Serotonin Promotes Development and Regeneration of Spinal Motor Neurons in Zebrafish

In contrast to mammals, zebrafish regenerate spinal motor neurons. During regeneration, developmental signals are re-deployed. Here, we show that, during development, diffuse serotonin promotes spinal motor neuron generation from pMN progenitor cells, leaving interneuron numbers unchanged. Pharmacol...

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Published inCell reports (Cambridge) Vol. 13; no. 5; pp. 924 - 932
Main Authors Barreiro-Iglesias, Antón, Mysiak, Karolina S., Scott, Angela L., Reimer, Michell M., Yang (杨宇婕), Yujie, Becker, Catherina G., Becker, Thomas
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 03.11.2015
Cell Press
Elsevier
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Summary:In contrast to mammals, zebrafish regenerate spinal motor neurons. During regeneration, developmental signals are re-deployed. Here, we show that, during development, diffuse serotonin promotes spinal motor neuron generation from pMN progenitor cells, leaving interneuron numbers unchanged. Pharmacological manipulations and receptor knockdown indicate that serotonin acts at least in part via 5-HT1A receptors. In adults, serotonin is supplied to the spinal cord mainly (90%) by descending axons from the brain. After a spinal lesion, serotonergic axons degenerate caudal to the lesion but sprout rostral to it. Toxin-mediated ablation of serotonergic axons also rostral to the lesion impaired regeneration of motor neurons only there. Conversely, intraperitoneal serotonin injections doubled numbers of new motor neurons and proliferating pMN-like progenitors caudal to the lesion. Regeneration of spinal-intrinsic serotonergic interneurons was unaltered by these manipulations. Hence, serotonin selectively promotes the development and adult regeneration of motor neurons in zebrafish. [Display omitted] •Serotonin is a remote signal promoting motor neuron regeneration in adult zebrafish•Serotonin acts on proliferation of pMN-like progenitors•Serotonin does not affect regeneration of spinal serotonergic neurons•Exogenous serotonin can compensate for the loss of endogenous serotonergic axons Adult zebrafish, in contrast to mammals, regenerate spinal neurons. Barreiro-Iglesias et al. establish that serotonin from descending axons promotes the regeneration of motor neurons in the lesioned spinal cord but leaves spinal serotonergic neuron regeneration unaffected. Serotonin acts specifically on adult progenitor cells for motor neurons.
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Co-senior author
Present address: Department of Cell Biology and Ecology, CIBUS, Faculty of Biology, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, 15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain
Co-first author
ISSN:2211-1247
2211-1247
DOI:10.1016/j.celrep.2015.09.050