axonal development
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2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (8) ◽  
pp. 4253
Author(s):  
Bérénice Le Dieu-Lugon ◽  
Nicolas Dupré ◽  
Céline Derambure ◽  
François Janin ◽  
Bruno J. Gonzalez ◽  
...  

MgSO4 is widely used in the prevention of preterm neurological disabilities but its modes of action remain poorly established. We used a co-hybridization approach using the transcriptome in 5-day old mice treated with a single dose of MgSO4 (600 mg/kg), and/or exposed to hypoxia-ischemia (HI). The transcription of hundreds of genes was altered in all the groups. MgSO4 mainly produced repressions culminating 6 h after injection. Bio-statistical analysis revealed the repression of synaptogenesis and axonal development. The putative targets of MgSO4 were Mnk1 and Frm1. A behavioral study of adults did not detect lasting effects of neonatal MgSO4 and precluded NMDA-receptor-mediated side effects. The effects of MgSO4 plus HI exceeded the sum of the effects of separate treatments. MgSO4 prior to HI reduced inflammation and the innate immune response probably as a result of cytokine inhibition (Ccl2, Ifng, interleukins). Conversely, MgSO4 had little effect on HI-induced transcription by RNA-polymerase II. De novo MgSO4-HI affected mitochondrial function through the repression of genes of oxidative phosphorylation and many NAD-dehydrogenases. It also likely reduced protein translation by the repression of many ribosomal proteins, essentially located in synapses. All these effects appeared under the putative regulatory MgSO4 induction of the mTORC2 Rictor coding gene. Lasting effects through Sirt1 and Frm1 could account for this epigenetic footprint.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soyeon Lee ◽  
Dongkeun Park ◽  
Chunghun Lim ◽  
Jae-Ick Kim ◽  
Kyung-Tai Min

AbstractMitochondrial initiation factor 3 (mtIF3) binds to and dissociates mitochondrial ribosomes. The mtIF3-small subunit complex then recruits mtIF2, mRNA, and N-formylmethionine-tRNA to initiate mitochondrial translation. Intriguingly, transcripts of the nuclear-encoded mtIF3 gene have been shown present in axonal growth cones; however, the biological function of this compartmentalization remains largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) induces local translation of mtIF3 mRNA in axonal growth cones. Subsequently, mtIF3 protein is translocated into axonal mitochondria and promotes mitochondrial translation as assessed by our newly developed bimolecular fluorescence complementation sensor for the assembly of mitochondrial ribosomes. We further show that BDNF-induced axonal growth requires mtIF3-dependent mitochondrial translation in axons. These findings provide new insight into how neurons adaptively control mitochondrial physiology and axonal development via local mtIF3 translation.


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