Aryl hydrocarbon receptor restricts axon regeneration of DRG neurons in response to injury

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Aryl hydrocarbon receptor restricts axon regeneration of DRG neurons in response to injury

Authors

Wang, Y.; Halawani, D.; Estill, M.; Ramakrishnan, A.; Shen, L.; Friedel, R. H.; Zou, H.

Abstract

Injured neurons sense environmental cues to balance neural protection and axon regeneration, but the mechanisms are unclear. Here, we unveil aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), a ligand-activated bHLH-PAS transcription factor, as molecular sensor and key regulator of acute stress response at the expense of axon regeneration. We demonstrate responsiveness of DRG sensory neurons to ligand-mediated AhR signaling, which functions to inhibit axon regeneration. Ahr deletion mimics the conditioning lesion in priming DRG to initiate axonogenesis gene programs; upon peripheral axotomy, Ahr ablation suppresses inflammation and stress signaling while augmenting pro-growth pathways. Moreover, comparative transcriptomics revealed signaling interactions between AhR and HIF-1, two structurally related bHLH-PAS units that share the dimerization partner Arnt/HIF-1{beta}. Functional assays showed that the growth advantage of AhR-deficient DRG neurons requires HIF-1; but in the absence of Arnt, DRG neurons can still mount a regenerative response. We further unveil a link between bHLH-PAS transcription factors and DNA hydroxymethylation in response to peripheral axotomy, while neuronal single cell RNA-seq analysis revealed a link of the AhR regulon to RNA polymerase III regulation and integrated stress response (ISR). Altogether, AhR activation favors stress coping and inflammation at the expense of axon regeneration; targeting AhR can enhance nerve repair.

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