B-RAF kinase drives developmental axon growth and promotes axon regeneration in the injured mature CNS

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Abstract

Activation of intrinsic growth programs that promote developmental axon growth may also facilitate axon regeneration in injured adult neurons. Here, we demonstrate that conditional activation of B-RAF kinase alone in mouse embryonic neurons is sufficient to drive the growth of long-range peripheral sensory axon projections in vivo in the absence of upstream neurotrophin signaling. We further show that activated B-RAF signaling enables robust regenerative growth of sensory axons into the spinal cord after a dorsal root crush as well as substantial axon regrowth in the crush-lesioned optic nerve. Finally, the combination of B-RAF gain-of-function and PTEN loss-of-function promotes optic nerve axon extension beyond what would be predicted for a simple additive effect. We conclude that cell-intrinsic RAF signaling is a crucial pathway promoting developmental and regenerative axon growth in the peripheral and central nervous systems. © 2014 O'Donovan et al.

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O’Donovan, K. J., Ma, K., Guo, H., Wang, C., Sun, F., Han, S. B., … Zhong, J. (2014). B-RAF kinase drives developmental axon growth and promotes axon regeneration in the injured mature CNS. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 211(5), 801–814. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20131780

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