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Volume 16, Number 12,
Issue of June 15, 1996
pp. 3887-3894
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor and
Neurotrophin-4/5 Stimulate Growth of Axonal Branches from
Regenerating Retinal Ganglion Cells
Hajime Sawai,
David B. Clarke,
Paula Kittlerova,
Garth M. Bray, and
Albert J. Aguayo
Centre for Research in Neuroscience, Montréal General
Hospital Research Institute and McGill University, Montréal,
Québec, Canada H3G 1A4
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
To investigate the influences of growth factors on axonal
regeneration in the mammalian CNS, we used intracellular tracers to
quantitate the effects of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF),
neurotrophin (NT)-4/5, or NT-3 on individual retinal ganglion cell
(RGC) axons in the retinas of adult rats after optic nerve transection.
A single injection of BDNF or the prolonged administration of NT-4/5 by
mini-pump increased axon branch median lengths by eightfold but had no
effect on the number of branches formed by the RGC axons. NT-3 did not
significantly influence axonal regrowth. These specific in vivo
effects of BDNF and NT-4/5 on axonal regeneration from injured
RGCs may be used to promote growth and expand the abnormally small
terminal arbors observed when RGCs regrow into their CNS targets.
Key words:
axon branching;
BDNF;
NT-4/5;
neurotrophins;
axon
regeneration;
retina
INTRODUCTION
Recovery from neural injury is often impaired by a
loss of nerve cells and the failure of regenerating axons to grow and
branch appropriately in the adult mammalian CNS. We have shown
previously in adult rats that the intraocular injection of
brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) enhances the survival of
axotomized retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) (Mansour-Robaey et al., 1994 ).
The BDNF injections also caused the formation of a dense and intricate
meshwork of axons within the retinas of these animals (Mansour-Robaey
et al., 1994 ). Such an observation suggested that BDNF could promote
the regrowth of injured RGC axons in adult mammals. On the other hand,
Schnell et al. (1994) reported that neurotrophin (NT)-3, but not BDNF,
enhanced axonal sprouting in the injured spinal cord of rats. Such
apparent discrepancies may have reflected differences in NT receptor
expression in separate classes of CNS neurons. In both of these
experiments, however, the precise actions of the NTs on axonal
regeneration were difficult to define because increases in fiber
density at the site of injury could have resulted from a greater number
of axons, an increase in their branching, or a larger population of
surviving nerve cells.
In the present investigations, we have exploited the accessibility of
the retina and used intracellular tracers to visualize fine details of
the course and termination of individual regenerating axons and their
branches. Measurements in untreated and NT-treated retinas have then
been used to delineate specific in vivo effects of the
NTs BDNF, NT-3, and NT-4/5 on intraretinal growth and branch
formation by RGC axons. We anticipate that a better understanding of
the nature of the axonal changes induced by individual NTs in the adult
mammalian CNS will provide new insights on the molecular determinants
of axonal phenotypes. Such knowledge may also help develop in
vivo strategies to enlarge the arborizations of regrowing axons,
which are smaller than normal when RGCs regenerate into the superior
colliculus (SC) along peripheral nerve grafts that connect the eye and
the tectum (Carter, 1991 ; Carter et al., 1991 ; Sauvé et al.,
1995 ).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animals. In 67 adult female Sprague-Dawley rats, the
left optic nerve (ON) was transected 0.5 mm from the eye. At the time
of ON transection, RGCs were back-labeled by the application of
4Di-10Asp (Di-Asp, Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) to the ocular stump of
the ON. In four animals without previous ON lesions, the left ON was
transected only at the time of removal of the retina for in
vitro RGC labeling.
NT administration. Five micrograms of BDNF or NT-3, or 3 µg of NT-4/5 (provided by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals) in 5 µl of
PBS, pH 7.2, was injected into the vitreous space by a posterior
injection at the time of ON transection. Care was taken to avoid injury
to anterior structures of the eye, known to be a potential source of
trophic molecules capable of influencing RGC responses to axotomy
(Mansour-Robaey et al., 1994 ). For sustained administration, an osmotic
mini-pump (Alzet #2002) filled with NT-4/5 (0.1 µg/µl) was placed
in a subcutaneous pocket. The NT was delivered to the vitreous chamber
through a fine SILASTIC tubing (Dow Corning, Corning, NY). The
mini-pump contained 0.1 µg/µl NT-4/5 that was delivered at
approximate rates of 0.5 µl/hr for 14 d.
