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Evaluating the effectiveness of anti-Nogo treatment in spinal cord injuries.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

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Authors

Opara, Kaesi 
Lall, Rahul 
Ojha, Utkarsh 
Xiang, Jinpo 

Abstract

As humans, we cannot regenerate axons within the central nervous system (CNS), therefore, making any damage to it permanent. This leads to the loss of sensory and motor function below the site of injury and can be crippling to a person's health. Spontaneous recovery can occur from plastic changes, but it is minimal. The absence of regeneration is due to the inhibitory environment of the CNS as well as the inherent inability of CNS axons to form growth cones. Amongst many factors, one of the major inhibitory signals of the CNS environment is the myelin-associated Nogo pathway. Nogo-A, Nogo-B and Nogo-C (Nogo), stimulate the Nogo receptor, inhibiting neurite outgrowth by causing growth cones to collapse through activation of Rho Kinase (ROCK). Antibodies can be used to target this signalling pathway by binding to Nogo and thus promote the outgrowth of neuronal axons in the CNS. This use of anti-Nogo antibodies has been shown to upregulate CNS regeneration as well as drastically improve sensory and motor function in both rats and primates when coupled with adequate training. Here, we evaluate whether the experimental success of anti-Nogo at improving CNS regeneration can be carried over into the clinical setting to treat spinal cord injuries (SCI) and their symptoms successfully. Furthermore, we also discuss potential methods to improve the current treatment and any developmental obstacles.

Description

Keywords

Axon, CNS, Myelin, Nogo, Regeneration, Animals, Antibodies, Growth Cones, Humans, Immunotherapy, Nerve Regeneration, Neurons, Nogo Proteins, Signal Transduction, Spinal Cord Injuries, Treatment Outcome

Journal Title

Neural Dev

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1749-8104
1749-8104

Volume Title

15

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC