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First published online February 22, 2008
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.013995
1 Department of Physics and Center for Brain Science, Harvard University,
Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
2 Department of Biology and Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill
University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1B1, Canada.
3 Division of Developmental Biology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical
Center, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA.
* Authors for correspondence (e-mails: chieh.chang{at}mcgill.ca; samuel{at}physics.harvard.edu)
Accepted 2 January 2008
| SUMMARY |
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Key words: C. elegans, Femtosecond laser axotomy, Regeneration
| INTRODUCTION |
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In this study, we extend femtosecond laser ablation to different neuronal
types in C. elegans. We show that different neurons have different
capacities for adult-stage regeneration. In particular, we discovered that the
AVM mechanosensory neuron displays robust axon regeneration after adult-stage
injury. The molecular requirements for initial axon development in the AVM
mechanosensory neurons are particularly well understood, providing an
opportunity for detailed analysis of the molecular differences for
regenerative axon growth and guidance. AVM integrates both netrin- and
slit-based cues to make its first decision in early development: a pioneer
axonal projection from the cell body to the ventral nerve cord. During
development, unc-6/netrin is expressed in ventral nerve cord neurons
(Wadsworth et al., 1996
), and
unc-40/DCC is the netrin receptor that mediates ventral attraction of
the developing AVM axon (Hao et al.,
2001
). During development, the dorsal body wall muscles express
repellent slt-1, which facilitates dorsal repulsion of the developing
AVM axon through the sax-3/ROBO receptors. By systematically
comparing patterns in AVM axon regeneration in wild-type animals versus
mutants with specific defects in the netrin and slit pathways, we establish
distinct molecular requirements between initial axon development and
adult-stage regeneration. Our observations show that C. elegans may
be used to identify and characterize novel cellular and molecular mechanisms
that mediate adult-stage axon regeneration.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Molecular biology
Standard molecular biology techniques were used. To study adult-stage
expression of TGF-β, unc-129p::YFP was made by cloning the 3.5
kb unc-129 promoter into pSM-YFP vector. Primers were designed with
SphI (5') to BamHI (3') to amplify the
unc-129 promoter and clone into corresponding sites in pSM-YFP. The
mec-4p::unc-34 and mec-4p::ced-10 constructs were made by
cloning unc-34 or ced-10 cDNA into KpnI (5')
and SpeI (3') sites in pPD95.81 downstream of the
mec-4 promoter.
|
Laser surgery
Our femtosecond laser set-up is shown in
Fig. 1A. We used a
cavity-dumped Ti:sapphire laser oscillator (Cascade Laser, KMLabs, Boulder,
CO) to generate
100 fs laser pulses
(Clark et al., 2006
). The laser
output was pruned to a 1 kHz pulse train by an Eclipse Pulse Picker (KMLabs
Inc., Boulder, CO), which was tightly focused onto targets using a Nikon
100x, 1.4 NA oil-immersion objective. The vaporization threshold
corresponds to pulse energies of 5-15 nJ
(Shen et al., 2005
;
Chung et al., 2006
). Successful
axotomy was confirmed by visualizing targets immediately after exposure.
Microscopy
Neuronal morphology was based on high-magnification z-stacks using
a Nikon TE2000 fluorescence microscope. We mounted worms on 2% agar pads
containing 3 mM sodium azide, and imaged targeted neurons before and after
axotomy. Worms were recovered from sodium azide, placed on fresh plates with
bacterial foods, and reimaged after 24 hours. For time-lapse studies, we
paralyzed worms with 0.05% tetramisole
(Knobel et al., 1999
), mounted
them on 2% agar pads, sealed under cover glass and wax, and captured
z-stacks every 15 or 30 minutes for 15 hours. The images presented in
the figures were created from a maximum intensity projection of the
corresponding z-stack. In some cases, individual planes of the
z-stacks were modified to heighten the contrast and visibility of
axonal processes.
Quantifying axon length after AVM regeneration
The axon length of regenerating neurons was quantified 24 hours after
surgery. To produce the scatter plots in
Fig. 5C and
Fig. 7A, we scored the relative
position of all axon termini from the dorsal and ventral midlines and AVM cell
body. Owing to the curvature of the worm's body, two-dimensional projections
of each z-stack would underestimate axon length. Therefore, we used
image analysis software (MatLAB, Mathworks, Natick, MA) to effectively unroll
the worm's cylindrical surface, quantifying anteroposterior distances using
the coordinate parallel to the body centerline and dorsoventral distances
along the cylindrical surface. P values for the ventral scores were
calculated using a Chi-square test for equality of distributions. Axon lengths
(Fig. 5E,
Fig. 7C,D) were calculated as
the actual contour length between the cell body and axon termini, by tracing
the axon through a three-dimensional image stack. P values for the
length measurements were calculated using a Student's t-test.
| RESULTS |
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Similar observations have been made previously in immature hippocampal and
cortical neurons (Dotti and Banker,
1987
; Goslin and Banker,
1989
; Hayashi et al.,
2002
; Bradke and Dotti,
2000
). When hippocampal neurons are cultured in vitro after being
dissociated from the embryonic brain, they reproducibly establish a single
axon and several dendrites, despite the absence of environmental cues. The
regeneration pattern is similarly dependent on the location of the axotomy
with respect to the cell body. The severed axon will regrow from the proximal
end if the cut is farther away from the cell body and the remaining axon stump
is longer than 35 µm, while one of the neurites (dendrites) will grow out
to become the new axon if the cut is close to the cell body and the remaining
stump is shorter (Goslin and Banker,
1989
). One possibility is that, upon cell-body distal axotomy,
greater amount of a regulatory factor in the remaining axon stump can prevent
other parts of the neuron from producing new axons.
