Experimental neurology
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Experimental neurology · Aug 1996
Nerve growth factor promotes regeneration of sensory axons into adult rat spinal cord.
Injured adult mammalian axons are unable to regenerate spontaneously in the central nervous tissue. This study investigated in two adult rat models the effects of nerve growth factor (NGF) on the capacity of central primary sensory axons to regenerate back into the spinal cord. Sensory fibers were conditioned by transection of the peripheral nerve 1 week prior to the experiment and identified by anterograde tracing with cholera toxin B subunit injected in the sciatic nerve. ⋯ With vehicle, only 6% of the regenerating fibers at the transition zone had crossed the root-spinal cord barrier, but not farther than 0.5 mm into the spinal tissue. With NGF, 18% of the fibers at the transition zone were found at 0.5 mm, 9% at 1.5 mm, and 5% at 2.5 mm (the infusion site) from the transition zone. The present results demonstrate that NGF can promote the regeneration of adult sensory fibers into the otherwise nonpermissive spinal cord white matter.