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Neural regeneration protein is a novel chemoattractive and neuronal survival-promoting factor

Neural regeneration protein is a novel chemoattractive and neuronal survival-promoting factor
Neural regeneration protein is a novel chemoattractive and neuronal survival-promoting factor
Neurogenesis and neuronal migration are the prerequisites for the development of the central nervous system. We have identified a novel rodent gene encoding for a neural regeneration protein (NRP) with an activity spectrum similar to the chemokine stromal-derived factor (SDF)-1, but with much greater potency. The Nrp gene is encoded as a forward frameshift to the hypothetical alkylated DNA repair protein AlkB. The predicted protein sequence of NRP contains domains with homology to survival-promoting peptide (SPP) and the trefoil protein TFF-1. The Nrp gene is first expressed in neural stem cells and expression continues in glial lineages. Recombinant NRP and NRP-derived peptides possess biological activities including induction of neural migration and proliferation, promotion of neuronal survival, enhancement of neurite outgrowth and promotion of neuronal differentiation from neural stem cells. NRP exerts its effect on neuronal survival by phosphorylation of the ERK1/2 and Akt kinases, whereas NRP stimulation of neural migration depends solely on p44/42 MAP kinase activity. Taken together, the expression profile of Nrp, the existence in its predicted protein structure of domains with similarities to known neuroprotective and migration-inducing factors and the high potency of NRP-derived synthetic peptides acting in femtomolar concentrations suggest it to be a novel gene of relevance in cellular and developmental neurobiology.
migration, frameshift, neural stem cells, neuroprotection, organotypic cultures
0014-4827
3060-3074
Gorba, Thorsten
84224897-dd3e-4a7f-a089-6ad1b60e4b2b
Bradoo, Privahini
9df0990a-853a-4dea-86ec-61daed292aa4
Antonic, Ana
95294aa4-9e8f-4cf8-9c1a-7633fd9abec5
Marvin, Keith
0cd589db-d608-4598-b7f5-06f956210d80
Liu, Dong-Xu
8f6a05f6-4080-4cc1-833a-cffec163f453
Lobie, Peter E.
1b5a20a1-8373-4bf1-8af2-d71bfe5b8603
Reymann, Klaus G.
be5a8cb9-cc02-42d7-a00a-3e3aa6bf3850
Gluckman, Peter D.
ef2e8b92-0b76-4a12-bd7c-01b0674f94d3
Sieg, Frank
6716fc27-2ab2-444b-b14c-a5d5431daead
Gorba, Thorsten
84224897-dd3e-4a7f-a089-6ad1b60e4b2b
Bradoo, Privahini
9df0990a-853a-4dea-86ec-61daed292aa4
Antonic, Ana
95294aa4-9e8f-4cf8-9c1a-7633fd9abec5
Marvin, Keith
0cd589db-d608-4598-b7f5-06f956210d80
Liu, Dong-Xu
8f6a05f6-4080-4cc1-833a-cffec163f453
Lobie, Peter E.
1b5a20a1-8373-4bf1-8af2-d71bfe5b8603
Reymann, Klaus G.
be5a8cb9-cc02-42d7-a00a-3e3aa6bf3850
Gluckman, Peter D.
ef2e8b92-0b76-4a12-bd7c-01b0674f94d3
Sieg, Frank
6716fc27-2ab2-444b-b14c-a5d5431daead

Gorba, Thorsten, Bradoo, Privahini, Antonic, Ana, Marvin, Keith, Liu, Dong-Xu, Lobie, Peter E., Reymann, Klaus G., Gluckman, Peter D. and Sieg, Frank (2006) Neural regeneration protein is a novel chemoattractive and neuronal survival-promoting factor. Experimental Cell Research, 312 (16), 3060-3074. (doi:10.1016/j.yexcr.2006.06.020).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Neurogenesis and neuronal migration are the prerequisites for the development of the central nervous system. We have identified a novel rodent gene encoding for a neural regeneration protein (NRP) with an activity spectrum similar to the chemokine stromal-derived factor (SDF)-1, but with much greater potency. The Nrp gene is encoded as a forward frameshift to the hypothetical alkylated DNA repair protein AlkB. The predicted protein sequence of NRP contains domains with homology to survival-promoting peptide (SPP) and the trefoil protein TFF-1. The Nrp gene is first expressed in neural stem cells and expression continues in glial lineages. Recombinant NRP and NRP-derived peptides possess biological activities including induction of neural migration and proliferation, promotion of neuronal survival, enhancement of neurite outgrowth and promotion of neuronal differentiation from neural stem cells. NRP exerts its effect on neuronal survival by phosphorylation of the ERK1/2 and Akt kinases, whereas NRP stimulation of neural migration depends solely on p44/42 MAP kinase activity. Taken together, the expression profile of Nrp, the existence in its predicted protein structure of domains with similarities to known neuroprotective and migration-inducing factors and the high potency of NRP-derived synthetic peptides acting in femtomolar concentrations suggest it to be a novel gene of relevance in cellular and developmental neurobiology.

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More information

Published date: 1 October 2006
Keywords: migration, frameshift, neural stem cells, neuroprotection, organotypic cultures

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 61175
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61175
ISSN: 0014-4827
PURE UUID: 172e2b8c-2610-459c-8a8e-671b51213c09

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Date deposited: 24 Sep 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:24

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Contributors

Author: Thorsten Gorba
Author: Privahini Bradoo
Author: Ana Antonic
Author: Keith Marvin
Author: Dong-Xu Liu
Author: Peter E. Lobie
Author: Klaus G. Reymann
Author: Peter D. Gluckman
Author: Frank Sieg

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