Abstract

Uncontrolled, excessive inflammation contributes to the secondary tissue damage of traumatic spinal cord, and HMGB1 is highlighted for initiation of a vicious self-propagating inflammatory circle by release from necrotic cells or immune cells. Several regenerative-competent vertebrates have evolved to circumvent the second damages during the spontaneous spinal cord regeneration with an unknown HMGB1 regulatory mechanism. By genomic surveys, we have revealed that two paralogs of HMGB1 are broadly retained from fish in the phylogeny. However, their spatial-temporal expression and effects, as shown in lowest amniote gecko, were tightly controlled in order that limited inflammation was produced in spontaneous regeneration. Two paralogs from gecko HMGB1 (gHMGB1) yielded distinct injury and infectious responses, with gHMGB1b significantly up-regulated in the injured cord. The intracellular gHMGB1b induced less release of inflammatory cytokines than gHMGB1a in macrophages, and the effects could be shifted by exchanging one amino acid in the inflammatory domain. Both intracellular proteins were able to mediate neuronal programmed apoptosis, which has been indicated to produce negligible inflammatory responses. In vivo studies demonstrated that the extracellular proteins could not trigger a cascade of the inflammatory cytokines in the injured spinal cord. Signal transduction analysis found that gHMGB1 proteins could not bind with cell surface receptors TLR2 and TLR4 to activate inflammatory signaling pathway. However, they were able to interact with the receptor for advanced glycation end products to potentiate oligodendrocyte migration by activation of both NFκB and Rac1/Cdc42 signaling. Our results reveal that HMGB1 does not mediate the inflammatory response in spontaneous spinal cord regeneration, but it promotes CNS regeneration.

Highlights

  • HMGB1 in spontaneously regenerating spinal cord does not trigger the inflammation in contrast to those in injured mammalian cords

  • HMGB1 Paralogs Are Broadly Retained from Fish Onward in the Phylogeny—To identify whether HMGB1 paralogs exist in the reptiles, in which some species are capable of spontaneously regenerating spinal cord, we constructed brain and spinal cord cDNA library from G. japonicus

  • C–E, gHMGB1a or gHMGB1b coprecipitated with RAGE, but not with TLR2 or TLR4 receptor. These results indicated that gHMGB1a or gHMGB1b in spontaneously regenerating spinal cord could not bind with cell surface receptors TLR2 or TLR4 to initiate the production of inflammatory cytokines

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Summary

A HINT FOR CNS REGENERATION*

Received for publication, February 22, 2013, and in revised form, April 26, 2013 Published, JBC Papers in Press, May 6, 2013, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M113.463810 Yingying Dong1, Yun Gu1, Youjuan Huan, Yingjie Wang, Yan Liu, Mei Liu, Fei Ding, Xiaosong Gu2, and Yongjun Wang3 From the Key Laboratory of Neuroregeneration, Nantong University, Nantong 226007, China

Background
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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