Abstract

During development of the central nervous system, neural cells respond to several external cues that influence cell proliferation, differentiation, axonal growth and synaptogenesis. Thyroid hormone plays a critical role in each of these processes. Previously, we showed that Krüppel-like factor 9 (KLF9), a zinc finger transcription factor, is strongly and directly induced by liganded thyroid hormone receptors, and it mediates the actions of thyroid hormone on neuronal differentiation during late fetal development. Here we analyzed the molecular mechanisms by which KLF9 maintains neuronal structure, and inhibits regeneration in juvenile and adult neuronal cells. We also investigated the actions of the closely related transcription factor KLF13, which is paralogous to KLF9. We engineered the adult mouse hippocampus-derived cell line HT22 to control Klf9 or Klf13 expression by addition of doxycycline. We also used CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing to generate Klf9 or Klf13 knock out (KO), and Klf9+Klf13 double KO HT22 cell lines. To induce neurite outgrowth, we treated cells with forskolin (FK)+IBMX, which increases intracellular cAMP; elevated cAMP is a hallmark of regenerative responses of neurons to injury. Our results show that FK+IBMX increased neurite length in the parent HT22 cell line, and this action was enhanced in Klf9 and Klf13 single KO cells, and was even greater in double KO cells. By contrast, the stimulatory effect of FK+IBMX on neurite outgrowth was blocked by simultaneous forced expression of Klf9 or Klf13 in parent HT22 cells. This effect on neurite outgrowth was confirmed in primary mouse hippocampal neurons, where electroporation of expression plasmids for Klf9 or Klf13 suppressed FK+IBMX-induced neurite extension compared with empty vector-transfected cells. Analysis of RNA-seq data obtained from HT22 cells following 8 hr of induced Klf9 or Klf13 expression showed that both proteins impact the cAMP signaling pathway. Using transfection-reporter assays and chromatin immunoprecipitation, we confirmed that several genes in this pathway are direct targets of both KLFs. Our findings suggest that KLF9 and KLF13 may cooperate to maintain the differentiated state of mammalian neurons and thereby block regeneration, in part, by repressing the cAMP signaling pathway.

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