Tissue processing. Groups of rats were perfused with aerated
Ames' solution immediately after ON transection or 3 d or 1, 2, or 4 weeks later. The retinas were quickly dissected, flat-mounted, and
superfused with aerated Ames' solution in a Plexiglas chamber on a
fixed-stage epifluorescence microscope.
Visualization of individual RGCs. RGC perikarya were
identified by fluorescence microscopy on the basis of their labeling
with Di-Asp. Individual neurons were then injected by iontophoresis
through micropipettes (0.1-0.5 µm tips) with 4% Neurobiotin (Kita
and Armstrong, 1991 ). Nine to fifteen RGCs were injected per retina
over 4-6 hr. Perfusion with the aerated Ames' solution continued for
an additional 30 min after the last injection. The retinas were then
fixed overnight by immersion in 4% paraformaldehyde and 0.25%
glutaraldehyde in phosphate buffer. Each retina was incubated at 4°C
for 2 d with the detergents 2% Triton X-100 and 0.5% DMSO in PBS.
Experimental and control retinas were immersed overnight at room
temperature in a solution of streptavidin-conjugated peroxidase in 2%
Triton X-100 and 0.5% DMSO. After rinses, the retinas were incubated
in phosphate buffer (0.1 M) containing
diaminobenzidine (50 mg/100 ml), cobalt chloride (0.002%), and
H202 (0.01%). The retinas
were flat-mounted in Permount and examined by light microscopy.
RGC axons were categorized according to the pattern of their
termination as well as the number and lengths of their branches.
Because of overlapping of axons and branches, 21 of the 470 labeled
axons in the 2 week groups of experimental animals could not be
analyzed. Among the 58 axons examined in the 4 week groups of animals,
there were no overlapping branches. Labeled RGC axons and their
branches were drawn by camera lucida at a magnification of 100× (oil
immersion). Axon and branch lengths were measured with an Image-I
analysis system (Universal Imaging, West Chester, PA). Although some
transected axons may have degenerated back in the retina from the site
of ON transection and then regrown toward the ON head, the only
measurable indication of new axonal growth was that of the axons that
turned at the ON head. The length of such growth was determined by
measuring the distance from the point that the axon turned at the ON
head to its termination in the retina.
Statistical methods. Quantitative results were
analyzed with the SigmaStat program (Jandel, Corte Madera, CA).
Data that failed tests of normality and equal variance were analyzed by
the Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on ranks followed by Dunn's pairwise
comparisons (Glantz, 1992 ).
RESULTS
In the 67 retinas examined, the axons of 652 individual RGCs were
delineated by the Neurobiotin-peroxidase reaction product. These axons
were analyzed for the location of their endings (over the retina
outside the ON head or over the ON head), the presence of growth cones,
the number and length of branches, and the appearance of aberrant
growth. Substantial proportions (34-59%) of the labeled axons in both
the untreated (Table 1) and NT-treated (Table
2) retinas ended outside the ON head or at its edge (see
Fig. 1). Many of these axons exhibited growth cones
(Tables 1, 2), suggesting that they had retracted into the retina and
were attempting to regrow. The perikarya and dendrites of the labeled
neurons were not analyzed in detail, but their size and appearance
indicated that most were probably -RGCs.
Table 1.
