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Amacrine-Signaled Loss of Intrinsic Axon Growth Ability by Retinal Ganglion Cells
Jeffrey L. Goldberg,*Matthew P. Klassen,Ying Hua,Ben A. Barres
The central nervous system (CNS) loses the ability to
regenerate early during development, but it is not known why. The
retinahas long served as a simple model system for study of CNS
regeneration.Here we show that amacrine cells signal neonatal rat
retinal ganglioncells (RGCs) to undergo a profound and apparently
irreversibleloss of intrinsic axon growth ability. Concurrently,
retinal maturationtriggers RGCs to greatly increase their dendritic
growth ability.These results suggest that adult CNS neurons fail to
regeneratenot only because of CNS glial inhibition but also because of
aloss of intrinsic axon growth ability.
Stanford University School of Medicine, Department of
Neurobiology, Sherman Fairchild Science Building D231, 299 Campus
Drive, Stanford, CA 94305-5125, USA.
*
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
jlgoldbe{at}stanford.edu
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