Abstract
Axon regrowth is a key determinant of the restoration of the biological function of the nervous system after trauma. However, mature mammalian neurons have limited capacity for axon regeneration. We have previously demonstrated that neuronal axon growth both in the central and the peripheral nervous systems is markedly enhanced when non-muscle myosin II (NMII) is inhibited with blebbistatin. The activity of NMII is primarily regulated by MLCK and MLCP via the phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of its light chain, respectively; however, the functional roles of MLCK and MLCP in mammalian axonal regeneration remain unknown. In the present study, we provide strong evidence that the inhibition of MLCK activity significantly blocks axon regeneration in the mouse. Conversely, inhibition of MLCP promotes axon regrowth of both peripheral and central nervous system. Our findings further indicate that the MLCK/MLCP regulates axon regeneration via the reorganization of F-actin distribution in the growth cone, and this result suggests that direct regulation of the growth cone machinery is a potential strategy to promote axon regeneration.
Introduction
The coordinated regulation of growth cone cytoskeleton components is essential for axon growth. Additionally, cytoskeletal proteins in the growth cone are converging targets of extracellular inhibitory molecules. It is now recognized that extracellular inhibitory molecules, such as myelin-based inhibitors and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) in glial scars are a major hurdle for successful axon regeneration. These extracellular inhibitory molecules typically trigger the activation of the RhoA/ROCK pathway, leading to the phosphorylation and, consequently, the deactivation of cofilin, a protein that severs actin filaments and promotes their depolymerization. Cofilin deactivation results in the stabilization of the growth cone actin cytoskeleton protein, and, subsequently, growth cone collapse. Accordingly, in order to overcome those inhibitory substrates and promote axonal outgrowth, several recent studies have focused on manipulating growth cone cytoskeleton dynamics, and have obtained promising results1–4. Here, we hypothesized that the appropriate spatiotemporal regulation of the local cytoskeletal machinery in the growth cone can provide an alternative and effective approach for enhancing axon regeneration.
We have previously shown that the inhibition of non-muscle myosin II (NMII) activity can promotes axonal growth over inhibitory substrates, such as CSPGs and myelin, in both the central and peripheral nervous systems (CNS and PNS, respectively)1. Furthermore, this growth-promoting effect is achieved via the reorganization of microtubules (MTs) in the growth cone1. Myosin proteins constitute a superfamily of ATP-dependent motor proteins known primarily for their role in muscle contraction. In the nervous system, however, myosin II usually drives actin retrograde flow in the growth cone, while the actin cytoskeleton powers directional growth cone motility5,6. An increasing number of studies have shown that the actin cytoskeleton and its regulators also play a critical role in axon elongation and guidance. Myosin II is typically activated via the phosphorylation of the N-terminus of its light chain by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) and deactivated through dephosphorylation by myosin light chain phosphatase (MLCP). An early study reported that the expression of MLCK, a calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase, is increased during axonal outgrowth in goldfish retinal ganglion cells7. The overexpression of constitutively active MLCK in Drosophila CNS neurons increases myosin II activity and leads to impaired axonal outgrowth8. Zhang et al. demonstrated that MLCK inhibition attenuates 5-HT-dependent neurite outgrowth in bag cell neurons of the mollusk Aplysia9. Additionally, the activation of MLCP/MLC signaling in PC12 cells was also shown to promote neurite outgrowth10. Together, these reports suggested that the MLCK/MLCP regulates axon growth in non-mammalian organisms. However, to our knowledge, the functional roles of MLCK and MLCP during mammalian axon regeneration remain unknown.
In the present study, we found that sciatic nerve injury elevated MLCK protein expression, leading to increased levels of MLC phosphorylation in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. Furthermore, the pharmacological inhibition or genetic silencing of MLCK blocked axon regeneration in the PNS and CNS both in vitro and in vivo, whereas the pharmacological inhibition or transcriptional silencing of MLCP dramatically promotes axon regeneration. We further found that the MLCK/MLCP activity also affects F-actin redistribution in the growth cone. Taken together, our results indicated that MLCK and MLCP may regulate axon regeneration via the redistribution of F-actin in the growth cone, and the direct manipulation of cytoskeleton proteins in the growth cone may be a promising strategy for enhancing mammalian axon regeneration.
