Abstract

Peripheral nerve injury induces motor and sensory defects and has serious impacts on patients' quality of life. Schwann cells (SCs) are the major glial cells in the peripheral nervous system and play important roles in the repair and regeneration of peripheral nerves. Long noncoding RNA HAGLR has been reported to be highly expressed in neurons and to promote neuronal differentiation but its expression decreases after nerve injury, suggesting that HAGLR may be involved in the process of nerve injury repair. This study aimed to investigate the role and mechanism of HAGLR in neural repair functions of SCs. We found that HAGLR promoted SC proliferation and migration and facilitated the secretion of neurotrophic factors. Furthermore, HAGLR functions as a competing endogenous RNA to regulate CDK5R1 expression via sponging miR-204. Overexpression of miR-204 or silencing of CDK5R1 partially abolished the promoting effect of HAGLR on SCs. Moreover, overexpression of HAGLR promoted the functional recovery of sciatic nerve crush (SNC) model rats. In summary, HAGLR promoted SC proliferation, migration, neurotrophic factor production, and facilitated functional recovery of SNC rats via miR-204/CDK5R1. Therefore, it may provide a potential therapeutic target for peripheral nerve repair and regeneration.

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