(Press-News.org) Zebrafish are members of a rarefied group of vertebrates capable of fully healing a severed spinal cord. A clear understanding of how this regeneration takes place could provide clues toward strategies for healing spinal cord injuries in people. Such injuries can be devastating, causing permanent loss of sensation and movement.
A new study from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis maps out a detailed atlas of all the cells involved — and how they work together — in regenerating the zebrafish spinal cord. In an unexpected finding, the researchers showed that survival and adaptability of the severed neurons themselves is required for full spinal cord regeneration. Surprisingly, the study showed that stem cells capable of forming new neurons — and typically thought of as central to regeneration — play a complementary role but don’t lead the process.
The study is published Thursday, Aug. 15, in the journal Nature Communications.
Unlike humans’ and other mammals’ spinal cord injuries, in which damaged neurons always die, the damaged neurons of zebrafish dramatically alter their cellular functions in response to injury, first to survive and then to take on new and central roles in orchestrating the precise events that govern healing, the researchers found. Scientists knew that zebrafish neurons survive spinal cord injury, and this new study reveals how they do it.
“We found that most, if not all, aspects of neural repair that we’re trying to achieve in people occur naturally in zebrafish,” said senior author Mayssa Mokalled, PhD, an associate professor of developmental biology. “The surprising observation we made is that there are strong neuronal protection and repair mechanisms happening right after injury. We think these protective mechanisms allow neurons to survive the injury and then adopt a kind of spontaneous plasticity — or flexibility in their functions — that gives the fish time to regenerate new neurons to achieve full recovery. Our study has identified genetic targets that will help us promote this type of plasticity in the cells of people and other mammals.”
By mapping out the evolving roles of various cell types involved in regeneration, Mokalled and her colleagues found that the flexibility of the surviving injured neurons and their capacity to immediately reprogram after injury lead the chain of events that are required for spinal cord regeneration. If these injury-surviving neurons are disabled, zebrafish do not regain their normal swim capacity, even though regenerative stem cells remain present.
When the long wiring of the spinal cord is crushed or severed in people and other mammals, it sets off a chain of toxicity events that kills the neurons and makes the spinal cord environment hostile against repair mechanisms. This neuronal toxicity could provide some explanation for the failure of attempts to harness stem cells to treat spinal cord injuries in people. Rather than focus on regeneration with stem cells, the new study suggests that any successful method to heal spinal cord injuries in people must start with saving the injured neurons from death.
“Neurons by themselves, without connections to other cells, do not survive,” Mokalled said. “In zebrafish, we think severed neurons can overcome the stress of injury because their flexibility helps them establish new local connections immediately after injury. Our research suggests this is a temporary mechanism that buys time, protecting neurons from death and allowing the system to preserve neuronal circuitry while building and regenerating the main spinal cord.”
There is some evidence that this capacity is present but dormant in mammalian neurons, so this may be a route to new therapies, according to the researchers.
“We are hopeful that identifying the genes that orchestrate this protective process in zebrafish — versions of which also are present in the human genome — will help us find ways to protect neurons in people from the waves of cell death that we see following spinal cord injuries,” she said.
While this study is focused on neurons, Mokalled said spinal cord regeneration is extremely complex, and future work for her team will delve into a new cell atlas to understand the contributions of other cell types to spinal cord regeneration, including non-neuronal cells, called glia, in the central nervous system as well as cells of the immune system and vasculature. They also have ongoing studies comparing the findings in zebrafish to what is happening in mammalian cells, including mouse and human nerve tissue.
Saraswathy VM, Zhou L, Mokalled MH. Single-cell analysis of innate spinal cord regeneration identifies intersecting modes of neuronal repair. Nature Communications. Aug. 15, 2024.
END
Zebrafish use surprising strategy to regrow spinal cord
Detailed blueprint of nerve cells’ dramatic changes could help identify ways to heal spinal cord damage
2024-08-15
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Bone fracture rates vary dramatically by race
2024-08-15
A new paper in the Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, published by Oxford University Press, finds that bone fracture rates in older women differ by race, quite significantly. While researchers have known for years that the risk of bone fracture is highest for White women, this is the first study to show the real fracture rate for Asian and Hispanic women.
Until recently researchers have had limited data on fracture rates by specific race and ethnicity beyond White people, and even less fracture data within race and ethnic groups. Hispanic and Asian populations are the ...
2024 Shanghai Ranking: Hebrew University rises to 81st, showcasing academic excellence
2024-08-15
For the second consecutive year, three Israeli universities are ranked among the top 100 institutions globally. Alongside the Hebrew University, ranked 81st, are the Technion (85th) and the Weizmann Institute (69th). This is an outstanding achievement for Israeli academia and especially for the Hebrew University.
Professor Asher Cohen, President of the Hebrew University, stated: "The presence of three Israeli universities in the list of the top 100 universities globally is an exceptional achievement in such a challenging and complex year. The Hebrew University's rise to 81st place ...
Neoadjuvant immunotherapy may facilitate surgery and improve outcomes for patients with high-risk liver cancer
2024-08-15
Bottom Line: Patients with liver cancer who received immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) before surgery—including those who would not have been eligible for surgery by conventional criteria—had similar outcomes to patients who received surgery upfront, according to results from a retrospective study.
Journal in Which the Study was Published: Cancer Research Communications, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR)
Author: Mari Nakazawa, MD, first author of the study and a clinical research fellow ...
Racial, economic barriers hinder access to medicine for treating opioid use disorder
2024-08-15
PORTLAND, Ore. – Patients with a prescription for an opioid use disorder medication may have a tough time getting it filled if their pharmacy is in a community that’s racially and economically segregated, according to a new study led by scientists at Oregon State University and Johns Hopkins University.
