Abstract:
In vertebrates, signaling by retinoic acid (RA) is known to play an important role
in embryonic development, as well as organ homeostasis in the adult. In organisms such
as adult axolotls and newts, RA is also important for regeneration of the CNS, limb, tail,
and many other organ systems. RA mediates many of its effects in development and
regeneration through nuclear receptors, known as retinoic acid receptors (RARs) and
retinoid X receptors (RXRs).
This study provides evidence for an important role of the RA receptor, RAR~2, in
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regeneration ofthe spinal cord and tail of the adult newt. It has previously been proposed
that the ability of the nervous system to regenerate might depend on the presence or
absence of this RAR~2 isoform. Here, I show for the very first time, that the regenerating
spinal cord of the adult newt expresses this ~2 receptor isoform, and inhibition of retinoid
signaling through this specific receptor with a selective antagonist inhibits tail and spinal
cord regeneration. This provides the first evidence for a role of this receptor in this
process.
Another species capable of CNS ~~generation in the adult is the invertebrate,
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Lymnaea stagnalis. Although RA has been detected in a small number of invertebrates
(including Lymnaea), the existence and functional roles of the retinoid receptors in most
invertebrate non-chordates, have not been previously studied. It has been widely
believed, however, that invertebrate non-chordates only possess the RXR class of retinoid
receptors, but not the RARs. In this study, a full-length RXR cDNA has been cloned,
which was the first retinoid receptor to be discovered in Lymnaea. I then went on to clone the very first full-length RAR eDNA from any non-chordate, invertebrate species. The
functional role of these receptors was examined, and it was shown that normal molluscan
development was altered, to varying degrees, by the presence of various RXR and RAR
agonists or antagonists. The resulting disruptions in embryogenesis ranged from eye and
shell defects, to complete lysis of the early embryo. These studies strongly suggest an
important role for both the RXR and RAR in non-chordate development.
The molluscan RXR and RAR were also shown to be expressed in the adult, nonregenerating
eNS, as well as in individual motor neurons regenerating in culture. More
specifically, their expression displayed a non-nuclear distfibution, suggesting a possible
non-genomic role for these 'nuclear' receptors. It was shown that immunoreactivity for
the RXR was present in almost all regenerating growth cones, and (together with N.
Farrar) it was shown that this RXR played a novel, non-genomic role in mediating
growth cone turning toward retinoic acid. Immunoreactivity for the novel invertebrate
RAR was also found in the regenerating growth cones, but future work will be required to
determine its functional role in nerve cell regeneration.
Taken together, these data provide evidence for the importance of these novel
'. retinoid receptors in development and regeneration, particularly in the adult nervous
system, and the conservation of their effects in mediating RA signaling from
invertebrates to vertebrates.