RGC axon branches after ON
transection
|
4-6 hr |
3 d |
1
week |
2 weeks |
4 weeks |
|
| Retinas
(n) |
4 |
4 |
3 |
11 |
4 |
| Labeled
axons
(n) |
52 |
47 |
25 |
92 |
27 |
| Retracteda |
20
(38%) |
16 (34%) |
11 (44%) |
37
(40%)c |
12 (44%) |
| With growth
conesb |
85% |
63% |
55% |
95% |
58% |
| Axons
with branches |
16 (31%) |
10 (21%) |
7 (28%) |
38 (41%) |
6
(22%) |
| Branches/axon |
16.8 |
11.6 |
8.4 |
6.8 |
20.8 |
| Range |
3-13 |
1-45 |
8-23 |
1-42 |
2-67 |
| Branch
length |
| Median (µm) |
2.7 |
7.5 |
6.5 |
9.0 |
5.7 |
| Range
(µm) |
0.7-14.4 |
2.0-125.4 |
2.7-26.4 |
1.7-1860.4 |
1.8-203.5 |
| <5
µm |
87% |
56% |
53% |
26% |
37% |
| >50
µm |
0% |
4% |
2% |
21% |
3% |
|
|
a
Axons that end outside the ON head or at
its edge.
|
|
b
Proportion of axons outside the ON head that
had growth cones.
|
|
c
The ending of two axons could not be
identified.
|
|
Table 2.
Effect of NTs on RGC axon branches 2 weeks after ON
transection
|
Cut
only |
+ BDNF |
+ NT-4/5 |
+ NT-4/5pa |
+
NT-3 |
|
| Retinas
(n) |
11 |
17 |
2 |
3 |
13 |
| Labeled
axons
(n) |
92 |
195 |
27 |
17 |
139 |
| Retractedb |
37
(40%)d |
115
(59%)d |
12 (44%) |
7 (41%) |
77
(55%) |
| With growth
conesc |
95% |
63% |
25% |
14% |
58% |
| Axons
with branches |
38 (41%) |
77 (39%) |
7 (26%) |
8 (47%) |
47
(35%) |
| Branches/axon |
6.8 |
6.2 |
8.9 |
9.9 |
7.8 |
| Range |
1-42 |
1-42 |
1-44 |
3-20 |
1-29 |
| Branch
length |
| Median
(µm) |
9.0 |
71.7* |
5.2 |
72.1* |
8.6 |
| Range
(µm) |
1.7-1860.4 |
2.1-1352.1 |
1.4-60.6 |
1.8-640.6 |
1.4-1030.2 |
| <5
µm (%) |
26% |
10% |
48% |
19% |
23% |
| >50 µm
(%) |
21% |
55%** |
2% |
51% |
20% |
|
|
a
Continuous administration by osmotic
mini-pump.
|
|
b
Axons that end outside the ON head or at its
edge.
|
|
c
Proportion of axons outside the ON head that
had growth cones.
|
|
d
The ending of two axons could not be
identified.
|
|
*Significantly greater than cut only. p < 0.001, Kruskal-Wallis one-way ANOVA on ranks; p < 0.05, Dunn's
pairwise comparisons.
|
|
**Significantly greater than cut only. p < 0.05, Student's
t test.
|
|
Fig. 1.
Camera lucida drawing of several
Neurobiotin-filled RGC axons near the ON head in a retina 4-6 hr after
removal from the animal. The edge of the ON head is indicated by the
broken lines. The axon at the top has two
short terminal branches; the fifth axon from the top does not reach the
ON head, because of either retrograde degeneration or incomplete
filling. Scale bar, 200 µm. Inset, The branched axon,
which was severed at the onset of the ex vivo labeling 4-6
hr before fixation, ends as two growth cones. Axons that showed such
growth cones over the ON head presumably terminated on the surface of
the ON head and did not project into the ON stump. Scale bar, 20 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (17K GIF file)]
In both the treated and the untreated retinas, axonal regrowth
was revealed by the formation of new branches arising from axonal
stumps and by aberrant axonal growth within the retina.
Axon branching
In the retinas that did not receive NT injections at the time of
ON transection, 21-41% of axons had branches that ranged in length
from less than 10 µm to nearly 2 mm (Fig. 2, Table 1).
