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Leucine Zipper-Bearing Kinase Is a Critical Regulator of Astrocyte Reactivity in the Adult Mammalian CNS
Author(s) -
Meifan Chen,
Cédric G. Geoffroy,
Jessica M. Meves,
Aarti Narang,
Yunbo Li,
Mallorie T. Nguyen,
Vung S. Khai,
Xiangmei Kong,
Christopher L Steinke,
Krislyn I. Carolino,
Lucie Elzière,
Mark P. Goldberg,
Yishi Jin,
Binhai Zheng
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.02.102
Subject(s) - astrogliosis , astrocyte , glial scar , leucine zipper , biology , gliosis , microbiology and biotechnology , lesion , neuroscience , central nervous system , medicine , pathology , gene , transcription factor , biochemistry
Reactive astrocytes influence post-injury recovery, repair, and pathogenesis of the mammalian CNS. Much of the regulation of astrocyte reactivity, however, remains to be understood. Using genetic loss and gain-of-function analyses in vivo, we show that the conserved MAP3K13 (also known as leucine zipper-bearing kinase [LZK]) promotes astrocyte reactivity and glial scar formation after CNS injury. Inducible LZK gene deletion in astrocytes of adult mice reduced astrogliosis and impaired glial scar formation, resulting in increased lesion size after spinal cord injury. Conversely, LZK overexpression in astrocytes enhanced astrogliosis and reduced lesion size. Remarkably, in the absence of injury, LZK overexpression alone induced widespread astrogliosis in the CNS and upregulated astrogliosis activators pSTAT3 and SOX9. The identification of LZK as a critical cell-intrinsic regulator of astrocyte reactivity expands our understanding of the multicellular response to CNS injury and disease, with broad translational implications for neural repair.

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