Materials and Methods
Animals and reagents
Adult ICR (8–10 weeks old, 20–30 g) were used. BDA (D1956) and CTB labeled with Alexa Fluor 488 (CTB-488, C34775) were obtained from Life Technologies. ML-7 hydrochloride (110448-33-4) was purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology. PDBu (P1269) was acquired from Sigma-Aldrich. Blebbistatin (S7099) was obtained from Selleck Chemicals. Antibodies against βIII-tubulin (TUJ1, T8578), MLCK (SAB1300116), and GFAP (G3893) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. Antibodies against β-actin (#4970) and p-MLC (#3675) were acquired from Cell Signaling Technology. Actin-stain 555 phalloidin (Cat# PHDH1) was purchased from Cytoskeleton, Inc. siRNAs designed to target mouse MLCK (siMLCK) (5′-GGCAAATACACCTGTGAAG-3′, 5′-TGGTCAAAGAAGGGCAGAT-3′, 5′-AGCCAAAGGGAGTCAACAT-3′, and 5′-TCACGACGGGAATGAGATT-3′) and mouse MYPT1 (siMYPT1) (5′-CTGTGGATATCTCGATATTGC-3′) were obtained from GenePharma (Shanghai, China).
Cell culture
Adult DRG neurons were dissociated from 8 to 10-week-old ICR mice and cultured in Minimal Essential Medium (MEM) containing 5% (v/v) fetal bovine serum (FBS), 5-fluoro-2-deoxyuridine/uridine (20 μM), and penicillin/streptomycin. Embryonic cortical neurons (from E14.5 embryos) and hippocampal neurons (from E18.5 embryos) were cultured in neurobasal medium supplemented with penicillin/streptomycin, GlutaMAX, and B27 supplement. To investigate axonal growth on inhibitory substrates, glass coverslips were first coated with poly-D-lysine (100 μg/mL) for 2 h, and then coated again with myelin or 10 μg/mL CSPGs for 2 h, as previously described1,11.
For the cell replating experiment, DRG neurons were cultured for 3 days, resuspended in culture medium, replated on new coverslips, and finally re-cultured for a further 18 h to allow new axons to grow, as previously described12,13. Briefly, in treatments denoted as “before replating”, neurons were first grown in the presence of 10 μM ML-7 during the initial 3-day culture period, and, after washing out the ML-7, they were replated and grown in the absence of drug(s) for 18 h. Treatments denoted as “after replating” refer to procedures in which neurons were first grown in the absence of a drug or drugs during the initial 3-day culture period, after which 10 μM ML-7 was added immediately after replating, followed by 18 h of culture in the presence of drug(s).
Sciatic nerve axotomy
The sciatic nerve was transected at the sciatic notch using ophthalmic scissors. After surgery, the wound was closed, and the mice were allowed to recover. The mice were then euthanized and L4–L5 DRGs were isolated for cell culture, quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR), and western blotting.
siRNA transfection
Cells were transfected with siRNA by electroporation in accordance with the manufacturer’s instructions. Briefly, dissociated neurons were suspended in 80-µL solutions of Amaxa electroporation buffer containing siRNAs (2–3 nmol) and/or an EGFP-expressing plasmid (5 mg). The cells were then transferred to a 2-mm cuvette and electroporated using an Amaxa Nucleofector apparatus. After electroporation, the cells were immediately transferred to 500 µL of prewarmed culture medium and cultured on glass coverslips coated with 100 mg/mL poly-D-lysine. After 4 h, when the neurons had fully attached to the coverslips, the remaining electroporation buffer was discarded, and fresh culture medium (500 mL) was added.