Most of these axon branches were observed within 200 µm of the ON
head (Fig. 3) and, based on the depth of focus in the
flat-mounted retinas, they appeared to be confined to the nerve fiber
layer. Both simple and complex patterns of axon branching were observed
(Fig. 3). Axonal branching, as well as the appearance of growth cones
(Fig. 1), was observed soon after axotomy; even when the ONs were
transected only at the time of eye removal for intra- neuronal
injection, 31% of the labeled axons had short branches at the end of
the 4-6 hr incubation (Table 1).
Fig. 2.
Photographs of two labeled RGC axons near the ON
head. The shaft of each axon was traced to the RGC perikaryon to ensure
that single, individual axons were being assessed. A, Two
weeks after ON transection without NT administration, this axon has
several small branches that are <12 µm in length. Scale bar, 10 µm. B, An axon from a retina that was treated with BDNF
has two long branches that grow toward the ON head that are 94 and 153 µm in length. Scale bar, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (57K GIF file)]
Fig. 3.
Camera lucida drawings of Neurobiotin-labeled RGC
axons in flat-mounted retinas 2 weeks after ON transection alone
(A) or with the intravitreal administration of BDNF
(B) or NT-3 (C) at the time of ON transection.
The broken lines indicate the edge of the ON head.
A, An axon in an untreated retina turns at the edge of the
ON head, grows toward the periphery of the retina for 824 µm, and
then forms a branch that is 445 µm in length. The main axon then
turns toward the ON head and ends as a growth cone. Scale bar, 200 µm. Inset, Drawn at higher magnification, the axon shown
in A also has numerous small branches near the ON head.
Scale bar, 50 µm. B, An axon in a retina treated with 5 µg of BDNF at the time of ON transection has eight branches that
range in length from 11 to 363 µm. Scale bar, 100 µm. C,
An RGC axon in a retina treated with 5 µg of NT-3 ends over the ON
head and has many short branches. Scale bar, 50 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (15K GIF file)]
The incidence of axons with branches was similar (21-41%) at the
times examined: 4-6 hr to 4 weeks. The ratio of branches/axon among
branching axons varied from 6.8 at 2 weeks to 20.8 at 4 weeks (Table
1), but the differences were not statistically significant. The
incidence of axonal branching and the ratios of branches/axon were
similar for axons in the NT-treated and untreated groups (Tables 1, 2).
Branch lengths
Examined 4-6 hr after axotomy, 87% of the axon branches measured
<5 µm (Table 1), lengths comparable to the ``spikes'' described in
developing RGCs of amphibians (Cohen-Cory and Fraser, 1995 ). The
proportion of these short branches decreased to 26% by 2 weeks. The
in vitro technique used to label RGC axons did not allow us
to determine whether such spikes were an early response to axon injury
or an intrinsic feature of the axons. However, the incidence of these
short branches was not significantly affected by the application of NTs
(Table 2).
A single injection of BDNF greatly increased RGC axon branch growth at
2 weeks (Fig. 4). Indeed, their median length grew
eightfold from 9.0 µm in the untreated retinas to 71.1 µm in the
BDNF-treated retinas, and the proportion of branches that were longer
than 50 µm increased significantly from 21 to 55% (Table 2, Fig.
5). This effect was specific for branch length and was
not accompanied by an increase in the proportion of axons that had
branches or in the number of branches formed by individual RGCs (Table
2). In the NT-3-treated retinas, the number and lengths of branches did
not differ from those of the untreated retinas (Fig. 3C,
Table 2). Thus, the specific effect of BDNF was clearly to enhance the
length of axonal branches. By 4 weeks after ON transection in both the
NT-treated and the untreated retinas, median branch lengths were under
10 µm and the proportion of branches longer than 50 µm decreased to
<10% (Fig. 4D-F).
Fig. 4.
Histograms (binwidths, 10 µm) showing the
distribution of RGC axon branches 2 weeks (A-C)
or 4 weeks (D-F) after ON transection without
added NT (A, D), and after a single intravitreal
injection of BDNF (B, E) or NT-3 (C,
F). At 2 weeks, there were more long axon branches in the
BDNF-treated retinas (B) than in the untreated
(A) or NT-3-treated (C) retinas. By 4 weeks, most
branch lengths were <10 µm in all three groups
(D-F).
