights

  • Peripheral neuropathies in humans occur across ethnic, sex, age and socio-economic groups, but are more pernicious among the elderly, the diabetic and the overweight

  • We obtained one line called Tg[gSAGFF202A] that activated the expression of upstream activating sequence’ (UAS)-controlled green-fluorescent protein (EGFP) in cells along the anterior and posterior lateral

  • Implications and future directions Dynamic processes in the nervous system should be studied in toto because the cells in their natural context provide the ideal framework for evaluating changes associated with physical injury

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Summary

Introduction

Peripheral neuropathies in humans occur across ethnic, sex, age and socio-economic groups, but are more pernicious among the elderly, the diabetic and the overweight. The National Institutes of Health, for example, lists over 1500 clinical trials for neuropathies of the peripheral nervous system, demonstrating the immense interest in this global health problem We have established an experimental paradigm that combines traumatic neural injury and multiparametric intravital microscopy in zebrafish to study in detail the behavior and function of Schwann cells during the repair of a sensory circuit

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