4.5 Article

Neurogenesis is required for behavioral recovery after injury in the visual system of Xenopus laevis

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY
Volume 521, Issue 10, Pages 2262-2278

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cne.23283

Keywords

retinotectal system; optic tectum; brain damage; visual avoidance behavior; cell proliferation; stem cell; neural progenitor cell; musashi; PH3; N--tubulin; injury response

Funding

  1. Dart Neuroscience, LLC
  2. Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation
  3. Hahn Family Foundation
  4. National Institutes of Health [EY011261]
  5. California Institute of Regenerative Medicine (CIRM)
  6. Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny by the Mather's Foundation of New York

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Nonmammalian vertebrates have a remarkable capacity to regenerate brain tissue in response to central nervous system (CNS) injury. Nevertheless, it is not clear whether animals recover lost function after injury or whether injury-induced cell proliferation mediates recovery. We address these questions using the visual system and visually-guided behavior in Xenopus laevis tadpoles. We established a reproducible means to produce a unilateral focal injury to optic tectal neurons without damaging retinotectal axons. We then assayed a tectally-mediated visual avoidance behavior to evaluate behavioral impairment and recovery. Focal ablation of part of the optic tectum prevents the visual avoidance response to moving stimuli. Animals recover the behavior over the week following injury. Injury induces a burst of proliferation of tectal progenitor cells based on phospho-histone H3 immunolabeling and experiments showing that Musashi-immunoreactive tectal progenitors incorporate the thymidine analog chlorodeoxyuridine after injury. Pulse chase experiments indicate that the newly-generated cells differentiate into N--tubulin-immunoreactive neurons. Furthermore, in vivo time-lapse imaging shows that Sox2-expressing neural progenitors divide in response to injury and generate neurons with elaborate dendritic arbors. These experiments indicate that new neurons are generated in response to injury. To test if neurogenesis is necessary for recovery from injury, we blocked cell proliferation in vivo and found that recovery of the visual avoidance behavior is inhibited by drugs that block cell proliferation. Moreover, behavioral recovery is facilitated by changes in visual experience that increase tectal progenitor cell proliferation. Our data indicate that neurogenesis in the optic tectum is critical for recovery of visually-guided behavior after injury. J. Comp. Neurol. 521:22622278, 2013. (c) 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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