qRT-PCR and western blotting
Total RNA was isolated using Trizol Reagent and assessed for integrity and concentration in a NanoDrop 1000 spectrophotometer. Each sample was then reverse transcribed using Maxima H Minus Reverse Transcriptase. Real-time qPCR was performed using SYBR Premix ExTaq II in a CFX96 Real-Time qPCR Detection System (Bio-Rad). Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase (Gapdh) was used as the internal control. The sequences of the forward and reverse primers were MLCK: 5′-AGAAGTCAAGGAGGTAAAGAATGATGT-3′ and 5′-CGGGTCGCTTTTCATTGC-3′, respectively; and GAPDH: 5′-AGGTCGGTGTGAACGGATTTG-3′ and 5′-TGTAGACCATGTAGTTGAGGTCA-3′, respectively.
For western blotting, samples were homogenized in RIPA buffer. After boiling for 5 min, equal amounts of extracted protein (20 µg/sample) were separated using 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and electro-transferred to polyvinylidene fluoride membranes (Immobilon-P; Millipore). After blocking with 0.01 M PBS containing 5% (w/v) skimmed milk overnight, the membranes were incubated first with primary antibodies and then with the appropriate secondary peroxidase-conjugated antibodies. Protein bands were developed using ECL Prime Western Blotting Detection Reagent and subsequently quantified using Image Lab software. An anti-β-actin antibody was used as a loading control.
Immunohistostaining
Mice were deeply anesthetized and transcardiacally perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA). L4–L5 DRG tissues were isolated, further fixed in 4% PFA, cryosectioned into 12-μm slices, and blocked with 5% FBS containing 0.3% Triton X-100. The sections were then incubated with the indicated primary antibody (monoclonal anti-βIII-tubulin antibody and/or polyclonal anti-MLCK antibody). Immunoreactivity was visualized using the appropriate fluorescently labeled secondary antibody. Alternatively, cultured DRG neurons were fixed in 4% PFA, blocked with 2% BSA and 0.1% Triton X-100, and then stained as described above. To visualize F-actin in the growth cones, in vitro-cultured neurons were stained with actin-stain 555 phalloidin following the manufacturer’s instructions.
Axonal growth and growth cone quantification
All images were acquired at 1388 × 1040-pixel resolution using a Zeiss fluorescence microscope with AxioVision 4.7 software (Carl Zeiss Micro Imaging, Inc.) equipped with a 10× or a 20× objective. For axon length quantification, the longest axon from 100 neurons for each condition was measured using the curve tool in AxioVision 4.7. Meanwhile, growth cone size and F-actin area were measured using the outline tool in AxioVision 4.7. The size of the growth cone was ascertained from the neck of the microtubule to the edge of the axon tip and the F-actin area was determined from the hillock to the most distant edge of the growth cone.
In vivo electroporation of DRGs and sciatic nerve crush
In vivo electroporation of adult mouse DRGs was performed as previously described14. Briefly, each mouse was anesthetized via an intraperitoneal injection of a ketamine (100 mg/kg) and xylazine (10 mg/kg) solution. The transverse process of L4 and L5 was carefully removed to expose the DRG tissue. The siRNA of interest (1 μL) was then microinjected into the L4–L5 DRG tissue using a Picospritzer II Microcellular Injection Unit followed by electroporation using a BTX ECM830 Electro Square Porator (five 15-ms pulses, 35 V, 900-ms interval). Following this, the muscle and skin were carefully sutured using 5-0 nylon sutures. The mouse was placed on a heated blanket (35°C) until it had completely recovered from anesthesia. Two days after electroporation, the sciatic nerves were crushed with forceps #5 and the crush sites were marked with an 11-0 nylon epineuria suture. After 3 more days, the mice were euthanized by perfusion of 4% PFA. The whole sciatic nerve was then dissected from the animal and the length of the EGFP-labeled axon was measured from the crush site to the axon tip.