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
Fig. 5.
At 2 weeks, median branch lengths (A)
and the proportions of branches >50 µm in length were significantly
greater in the retinas treated with a single injection of BDNF
(black bars) or a continuous infusion of NT-4/5
(cross-hatched bars) than in the untreated
retinas (open bars) or the retinas that received
single injections of NT-4/5 (hatched bars) or NT-3
(stippled bars).
[View Larger Version of this Image (11K GIF file)]
Effect of continuous administration of NT-4/5
To explore the possibility that a more prolonged availability of
NT might affect the growth of axotomized intraretinal RGC axons, we
compared the RGC axons after single injections or continuous infusion
with an osmotic minipump of NT-4/5. This NT is related to BDNF
(Hallböök et al., 1991 ), binds to the TrkB
receptor expressed by most rat RGCs (Jelsma et al., 1994), and is known
to enhance the survival of injured RGCs. For technical reasons probably
related to the tendency of the molecule to adhere to the constituents
of these pumps, we were not able to administer BDNF in a prolonged
manner. With continuous infusion of NT-4/5 in three retinas, however,
the median length of the RGC axon branches was 72.1 µm (n = 79 branches), significantly greater than the median branch length of
5.2 µm (n = 62) observed in two retinas treated with a
single injection of NT-4/5 at the time of ON transection.
Growth away from the ON head
In both the NT-treated and the untreated retinas, there were axons
that turned at the ON head and grew toward the periphery of the retina
(Fig. 3A). Such turning axons were seen as early as 3 d
after ON transection; by 2 weeks, ~10% of the axons studied
exhibited this turning course and extended for distances that ranged
from 28.5 to 1457.4 µm. Based on the distances that the turning axons
elongated toward the periphery of the retina, which was the only
reliable measurement of axon shaft growth available in this study, we
found no evidence that any of the NTs increased the growth of the main
axonal shaft of the injured RGCs.
DISCUSSION
Retinal ganglion cell axons cut in the ON or the eye can
spontaneously regrow for short distances within the retina (Tello; Leoz
and Arevate, cited by Ramón y Cajal, 1928 ); (Goldberg and Frank,
1980 ; McConnell and Berry, 1982 ). We previously showed that
intravitreal injections of BDNF enhanced RGC survival and caused an
increase in the density of axons in the vicinity of the ON head
(Mansour-Robaey et al., 1994 ). It was not known, however, whether the
greater number of RGCs was responsible for such an apparent increase in
axonal profiles. The present studies establish that the administration
of BDNF or NT-4/5, but not of NT-3, specifically promotes axonal branch
growth within the retina. Thus, both increased survival and growth
appear to have contributed to the meshwork of axonal profiles observed
in retinas after BDNF administration (Mansour-Robaey et al., 1994 ).
The mechanisms whereby the NTs influence neuronal survival and regrowth
may be independent of each other, as suggested by the in
vitro evidence that neuronal viability and neurite extension are
mediated by different domains of their preferred receptors (Garner and
Large, 1994 ; Peng et al., 1995 ) and involve the activation of distinct
cellular pathways (Rabin et al., 1993 ; Stevens et al., 1994; Peng et
al., 1995 ; Jackson et al., 1996 ).
BDNF or NT-4/5 increases RGC axon branch lengths
Previous in vitro studies demonstrated that BDNF is
capable of promoting neurite outgrowth (Lindsay, 1988 ; Cohen et al.,
1994 ; Ahmed et al., 1995 ) or branching (Patel and McNamara, 1995 ).
Recent in vivo investigations carried out in the developing
visual system of Xenopus tadpoles (Cohen-Cory and Fraser,
1995 ) also indicate that branch length is stimulated by the
administration of BDNF into the target regions of visual projections.
