Abstract

Rapid neurite remodeling is fundamental to nervous system development and plasticity. It involves neurite extension that is regulated by NGF through PI3K/AKT, p44/42 MAPK and p38 MAPK. It also involves neurite retraction that is regulated by the serine protease, thrombin. However, the intracellular signaling pathway by which thrombin causes neurite retraction is unknown. Using the PC12 neuronal cell model, we demonstrate that thrombin utilizes the PI3K/AKT pathway for neurite retraction in NGF-differentiated cells. Interestingly, however, we found that thrombin enhances NGF-induced neurite extension in differentiating cells. This is achieved through increased and sustained activation of p44/42 MAPK and p38 MAPK. Thus, thrombin elicits opposing effects in differentiated and differentiating cells through activation of distinct signaling pathways: neurite retraction in differentiated cells via PI3K/AKT, and neurite extension in differentiating cells via p44/42 MAPK and p38 MAPK. These findings, which also point to a novel cooperative role between thrombin and NGF, have significant implications in the development of the nervous system and the disease processes that afflicts it as well as in the potential of combined thrombin and NGF therapy for impaired learning and memory, and spinal cord injury which all require neurite extension and remodeling.

Highlights

  • Neurite remodeling, which involves rapid extension and retraction, is crucial for nervous system development and plasticity [1]

  • nerve growth factor (NGF) exerts a neuroprotective effect on PC12 cells by activating the phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI3K)/ AKT pathway which is important for cell survival [6]

  • We used PC12 cells that were induced to differentiate by treatment with NGF for 72 hours

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Summary

Introduction

Neurite remodeling, which involves rapid extension and retraction, is crucial for nervous system development and plasticity [1]. We found that thrombin induces neurite retraction in differentiated PC12 cells through the AKT pathway, we unexpectedly determined that thrombin and NGF act synergistically on differentiating cells to increase neurite extension. Thrombin induces neurite retraction in differentiated cells via activation of AKT but not p44/42 and p38 MAPK

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