Optic nerve injury
The optic nerves of adult C57BL/6 mice were carefully exposed and crushed with a jeweler’s forceps #5 just behind the eyeball for 1 s. A small piece of gelatin sponge fully soaked with PBS or 50 μM PDBu was placed at the lesion site; alternatively, 2 μL of PDBu (50 μM) was intravitreally injected into the vitreous body. Simultaneously, 2 μL of CTB-488 was injected into the vitreous body of each animal after the optic nerve had been crushed. All microinjections were performed using the Picospritzer II Microcellular Injection Unit (Paker Ins.; pressure: 15 psi, duration: 6 ms). After 3 days, the optic nerves were dissected out, fixed in 4% PFA overnight at 4°C, and cut into a series of 12-μm longitudinal sections. The numbers of CTB-labeled axon fibers were counted at distances of 50 and 100 μm from the injury site. The length of the longest CTB-labeled axon fiber of each nerve was also measured.
Spinal cord crush injury and PDBu injection
The T8 spinal cord was exposed under a microscope, the whole spinal cord was crushed for 2 s with a modified jeweler’s forceps #5 as previously described15, and the muscle and skin were separately sutured. A 100-µL volume of PDBu (50 μM) or DMSO was administered every 4 days by intrathecal injection. After 14 days, to trace and visualize the corticospinal tract axon, 1.6 μL of 10% BDA was injected into 4 sites of the sensorimotor cortex (1.0 mm lateral; 0.5 mm deep into the cortex; 1.0, 0.5, −0.5, and −1.0 posterior to bregma) with a 5 μL Hamilton syringe16. Fourteen days after BDA injection, mice were transcardically perfused with 4% PFA. The whole spinal cord was isolated from each mouse and post-fixed in 4% PFA for 6 h at 4°C. After dehydration using an increasing gradient of sucrose concentrations, the spinal cord was cut into 25-μm-thick sagittal sections, which were then stained with Cy3-streptavidin for 3 h following the manufacturer’s protocol. The lengths of regenerating axons were determined by measuring the distance from the lesion site to the tip of the BDA-labeled axon tip. The final axon length was the average calculated from 5 sections for each spinal cord. Five mice were used for each condition.
BBB locomotor scale score assessments
BBB score assessments were performed as previously described17. Briefly, mice were individually placed in an open, quiet space (45 × 30 cm) for 5 min while two individuals blinded to the experiments scored the hindlimb motor function of each animal. Assessments were made on day −1 (the day before injury) and on days 1, 3, 7, 14, 21, 28, 35, and 42 post-injuries for both the DMSO and PDBu treatment groups.
Results
The MLCK expression increased in adult sensory neurons following peripheral axotomy
Following injury, the expression of axon regeneration-related genes is usually upregulated. Thus, we first measured MLCK protein levels in DRG neurons following sciatic nerve transection. Compared with naive neurons, MLCK protein expression was significantly increased in DRG neurons 3 days after sciatic nerve transection (Figure 1A, B). The mRNA levels of MLCK in DRG neurons were also increased on days 1, 3, and 7 after axotomy, with the highest expression being observed on day 3 (Figure 1C). Given that MLCK phosphorylates MLC, we subsequently assessed the level of MLC phosphorylation and found that it was higher in DRG neurons following nerve injury than in control DRG neurons, likely due to the increase in MLCK expression (Figure 1A, D, E). Immunohistochemical staining further confirmed that both MLCK expression and the levels of phosphorylated MLC (p-MLC) increased in DRG neurons following sciatic nerve axotomy (Figure 1F, G). Taken together, these results indicated that MLCK is activated in DRG sensory neurons following peripheral axotomy, which leads to an increase in MLC phosphorylation.
