Publication:
The Core Apoptotic Executioner Proteins CED-3 and CED-4 Promote Neuronal Regeneration in Caenorhabditis Elegans

Thumbnail Image

Date

2012

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Public Library of Science
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Pinan-Lucarre, Berangere, Christopher V. Gabel, Christopher P. Reina, S. Elizabeth Hulme, Sergey Shevkopylas, R. Daniel Slone, Jian Xue, et al. 2012. The core apoptotic executioner proteins CED-3 and CED-4 promote neuronal regeneration in Caenorhabditis elegans. PLoS Biology 10(5): e1001331.

Research Data

Abstract

A critical accomplishment in the rapidly developing field of regenerative medicine will be the ability to foster repair of neurons severed by injury, disease, or microsurgery. In C. elegans, individual visualized axons can be laser-cut in vivo and neuronal responses to damage can be monitored to decipher genetic requirements for regeneration. With an initial interest in how local environments manage cellular debris, we performed femtosecond laser axotomies in genetic backgrounds lacking cell death gene activities. Unexpectedly, we found that the CED-3 caspase, well known as the core apoptotic cell death executioner, acts in early responses to neuronal injury to promote rapid regeneration of dissociated axons. In ced-3 mutants, initial regenerative outgrowth dynamics are impaired and axon repair through reconnection of the two dissociated ends is delayed. The CED-3 activator, CED-4/Apaf-1, similarly promotes regeneration, but the upstream regulators of apoptosis CED-9/Bcl2 and BH3-domain proteins EGL-1 and CED-13 are not essential. Thus, a novel regulatory mechanism must be utilized to activate core apoptotic proteins for neuronal repair. Since calcium plays a conserved modulatory role in regeneration, we hypothesized calcium might play a critical regulatory role in the CED-3/CED-4 repair pathway. We used the calcium reporter cameleon to track in vivo calcium fluxes in the axotomized neuron. We show that when the endoplasmic reticulum calcium-storing chaperone calreticulin, CRT-1, is deleted, both calcium dynamics and initial regenerative outgrowth are impaired. Genetic data suggest that CED-3, CED-4, and CRT-1 act in the same pathway to promote early events in regeneration and that CED-3 might act downstream of CRT-1, but upstream of the conserved DLK-1 kinase implicated in regeneration across species. This study documents reconstructive roles for proteins known to orchestrate apoptotic death and links previously unconnected observations in the vertebrate literature to suggest a similar pathway may be conserved in higher organisms.

Description

Keywords

animals, genetically modified animals, genetics, metabolism, physiology, apoptosis, axons, pathology, axotomy, Caenorhabditis elegans, Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins, calcium, calcium signaling, calcium-binding proteins, calreticulin, caspases, enzyme activation, MAP kinase kinase kinase, nerve regeneration, neurons, plasmids, proto-oncogene proteins c-bcl-2, time-lapse imaging

Terms of Use

This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material (LAA), as set forth at Terms of Service

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories