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Developmental decline in neuronal regeneration by the progressive change of two intrinsic timers

Zou, Yan
Chiu, Hui
Zinovyeva, Anna Y.
Ambros, Victor R.
Chuang, Chiou-Fen
Chang, Chieh
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Abstract

Like mammalian neurons, Caenorhabditis elegans neurons lose axon regeneration ability as they age, but it is not known why. Here, we report that let-7 contributes to a developmental decline in anterior ventral microtubule (AVM) axon regeneration. In older AVM axons, let-7 inhibits regeneration by down-regulating LIN-41, an important AVM axon regeneration-promoting factor. Whereas let-7 inhibits lin-41 expression in older neurons through the lin-41 3' untranslated region, lin-41 inhibits let-7 expression in younger neurons through Argonaute ALG-1. This reciprocal inhibition ensures that axon regeneration is inhibited only in older neurons. These findings show that a let-7-lin-41 regulatory circuit, which was previously shown to control timing of events in mitotic stem cell lineages, is reutilized in postmitotic neurons to control postdifferentiation events.

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Science. 2013 Apr 19;340(6130):372-6. doi: 10.1126/science.1231321. Link to article on publisher's site

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10.1126/science.1231321
PubMed ID
23599497
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