The inhibition of MLCK impaired axon regeneration in peripheral sensory DRG neurons
Next, to explore the functional role of MLCK during peripheral axon regeneration, ML-7 (10 μM), a specific pharmacological inhibitor of MLCK, was added to DRG neuron cultures for 3 days. The results showed that ML-7 administration led to a significant reduction in MLC phosphorylation levels (Figure 2A, B) and impaired axonal growth in sensory neurons (Figure 2C, D), and these effects were dose-dependent (Supplementary Figure S1). The proportion of neurons with axons also decreased after ML-7 treatment (Figure 2D). Furthermore, the transfection of a small interfering RNA (siRNA) targeting MLCK (siMLCK) into dissociated DRG neurons significantly inhibited MLCK expression and reduced p-MLC levels (Figure 2E, F), while concomitantly blocking axon growth in adult DRG sensory neurons (Figure 2G, H). Next, using our previously described in vivo DRG electroporation technique14, we further explored the functional role of MLCK in sciatic nerve axon regeneration in vivo. We co-transfected siMLCK and an EGFP-expressing plasmid into lumbar vertebrae 4 and 5 (L4 and L5) DRGs of adult mice by electroporation. After 2 days, mice were subjected to sciatic nerve crush injury, and, after another 3 days, the lengths of regenerating axons were measured in whole-mount sciatic nerves. Our data showed that the mean length of in vivo regenerating axons was significantly reduced in siMLCK-treated mice compared with that in control animals (Figure 2I, J). These findings suggested that MLCK activity is required for mammalian peripheral axon regeneration both in vitro and in vivo.
The inhibition of MLCP promoted peripheral axon growth over inhibitory substrates
It is well known that the opposite role of MLCK and MLCP to regulate the MLC phosphorylation status. Consequently, we also investigated the functional role of MLCP during axon regeneration. It has been reported that phorbol 12,13-dibutyrate (PDBu) can block MLCP activity, which leads to an increase in MLC phosphorylation18. Here, the results demonstrated that PDBu treatment (20 µM) significantly increased the p-MLC level in cultured DRG neurons (Supplementary Figure S2A, B). Importantly, we found that this occurred in parallel with greatly enhanced axonal growth in DRG neurons cultured on permissive substrates, such as poly-D-lysine (Supplementary Figure S2C, D). A key reason why CNS neurons cannot spontaneously regenerate axons after injury is due to the inhibitory local microenvironment. Myelin and CSPGs are well-characterized CNS-based inhibitory substrates that block axon regeneration. Therefore, we next examined whether inhibition of MLCP activity with PDBu promoted axon regeneration in the presence of these potential CNS-based inhibitory substrates. When dissociated adult DRG neurons were cultured on myelin extracts or CSPGs, sensory neuronal axon growth was significantly suppressed (Supplementary Figure S2C, D). Interestingly, however, when PDBu was added to the culture medium, axon growth was significantly enhanced on either substrate (Supplementary Figure S2C, D). This result indicated that PDBu treatment relieved the inhibitory effect of myelin and CSPGs on axonal growth in DRG neurons. MLCP is a phosphatase complex comprising PP1δ, MYPT1, and M2019. In this study, a siRNA specifically targeting MYPT1 (siMYPY1) was found to markedly increase MLC phosphorylation in cultured DRG neurons (Figure 4A, B). In line with the results obtained with the pharmacological inhibitor, siMYPT1 also significantly stimulated axonal growth in DRG sensory neurons cultured on myelin or CSPGs (Figure 3C, D). Furthermore, the transfection of siMYPT1 into L4–L5 DRGs of adult mice by electroporation also significantly promoted sciatic nerve axon regeneration in vivo (Figure 3E, F). Combined, these data indicated that the inhibition of MLCP activity enables mammalian axon regeneration in vitro and in vivo.