Our documentation that BDNF and NT-4/5 can dramatically enhance the
growth of axonal branches from axotomized RGCs in the mature rat eye
suggests that the effects of NTs on axonal growth are similar during
the development and regeneration of a given neuronal class. In both of
these circumstances, BDNF appears to be essential for the extension of
RGC axonal branches but had no apparent effect on the formation of new
branches. Furthermore, in both development and regeneration, the growth
of branches appears to depend on the supply of BDNF. Indeed, the
administration of BDNF antibodies into the tectum of tadpoles abolished
branching (Cohen-Cory and Fraser, 1995 ), whereas in our experiments
branch lengths were increased 2 weeks after a single intravitreal
injection of BDNF but diminished to control levels by 4 weeks.
The long axon branches observed at 2 weeks in the BDNF-treated retinas
were not seen at 4 weeks. Although the death of the axotomized RGCs
undoubtedly contributed to the decreased numbers of these branches,
there also must have been a loss of long branches from the few neurons
that survived at this time without additional BDNF (Mansour-Robaey et
al., 1994 ). The loss of these branches in the absence of added BDNF
provides additional support for the idea that BDNF is essential for
axon branch growth.
In both the NT-treated and the untreated groups of retinas, ~40% of
the labeled RGC axons branched and regrew aberrantly in the vicinity of
the ON head, the anatomical junction of the retina and the ON. Such a
limited incidence of branching was also suggested by the observation
that when BDNF was introduced into the tectum of the developing
Xenopus, the branching of RGCs only increased in
approximately one-half of the axons (Cohen-Cory and Fraser, 1995 ).
Possible causes of this restricted neuronal responsiveness to BDNF
include a limited expression of TrkB during development
(Cohen-Cory and Fraser, 1994 ) or an impaired growth capacity of certain
RGCs (Chen et al., 1995 ). The lack of regenerative branching in some
RGCs may also be a sign of neuronal failure and impending death because
so many of the axotomized RGCs are lost during the first 2 weeks after
injury (Berkelaar et al., 1994 ).
Effects of NT-3
Although there was a trend toward greater numbers of small
branches 2 weeks after NT-3 administration (Fig. 4C), the
difference was not statistically significant. In contrast to what is
observed in the retina, NT-3 administration does lead to increased
numbers of axonal ``sprouts,'' presumably branches, after spinal cord
lesions in adult rats (Schnell et al., 1994 ). Such differences in the
growth factor responsiveness of nerve cells in these two regions of the
mature rat CNS may reflect selective actions mediated by specific NT
receptors expressed by the various classes of neurons involved.
Although we did not demonstrate an effect of NT-3 on branch formation
by the overall population of RGCs, it is possible that this NT only
affected a subset of these neurons that express trkC, its
preferred receptor. In intact rat retinas, only 30% of the RGC
population expresses this receptor, and its mRNA levels tend to fall
after RGC axotomy (Kittlerova et al., 1995 ). In the present
experiments, it was not possible to determine whether NT-3 increases
survival and growth only in the subset of these neurons that express
TrkC.
The possibility that NT-3 may have an effect on RGC growth that
escaped our detection is suggested further by the finding that NT-3
causes an increase in the number of short, spike-like branches in the
developing retino-tectal pathway in tadpoles (Cory-Cohen and Fraser,
1995). Moreover, in adult rats GAP-43 is markedly enhanced in nearly
one-half of the axotomized RGCs 2 weeks after injury and NT-3
administration (Kittlerova et al., 1994 ). The in vitro
demonstration that GAP-43 expression correlates well with the branching
of sensory neurons responsive to NGF or IGF-1 (Aigner and Caroni, 1995 )
and that transgenic mice overexpressing GAP-43 show spontaneous nerve
sprouting in response to injury (Aigner et al., 1995 ) suggests that the
patterns of GAP-43 expression we have observed in RGCs treated with
NT-3 are indices of some form of growth stimulation by this NT.
