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Adult ciliary neurotrophic factor receptors help maintain facial motor neuron choline acetyltransferase expression in vivo following nerve crush.

  • Nancy Lee‎ et al.
  • The Journal of comparative neurology‎
  • 2017‎

Exogenous ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) administration promotes the survival of motor neurons in a wide range of models. It also increases the expression of the critical neurotransmitter enzyme choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) by in vitro motor neurons, likely independent of its effects on their survival. We have used the adult mouse facial nerve crush model and adult-onset conditional disruption of the CNTF receptor α (CNTFRα) gene to directly examine the in vivo roles played by endogenous CNTF receptors in adult motor neuron survival and ChAT maintenance, independent of developmental functions. We have previously shown that adult activation of the CreER gene construct in floxed CNTFRα mice depletes this essential receptor subunit in a large subset of motor neurons (and all skeletal muscle, as shown in this study) but has no effect on the survival of intact or lesioned motor neurons, indicating that these adult CNTF receptors play no essential survival role in this model, in contrast to their essential role during embryonic development. Here we show that this same CNTFRα depletion does not affect ChAT labeling in nonlesioned motor neurons, but it significantly increases the loss of ChAT following nerve crush. The data suggest that, although neither motor neuron nor muscle CNTF receptors play a significant, nonredundant role in the maintenance of ChAT in intact adult motor neurons, the receptors become essential for ChAT maintenance when the motor neurons are challenged by nerve crush. Therefore, the data suggest that the receptors act as a critical component of an endogenous neuroprotective mechanism. J. Comp. Neurol. 525:1206-1215, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Muscle ciliary neurotrophic factor receptor α helps maintain choline acetyltransferase levels in denervated motor neurons following peripheral nerve lesion.

  • Nancy Lee‎ et al.
  • Experimental neurology‎
  • 2019‎

Systemic ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) administration protects motor neurons from denervating diseases and lesions but produces non-neuromuscular side effects. Therefore, CNTF related therapeutics will need to specifically target motor neuron protective receptor mechanisms. Expression of the essential ligand binding subunit of the CNTF receptor, CNTF receptor α (CNTFRα), is induced in skeletal muscle by denervating lesion and in human denervating diseases. We show here, with muscle-specific in vivo genetic disruption, that muscle CNTFRα makes an essential/non-redundant contribution to maintaining choline acetyltransferase levels in denervated motor neurons following nerve crush, suggesting the muscle CNTFRα induction is an endogenous denervation-induced neuroprotective response that could be enhanced to treat nerve lesion and denervating diseases. Notably, unlike motor neuron gene expression, skeletal muscle gene expression can be specifically targeted with human gene therapy vectors already approved for market.


Immunohistochemical localization of CNTFRalpha in adult mouse retina and optic nerve following intraorbital nerve crush: evidence for the axonal loss of a trophic factor receptor after injury.

  • Jill A Miotke‎ et al.
  • The Journal of comparative neurology‎
  • 2007‎

Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) is important for the survival and outgrowth of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in vitro. However, in vivo adult RGCs fail to regenerate and subsequently die following axotomy, even though there are high levels of CNTF in the optic nerve. To address this discrepancy, we used immunohistochemistry to analyze the expression of CNTF receptor alpha (CNTFRalpha) in mouse retina and optic nerve following intraorbital nerve crush. In normal mice, RGC perikarya and axons were intensely labeled for CNTFRalpha. At 24 hours after crush, the immunoreactivity normally seen on axons in the nerve was lost near the lesion. This loss radiated from the crush site with time. At 2 days postlesion, labeled axons were not detected in the proximal nerve, and at 2 weeks were barely detectable in the retina. In the distal nerve, loss of axonal staining progressed to the optic chiasm by 7 days and remained undetectable at 2 weeks. Interfascicular glia in the normal optic nerve were faintly labeled, but by 24 hours after crush they became intensely labeled near the lesion. Double labeling showed these to be both astrocytes and oligodendrocytes. At 7 days postlesion, darkly labeled glia were seen throughout the optic nerve, but at 14 days labeling returned to normal. It is suggested that the loss of CNTFRalpha from axons renders RGCs unresponsive to CNTF, thereby contributing to regenerative failure and death, while its appearance on glia may promote glial scarring.


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