MLCK/MLCP activity regulated axon growth in the embryonic CNS
Compared with neurons of the PNS, those of the CNS have intrinsically poor axonal growth capability, which also helps explain why CNS neurons cannot spontaneously regenerate axons after injury. Therefore, we next examined the role of MLCK/MLCP on CNS axon regeneration using cortical and hippocampal neurons from embryonic day (E)14.5 and E18.5 mice, respectively. To block MLCK activity, the neurons were treated with 10 µM ML-7 for 3 days. The results showed that the MLC phosphorylation levels were markedly inhibited with ML-7 treatment (Figure 4A); simultaneously, the mean axon length of ML-7-treated E14.5 cortical neurons was significantly reduced compared with that of the control neurons (Figure 4C, D). Furthermore, consistent with the pharmacological results, the siRNA-mediated suppression of MLCK expression in E14.5 cortical neurons (Figure 4B) significantly inhibited their axonal growth (Figure 4E, F). Conversely, the blockade of MLCP activity with PDBu (20 µM; Figure 4A) notably augmented cortical neuronal axonal growth (Figure 4C, D). The siRNA-mediated transcriptional silencing of MYPT1 expression also upregulated p-MLC levels in cortical neurons (Figure 4B), and, accordingly, also enhanced axonal growth (Figure 4E, F). Similar results were obtained with E18.5 hippocampal neurons (Figure 4G-J). Overall, these findings demonstrated that MLCK/MLCP activity also regulates axon growth in the developing CNS.
The local inhibition of MLCP activity at an injury site promoted optic nerve regeneration
Given the promising axon growth-promoting effects observed in vitro, we wondered whether inhibiting MLCP activity could stimulate in vivo CNS axon regeneration. The optic nerve forms part of the CNS and, like other neurons of the CNS, also has weak intrinsic axon-regenerating ability (Supplementary Figure S3). To test this, the right optic nerve of adult mice was crushed, and PBS or PDBu (50 μM) was applied locally to the lesion site using a gelatin sponge; alternatively, 2 μL of PDBu (50 μM) was microinjected into the vitreous body of another mice. Subsequently, 2 μL of Alexa Fluor 488-conjugated cholera toxin subunit B (CTB) was injected into the vitreous body to anterogradely label regenerating axons. After 3 days, the whole optic nerve was harvested, and CTB-labeled axon regeneration was assessed. The local administration of PDBu using a gelatin sponge resulted in numerous CTB-labeled axon fibers growing over the injury site, the longest being approximately 400 μm long (Figure 5A-C). In contrast, local PBS administration at the injury site or intravitreal PDBu injection induced little axon regeneration beyond the lesion site (Figure 5A-C). This implied that only the local inhibition of MLCP activity at the injury site boosted optic nerve regeneration.
The local inhibition of MLCP activity prevented axonal retraction in the injured spinal cord
After spinal cord injury, corticospinal tract (CST) axons also did not regenerate spontaneously, principally because of the inhibitory environment (Supplementary Figure S4). To test whether local inhibition of MLCP activity can also promote spinal cord axon regeneration, mice were subjected to spinal cord crush injury at the level of the eighth thoracic vertebra (T8)15. Briefly, the T8 spinal cord was exposed and crushed for 1 second with jeweler’s forceps #5. A 100 μL PDBu (50 μM) or its vehicle, DMSO, was then administrated once every 4 days by intrathecal injection to block MLCP activity. After 2 weeks, 1.6 μL of 10 % biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) was microinjected into the sensorimotor cortex to label regenerating axons16. After a further 2 weeks, BDA -labeled regenerating axon was evaluated in the spinal cord section. Intrathecal PDBu injection significantly boosted p-MLC levels (Figure 5D, E) and prevented injury-induced axon retraction (Figure 5F, G), while also greatly reducing the number of retraction bulbs (Supplementary Figure S5). However, we did not observe any BDA-labeled axon fibers beyond the lesion site, and Basso–Beattie–Bresnahan (BBB) score evaluation following PDBu treatment did not differ from that of the control group (Figure 5H). Together, these results indicated that the local inhibition of MLCP activity reduces injury-induced retraction bulb formation and axon retraction in the spinal cord.
MLCK may regulate axon regeneration independently of myosin II activity
We further examined whether the regulatory effect of MLCK/MLCP on axonal growth was mediated through myosin II activity. For this, dissociated DRG neurons were co-treated with blebbistatin (a pharmacological myosin II inhibitor) and ML-7. Consistent with our previous study, the inhibition of myosin II activity with 25 μM blebbistatin markedly promoted axonal growth (Figure 6A, B). Surprisingly, however, ML-7/blebbistatin co-treatment did not block the inhibitory effect of ML-7 on sensory axon regeneration (Figure 6A, B). Additionally, blebbistatin administration did not influence MLC phosphorylation levels in cultured DRG neurons (Figure 6C, D). Collectively, these results interesting suggested that MLCK regulates axon regeneration may independently of myosin II activity.
