Self-healing Nerves
Your brain and spinal cord are connected to the rest of your body through a delicate network of nerves. Injury to these nerves causing loss of communication with the brain can result in severe and life-long disabilities. Scientists are keen to learn more about how some species, like the tiny roundworm C. elegans, spontaneously repair damaged nerve fibres through a process called axonal fusion. Now researchers have identified a specific protein, called GTPase RAB-5, which prevents nerve fibre fragments from fusing back together. When this protein was blocked, the fusion process was restored. This image shows one such repaired roundworm neuron (repeated) with different proteins fluorescently coloured. In future, this new knowledge could be applied to encourage nerve fibres to heal and even bring about long-term recovery for patients with peripheral and central nerve injuries.
Written by Gaëlle Coullon
- Image by Casey Linton and Nick Valmas, published on the cover of Journal of Neuroscience, April 2019
- Clem Jones Centre for Ageing Dementia Research, Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
- Image reproduced with permission from the Journal of Neuroscience
- Published in Journal of Neuroscience, April 2019
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