Failure of regenerating RGC axons to grow back into the
ON head
In both the untreated and the NT-treated retinas, nearly
one-half of the labeled RGC axons that were cut behind the eye
degenerated back toward their cell bodies in the retina for ~0.5 mm,
the length of the ON stumps. This axonal degeneration positioned most
growth cones within the retina in the vicinity of the ON head. Thus,
the regrowth of RGC branches into the ON would require their orderly
extension toward the ON head and their penetration of this anatomical
structure. In rodents, the ON head does not contain oligodendrocytes
(Anderson and Quigley, 1992 ) that express inhibitors of axon growth
(Schwab et al., 1993 ; McKerracher et al., 1994 ; Mukhopadhyay et al.,
1994 ). Our demonstration that many of the RGC axons that retracted into
the retina did not extend across or into the ON head but were diverted
at its edges suggests that molecules unrelated to myelin may impair
their growth. Possible candidates are chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan
(Brittis et al., 1992 ; Cohen et al., 1995 ), tenascin (Bartsch et al.,
1994 ), and collapsin (Luo et al., 1995 ). Because it has been suggested
that certain membrane-bound inhibitors can enhance RGC arborization in
the superior colliculus (Roskies and O'Leary, 1994 ), it is conceivable
that putative molecules in the ON head also may have influenced the
branching of the RGC axons in the retina.
The demonstration that NTs do not prevent the early dying back of
injured RGC axons into the eye where they are blocked from reentering
the ON could explain why an enhancement of RGC survival and growth was
not paralleled by a greater regeneration into PN grafts attached to the
ON (Mansour-Robaey et al., 1994 ). Although the capacity to sustain a
lengthy regrowth has not been proven for all adult mammalian RGCs (Chen
et al., 1995 ), the source of graft innervation may be restricted to
axons whose growth cones remain within the ON stump, in the proximity
of the end of the PN graft.
Possible modulation of regenerated arbors by NTs
RGC axons regenerating along peripheral nerve grafts can be guided
to their targets in the SC where they form persistent and functional
synapses (Vidal-Sanz et al., 1987 ; Carter et al., 1989 ; Kierstead et
al., 1989; Sauvé et al., 1995 ). Individual regenerated axons form
approximately normal numbers of terminal boutons, but their
arborizations are about one order of magnitude smaller than normal
(Carter, 1991 ; Carter et al., 1991 ). This failure of the terminal axon
branches to extend is associated with an increased density of synapses
in the partially innervated superior colliculi and may explain some of
the electrophysiological characteristics of the focally concentrated
RGC inputs found in the SC of animals with nerve grafts linking the eye
and the dorsal midbrain (Sauvé et al., 1995 ).
The recent demonstration that BDNF increased branch length in the
developing arbors formed by RGC axons entering the tectum of tadpoles
(Cohen-Cory and Fraser, 1995 ) and the effects of BDNF and NT-4/5 on
regenerating RGCs in the adult rat retina documented in the present
study strongly suggest that NTs contribute to the establishment of
normal branching patterns not only in dendrites (McAllister et al.,
1995) but also in axons. Furthermore, the effects of BDNF on the length
of the RGC branches shown here (median 71.7 µm, maximum 1352 µm)
would be sufficient to expand toward normal the small arbors observed
when RGCs regenerate into the SC (Carter et al., 1991 ; Sauvé et
al., 1995 ). Thus, a better understanding of the effects of growth
factors on axons may help develop strategies to reshape the terminal
fields that arise from the regeneration of these and other CNS
pathways. The observation that the intracortical infusion of BDNF in
kittens leads to an inhibition of the normal segregation of ocular
dominance columns (Cabelli et al., 1995 ) underscores the need for a
cautious approach to the use of these powerful molecules during
development and regeneration.
FOOTNOTES
Received Jan. 1, 1996; revised March 18, 1996; accepted March 26, 1996.
This work was supported by the Canadian Neuroscience Network, the
Medical Research Council of Canada, and the Multiple Sclerosis Society
of Canada. We thank Jane Trecarten, Margaret David, Janet
Laganière, and Wendy Wilcox for technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Albert J. Aguayo, Centre for
Research in Neuroscience, 1650 Cedar Avenue, Montréal,
Québec, Canada H3G 1A4.
Dr. Sawai's present address: Department of Welfare and Health Science,
Okayama Prefectural University, 111 Kuboki, Souja, Okayama 719-11, Japan.
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