Local F-actin distribution in the growth cone is regulated by MLCK and MLCP
We previously established a culture-and-replating model to investigate whether axonal regeneration was soma gene transcription-dependent or local growth cone cytoskeleton dynamics-dependent12,13. Interestingly, only ML-7 treatment after replating was found to significantly inhibit axonal growth in peripheral sensory neurons. However, no effect was observed on axonal growth when ML-7 was administrated before cell replating (Figure 7A, C). Several studies have reported that peripheral axotomy triggers local cytoskeleton dynamics-dependent axon growth in DRG neurons 13,16,20. Consistent with the culture-and-replating results, axotomy-induced, local cytoskeleton assembly-dependent axon growth was also markedly inhibited by ML-7 treatment (Figure 7D, E). These results suggested that MLCK primarily influences local cytoskeleton dynamics during axonal growth. Accordingly, we further examined how MLCK/MLCP activity regulates growth cone cytoskeletal distribution during axonal growth. E14.5 cortical neurons were treated with ML-7 or PDBu for 3 days, following which microtubule and F-actin distribution in the growth cone was visualized using Tuj1 and phalloidin staining. The results indicated that ML-7 treatment increased growth cone size and F-actin content, whereas PDBu treatment exerted the opposite effect (Figure 8A-D). These findings indicated that MLCK and MLCP activity regulates F-actin redistribution.
Discussion
In the present study, we demonstrated that peripheral axotomy increases MLCK and MLC phosphorylation levels in adult DRG neurons subsequently. Thus, when MLCK activity was suppressed in mature DRG neurons via ML-7- or specific siRNA, axonal growth was blocked in treated neurons both in vitro and in vivo. Conversely, an inhibit in MLCP activity via the knockdown of MYPT1 significantly promoted axonal growth in both PNS and CNS neurons. We further found that the MLCK and MLCP primarily regulates F-actin redistribution in the growth cone during the axon regeneration process.
Axon injury leads to disconnection between neurons and their targets, thereby destroying functional circuits and behavioral outputs. This implies that for the successful restoration of impaired nervous system function, injured axons must regenerate to their original targets and reconstruct functional circuits. Interestingly, it has been reported that the coordinated regulation of the neuronal cytoskeleton dynamics is essential for axon shaft extension 21. Among them, the microtubule and actin are two of major component of neuronal cytoskeleton that involves axonal extension. For example, Athamneh et al. found that the speed of axon elongation is highly correlated with the bulk forward translocation rate of microtubules 22. In addition, it also has been reported that the axon extension depends on actin assembly and microtubule-actin interactions23. Unsurprisingly given these observations, increasing attention has been paid to promoting axon regeneration via the modulation of local cytoskeletal dynamics in the growth cone. Myosin II is a key cytoskeleton protein, which activated through the MLCK-mediated phosphorylation of its light chain and deactivated via the dephosphorylation of the N-terminus of its light chain by MLCP. Here, we found that the MLCK expression and phosphorylation level of MLC was increased in adult DRG neurons after sciatic nerve injury, while the inhibition of MLCK blocked axon regeneration. These results indicate that activated MLCK is required for mammalian axon regeneration. If thus, increase of MLCK expression will activate myosin II during axon regeneration. However, in our previous study, we found that pharmacological blockade of myosin II activity with blebbistatin stimulated axon growth 1, which suggested that myosin II plays an inhibitory role in this process. This apparent contradiction might be attributed to blebbistatin being a specific inhibitor of non-muscle myosin II ATPase activity and may not affect MLCK activity or the phosphorylation status of MLC 24. Indeed, blebbistatin treatment did not influence MLC phosphorylation levels in our study, in line with a previous report in which it was found that blebbistatin does not alter the phosphorylation status of MLC in sensory neurons in vitro 24,25. Additionally, our results demonstrated that blebbistatin treatment could not rescue the inhibitory effect of ML-7 on axon regeneration. These data suggest that the regulatory effect of MLCK on axonal growth may be exerted through