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Published online 7 October 2002. doi:10.1083/jcb1591rr2
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© The Rockefeller University Press, 0021-9525/2002/10/14-a $5.00
The Journal of Cell Biology, Volume 159, Number 1, 14-a-14


Research Roundup

Old and unattracted


Young neurons turn toward netrin (top), but old neurons turn away (bottom).

Holt/Macmillan

With a limited number of guidance molecules in the nervous system, the same molecules get used in multiple places. Now Derryck Shewan, Christine Holt, and colleagues (University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK) have shown that an intrinsic timing mechanism allows netrin to be used as both an attractant and repellant for the same set of growth cones during different periods of their outgrowth.

Holt had already shown that, at the beginning of the pathway traversed by frog retinal axons, netrin leads the axons out of the eye. To study the rest of the pathway, Shewan achieved the finicky feat of culturing the entire pathway. He confirmed that netrin could later act as a repellent that probably helps to prevent overshoot of the axons' final target.

That was a nice result. But the surprise was yet to come. When the team cultured a chunk of retina, which lacked the rest of the optic pathway and had not yet initiated axon outgrowth, they saw that after two days there was the same switch from netrin attraction to netrin repulsion. Thus, the switch appears to be intrinsic.

"It was when we did the control experiment that we realized [that the switch to repulsion] was happening even without the pathway experience," says Holt. "It was one of those strange twists."

The initial, acute switch during outgrowth may still be influenced by pathway cues—possibly a combination of laminin, which Holt's group has shown can flip the netrin switch, and another guidance molecule called Robo, whose receptor in the spinal cord can silence the netrin receptor. But the more long-lasting switch in netrin responsiveness may be a result of dropping levels of cyclic AMP (cAMP), which Holt's group shows is correlated with the aging of the retinal neurons. Boosting cAMP can restore the youthful attraction to netrin, but the ultimate cause of the age-dependent dip in cAMP is not yet known. {blacksquare}

Reference:

Shewan, D., et al. 2002. Nat. Neurosci. 10.1038/nn919.



William A. Wells

wellsw{at}rockefeller.edu


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This Article
Right arrow Full Text (PDF, 290K)
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Right arrow Articles by Wells, W. A.
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