The findings shed additional light on inequities in health care as the U.S.’s overdose crisis continues to accelerate, with fatality rates rising fastest in Black and Hispanic/Latinx communities.
“While there have been notable policy changes over the past decade that ...
Weather and geography drive waterborne infectious disease outbreaks
2024-08-15
An analysis of 12 years of data collected from over 500 hospitals in 25 different U.S. states shows that weather, geographic location, and urban or rural location all appear to influence hospitalizations for waterborne infectious diseases, according to a new study by researchers at Columbia University in the open-access journal PLOS Water.
Waterborne infectious diseases caused by bacteria, parasites, and viruses still affect over 7,000,000 people annually in the United States despite drinking and recreational water regulations, and sanitation ...
First-of-its-kind vaccine expands malaria protection for pregnant women
2024-08-15
August 14, 2024 – In a report published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases (Safety and efficacy of PfSPZ Vaccine against malaria in healthy adults and women anticipating pregnancy in Mali: two randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 1 and 2 trials) a team led by investigators at the Malaria Research and Training Center (MRTC), Bamako, Mali; the Laboratory of Malaria Immunology and Vaccinology (LMIV), National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health; and Sanaria Inc. describes ...
Candidate malaria vaccine provides lasting protection in NIH-sponsored trials
2024-08-15
WHAT:
Two National Institutes of Health (NIH)-supported trials of an experimental malaria vaccine in healthy Malian adults found that all three tested regimens were safe. One of the trials enrolled 300 healthy women ages 18 to 38 years who anticipated becoming pregnant soon after immunization. That trial began with drug treatment to remove malaria parasites, followed by three injections spaced over a month of either saline placebo or the investigational vaccine at one of two dosages. Both dosages of the vaccine candidate conferred a significant degree of protection from parasite infection and clinical malaria that was sustained ...
Pioneering research sheds light on how babies and young children understand the art of pretence
2024-08-15
Babies recognise pretence and around half of children can pretend themselves by 12 months, new research has found.
The study, led by the University of Bristol, shows for the first time how children’s awareness and grasp of pretence in its various forms develops from birth to three years.
Lead author Prof Elena Hoicka, Professor of Psychology in Education at the University’s School of Education, said: “Our findings highlight how pretending is a complex, evolving process which begins very early on in life, helping their cognitive and social skills to advance. Pretence ...
Climate reporting standards insufficient, must be expanded, say Oxford net zero experts
2024-08-15
A new paper from the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, University of Oxford concludes that current climate standards are not sufficiently incentivising the big picture innovations necessary to deliver net zero, and must be expanded to include a company’s broader influence on climate action. The peer-reviewed research, published in Carbon Management, comes after a period of fierce public debate about climate standards and offers possible solutions for those seeking to improve both integrity and impact of corporate climate action.
Incentivising climate action and innovation in the corporate world is essential says co-author Dr Matilda Becker: “Of the 2000 largest ...
Khojandi, Zhao selected for prestigious AAAS STPF fellowships
2024-08-15
Anahita Khojandi and Xiaopeng Zhao have been selected by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) to participate in the 2024-25 Science & Technology Policy Fellowship (STPF).
Khojandi, a Heath Endowed Faculty Fellow in Business & Engineering and Associate Professor in the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering, and Zhao, a professor in the Department of Mechanical, Aerospace, and Biomedical Engineering and founding director of the Applied AI Program ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Scientists discover NELL2’s dual role: boosting bone formation while curbing fat accumulation
Bees facing new threats, putting our survival and theirs at risk
Deep learning can predict lung cancer risk from single LDCT scan
Genomic data shows widespread mpox transmission in West Africa prior to 2022 global outbreak
Research spotlight: Gender differences in primary care physician earnings and outcomes
Eating craved foods with meals lessens cravings, boosts weight loss
Limited evidence suggests calorie restriction may slightly reduce depressive symptoms in people with elevated cardiometabolic risk
U of A researchers developing world's first petahertz-speed phototransistor in ambient conditions
NRL hosts Innovation Day for Industry
Here comes the boom! Studying the effects of rocket launch sonic booms on neighboring communities #ASA188
Researchers capture brain activity with imager that is smaller than an eyelash
A head and a hundred tails: how a branching worm manages reproductive complexity
Investment risk for energy infrastructure construction is highest for nuclear power plants, lowest for solar
Personality traits influence the development of insomnia
Controlling these 8 risk factors may eliminate early death risk for those with high blood pressure
A groundbreaking discovery of a common master switch to cure Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and other brain-related diseases
Novel data streaming software chases light speed from accelerator to supercomputer
UK child sexual abuse survivors lack support - report
Rice’s Mikos elected to the European Academy of Sciences
Hari Kalva, Ph.D., inducted into the Florida Inventors Hall of Fame
Machine learning model helps identify patients at risk of postpartum depression
The US has a new most powerful laser
Team creates light-activated therapy to target hard-to-treat cancer
Tiny microlaser sensors offer supercharged biosensing
Having a team therapist reduces burnout in critical care nurses
Ciliary dysfunction linked to bronchopulmonary dysplasia severity
Inhaled microplastics inhibit key immune cell in the lungs
R. Rex and Carrol Parris make $10 million gift to launch USC Longevity Research Accelerator at Keck School of Medicine
Stars or numbers? How rating formats change consumer behavior
Empowering robots with human-like perception to navigate unwieldy terrain
[Press-News.org] Zebrafish use surprising strategy to regrow spinal cordDetailed blueprint of nerve cells’ dramatic changes could help identify ways to heal spinal cord damage