different molecular mechanisms. Interestingly, it has been reported that MLCK regulates cell migration not by MLC phosphorylation, but possible MLCK may serve as an F-actin-binding protein stabilizing the F-actin/myosin II network of the membrane cytoskeleton25. Additionally, recent study also identified multiple noncanonical targets of MLCK through CRISPR-Cas9/phosphoproteomics method26, thus it is also possible that MLCK regulates axon growth its noncanonical targets or unknown mechanism. They also found that MLCK plays an important role in vasopressin-induced actin depolymerization26. Meanwhile, adult sensory neurons express different isoforms of myosin II, which also exert distinct effects on axonal regeneration27. For example, the knockdown of myosin IIA enhances axonal growth, while the knockdown of myosin IIB increases F-action retrograde flow and inhibits axon growth 1,28–31. A study in Neuro-2A cells also revealed that myosin IIA is involved in axon retraction, whereas myosin IIB was reported to contribute to axon extension28,29. Under physiological conditions, MLCP is activated by PKC, and it has been reported that the PKC-mediated activation of myosin II is restricted to the T zone of growth cones; the results of the present study suggest that growth cones require low-to-moderate levels of myosin II activity and F-actin for best growth rates. This observation emphasizes the complexity of the role of myosin II in axonal growth, the precise molecular mechanisms of which require further in-depth investigation.
The inability of neurons in the CNS to regenerate their axons after injury is attributable, at least in part, to the presence of inhibitory molecules at the injury site, including CSPGs and myelin. Here, we found that the inhibition of MLCP activity with PDBu or the siRNA-mediated knockdown of MYPT1 promoted axonal growth in adult sensory neurons over both CSPG and myelin substrates. Our findings also further indicated that the local inhibition of MLCP by PDBu not only induces axon regeneration in peripheral sensory neurons but also promotes axon regeneration in the optic nerve. Studies have shown that MLCK possesses several actin-binding domains to which F-actin can bind and form bundles32,33 and that directional growth cone motility during axon growth is controlled by actin-based machinery. Growth cone movement during axon growth is achieved through protrusion towards attractive guidance cues and retraction from repulsive ones in an actin-dependent manner. In the classic molecular clutch model, strong mechanical coupling between the F-actin cytoskeleton and the substrate, mediated by cell adhesion complexes, transmits the forces generated by the cytoskeleton into rearward traction forces, enabling the forward movement of the growth cone. Our results indicated that treating DRG neurons with ML-7 induces the increases F-actin content in the growth cone. Conversely, the inhibition of MLCP following PDBu administration resulted in decreased F-actin content. Our findings are consistent with the results of a previous study on Helisoma, in which treatment with ML-7 increased F-actin content at the C/P-domain interface, thus inhibiting axonal regeneration34. This suggests that MLCK or MLCP may control mammalian axonal regeneration by regulating growth cone F-actin distribution. Together, our findings indicate that directly targeting growth cone cytoskeleton components may be a promising strategy for promoting mammalian axon regeneration.
Statements & Declarations
Funding
This work was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program (Nos. 2016YFC 1100203), A Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions, and Innovation and Entrepreneurship Program of Jiangsu Province.
Author Contribution
Saijilafu, W.H. W and J.J. M designed the experiment. W.H. W and J.J. M performed the experiments and analyzed the data. W.H. W, Y.Y, Y.X. M and Saijilafu co-wrote the paper with all authors’ input.
Ethics approval
The animal experiments were conducted in accordance with the National Institutes of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (NIH Publications No. 8023, revised 1978) and were approved by the Ethics Committee of the First Affiliated Hospital of Soochow University.
Consent to publish
All the authors consent for publication.
Conflict of interests
The authors have no relevant financial interests to disclose.
Data availability
All data generated or analyzed during this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
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