Axon regeneration at the adult stage involves exploratory outgrowth and pruning
Differences in regenerative ability between different types of neurons may
depend on intrinsic factors or on local cellular environment
(Case and Tessier-Lavigne,
2005
). In the present study, we focused on the AVM mechanosensory
neuron, which has proven to be a particularly useful system for analyzing the
molecular requirements for axon growth and guidance during initial
development.
First, we explored the spatiotemporal dynamics of regeneration using
time-lapse imaging after femtosecond laser axotomy, and identified distinct
cell biological changes that characterize adult-stage axon regeneration. The
cell body of an injured neuron sends out fanlike, lamellipodial growth cones.
Multiple axons may be initiated from the injured neuron but not every axon
reaches its target. Unwanted axons are pruned, suggesting a process of axon
competition. In a representative series of time-lapse images
(Fig. 3), the cell body of an
injured mechanosensory neuron sent its first axon in the dorsal direction.
Successive branches from the first axon failed to approach the ventral nerve
cord. After persistent failure by the first axon, the cell body initiated a
second axon in the ventral direction. After the second axon successfully
reached the ventral nerve cord, the first axon began to retract. Some excess
axons were not completely removed even after 24 hours. Although our results do
not directly prove axon competition between regenerating axons, they are
consistent with a competition model, which might provide an alternative
explanation to the discovery by Wu et al.
(Wu et al., 2007
) of an
inhibitory role of a synaptic branch on PLM regeneration. Wu et al. discovered
that PLM axons cut distal to the ventral branch point typically do not regrow,
but can regrow if the ventral branch is also severed. One possibility is that
a regulatory cue from the ventral branch can signal to the PLM cell body to
either prevent axon regrowth or promote axon pruning. Our time-lapse imaging
enabled us to identify intermediate structures during mechanosensory axon
regeneration, which seem to support a model in which the stabilization of one
axon might cause the retraction of the other axon.
Wu et al. (Wu et al., 2007
)
found that regeneration of ALM and PLM mechanosensory neurons after axotomy at
larval stages tends to exhibit fewer guidance errors than regeneration after
axotomy at the adult stage. Our time-lapse imaging analysis shows that
regenerating axons at the adult stage lack the deterministic precision of
initial axon development. Although we were unable to perform the same
time-lapse imaging to monitor initial axon development in the AVM neurons, as
our fluorescence marker (mec-4p::GFP) only becomes visible in the AVM
axon after its development is completed, we have several observations
suggesting that initial wiring during larval development is rather precise.
First, axon morphology after regeneration is highly variable, whereas axon
morphology after development is stereotyped and practically indistinguishable
from worm to worm (based on inspection of more than 100 wild-type worms).
Second, pruning of unwanted axons in adult worms is often imperfect and excess
axon outgrowths are commonly observed (Fig.
4), whereas we have never observed excess axon outgrowths after
initial development. Finally, we were able to compare the effects of different
developmental ages on the extent of AVM axon regeneration in L3, L4 and young
adult animals (Fig. 5). We cut
AVM axons halfway along their ventral projections at each developmental stage,
and found that advancing development leads to significant decrease in the
total amount of regenerative axonal outgrowth, as well as to a significant
decrease in guidance precision to the ventral nerve cord. Taken together,
these results point to significant shifts in the regenerative capacity from
larval to adult stage.
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90%) of ventral guidance
(Hao et al., 2001We found that the AVM axon in unc-40/DCC mutants displayed the same level of success in regenerating and reaching the ventral nerve cord after adult-stage axotomy as in wild-type worms, but was significantly less successful in unc-6/netrin mutants. One possibility is that unc-6/netrin continues to mediate guidance in the regenerating AVM axons of adult animals, but through an unc-40/DCC-independent mechanism (Fig. 7A,B). The unc-5 gene encodes an alternative netrin receptor in C. elegans. We found that AVM axon regeneration in the unc-5 mutants was indistinguishable from wild-type animals, suggesting that the unc-5 receptor alone is not sufficient to mediate attraction to unc-6/netrin during regeneration (Fig. 7A,B). We note that unc-6/netrin also adopts a significant role in anteroposterior guidance of regenerating AVM axons, as we frequently observed regenerated AVM axons in unc-6 mutants projecting extensively in the posterior direction (30%; n=23) in contrast to exclusively anterior projections in wild-type worms during initial development (Fig. 7A, Fig. 8C,D).
