6533b82efe1ef96bd12931e0

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Reawakening the sleeping beauty in the adult brain: neurogenesis from parenchymal glia

Benedikt BerningerSophie Péron

subject

NeurogenesisStriatumBiologyParenchymaGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansRegenerationNeuronsRegulation of gene expressionRegeneration (biology)NeurogenesisGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalAnatomyCellular Reprogrammingmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemCerebral cortexAstrocytesBrain InjuriesNeurogliaNeurogliaNeuroscienceReprogrammingDevelopmental Biology

description

Life-long neurogenesis is highly restricted to specialized niches in the adult mammalian brain and therefore the brain's capacity for spontaneous regeneration is extremely limited. However, recent work has demonstrated that under certain circumstances parenchymal astrocytes and NG2 glia can generate neuronal progeny. In the striatum, stroke or excitotoxic lesions can reawaken in astrocytes a latent neurogenic program resulting in the genesis of new neurons. By contrast, in brain areas that fail to mount a neurogenic response following injury, such as the cerebral cortex, forced expression of neurogenic reprogramming factors can lineage convert local glia into induced neurons. Yet, injury-induced and reprogramming-induced neurogenesis exhibit intriguing commonalities, suggesting that they may converge on similar mechanisms.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gde.2015.07.004