We found that slt-1 continues to be expressed by dorsal body wall muscles in the adult stage (Fig. 9A) and contributes to the ventral guidance of the regenerating AVM axons. The regenerative axon guidance defect caused by slt-1 mutation is not obvious by itself but is revealed by its enhancing the defect caused by an unc-6 mutation (Fig. 7B). Even in the absence of SLT-1 activity, developing AVM axons never project to the dorsal midline (0%; n>100). By contrast, regenerating AVM axons frequently project to the dorsal midline (37%; n=19) (Fig. 7A, Fig. 8B). These results suggest that SLT-1 is the major axon repellent that mediates dorsal repulsion at the adult stage, whereas a redundant axon repellent cooperates with SLT-1 during early development to repel AVM axons away from the dorsal midline.
A candidate redundant repellent is UNC-129/TGF-β as UNC-129, like
SLT-1, is also expressed in dorsal body wall muscles during development
(Colavita et al., 1998
) and an
unc-129 mutation strongly enhances the AVM axon guidance phenotypes
of slt-1 mutants (C.C., T. Yu and C. Bargmann, unpublished).
UNC-129/TGF-β continues to be expressed in dorsal body wall muscles at
the adult stage (Fig. 9B).
However, we found that unc-129 no longer exerts its effects on adult
AVM axons, as an unc-129 mutation does not enhance AVM regenerative
phenotypes of slt-1 mutants (Fig.
7A,B). One possible explanation is that TGF-β receptor
signaling might be inactivated in adult AVM neurons. This hypothesis awaits
further demonstration as the UNC-129/TGF-β receptor has not yet been
identified in C. elegans (Colavita
et al., 1998
).
The signaling molecules UNC-34/Ena, CED-10/Rac and MIG-10/Lamellipodin
(Lpd) operate downstream of axon guidance receptors during initial AVM axon
development, forming two redundant pathways that mediate axon guidance
(Gitai et al., 2003
;
Lundquist et al., 1998
;
Chang et al., 2006
;
Quinn et al., 2006
)
(Fig. 6B). Based on inspection
of AVM morphology after initial development in unc-34(gm104) and
ced-10 (n1993) mutant animals (n>100), we observed normal
axon outgrowth in every animal. Thus, both UNC-34/Ena and CED-10/Rac are not
required for developmental axon growth. By contrast, both UNC-34/Ena and
CED-10/Rac are essential for adult-stage axon regrowth
(Fig. 7A,D,
Fig. 8F,G). We quantified
regenerative axonal outgrowth by measuring the average length along the
contour of all primary and secondary regenerated axons
(Fig. 5A,B). Using this metric,
both unc-34 and ced-10 mutants exhibit stunted axonal
outgrowth after adult-stage axotomy, which may contribute to the poor success
rate with which regenerating AVM axons in ced-10 mutants reach the
ventral midline (Fig. 7A,B).
Expressing UNC-34/Ena and CED-10/Rac in the mechanosensory neurons using the
cell-type specific mec-4 promoter rescued regenerative axon outgrowth
defects of unc-34(gm104) and ced-10(n1993) mutants,
indicating that these molecules function cell autonomously in AVM for
adult-stage axon regeneration (Fig.
7D). By the axonal length metric, the unc-6 mutation has
the interesting and quantifiable effect of enhancing regenerative axonal
outgrowth, an effect that is augmented in unc-6 slt-1 double mutants
(Fig. 7A,C,
Fig. 8E).
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| DISCUSSION |
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Our observations uncovered specific features of adult-stage regeneration in C. elegans that resemble clinically relevant features of regeneration in higher mammals. In C. elegans, we found that different neuronal cell types exhibit different capacities for regeneration. Neurons in the worm's head tend not to regenerate after axotomy, but neurons in the body reliably regenerate. Similarly, in mammals, neurons in the peripheral nervous system tend to regenerate after traumatic injury, but neurons in the central nervous system fail to regenerate. In C. elegans, we found that axotomy at the adult stage can stimulate the formation of multiple growth cones, exploratory outgrowth and imprecise pruning of excessive outgrowths. Similarly, in mammals, exuberant axon sprouting can often be found at the sites of brain lesions, which is frequently associated with post-traumatic epilepsy. In addition, in C. elegans, we found that the location of the axotomy with respect to the cell body affects regeneration patterns, and that regenerative capacity is higher in early development than in adult stage. Both are well-established features of mammalian axonal regeneration.
In the case of the AVM neurons, we observed clear differences in the genetic requirements between wiring during initial development and rewiring during adult-stage regeneration. Mutations in certain genes, e.g. unc-40/DCC and unc-129/TGF-β, have significant effects on initial wiring without having significant effects on rewiring. Mutations in other genes, e.g. ced-10, unc-34 and mig-10, have significant effects on rewiring without having significant effects on initial wiring. High-throughput methods for stereotyped femtosecond laser axotomy in C. elegans should enable unbiased, forward genetic screens to identify new molecules that allow the nervous system to regenerate and repair itself after traumatic injury at the adult stage.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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