TY - GEN AB - How injury or neurodegenerative disease alter neural circuit function remains unclear. In this thesis, I explored how axotomy affects severed axons and adjacent uninjured 'bystander' neurons in a simple in vivo nerve preparation. Following axotomy, I observed rapid suppression of transport in all axons, whether uninjured or not, and decreased sensory signaling in intact bystander neurons. Unexpectedly, the axon death gene dsarm was required for early changes in bystander neuron cell biology, as were the voltage-gated calcium channel Cacophony (Cac) and MAP kinase signaling. Bystander neurons later recovered, while severed axons degenerated via dSarm/Axundead signaling, and independently of Cac/MAP kinase. Interestingly, suppression of bystander neuron function required Draper receptor and JNK/MMP-1 signaling in glia, indicating glial cells actively suppress bystander neurophysiology. This work identifies a new role for Cac/dSarm/MAPK signaling and glia in the broad suppression of neural circuit function after injury, and defines two genetically and temporally separable phases of dSarm signaling in the injured nervous system. AU - Hsu, Jiun-Min DA - 2020 DO - 10.6083/ff365610t DO - DOI ID - 8600 KW - Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases KW - Axotomy KW - Axons KW - Neurons KW - glia L1 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8600/files/Hsu.JiunMin.2020.pdf L2 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8600/files/Hsu.JiunMin.2020.pdf L4 - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8600/files/Hsu.JiunMin.2020.pdf LK - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8600/files/Hsu.JiunMin.2020.pdf N2 - How injury or neurodegenerative disease alter neural circuit function remains unclear. In this thesis, I explored how axotomy affects severed axons and adjacent uninjured 'bystander' neurons in a simple in vivo nerve preparation. Following axotomy, I observed rapid suppression of transport in all axons, whether uninjured or not, and decreased sensory signaling in intact bystander neurons. Unexpectedly, the axon death gene dsarm was required for early changes in bystander neuron cell biology, as were the voltage-gated calcium channel Cacophony (Cac) and MAP kinase signaling. Bystander neurons later recovered, while severed axons degenerated via dSarm/Axundead signaling, and independently of Cac/MAP kinase. Interestingly, suppression of bystander neuron function required Draper receptor and JNK/MMP-1 signaling in glia, indicating glial cells actively suppress bystander neurophysiology. This work identifies a new role for Cac/dSarm/MAPK signaling and glia in the broad suppression of neural circuit function after injury, and defines two genetically and temporally separable phases of dSarm signaling in the injured nervous system. PB - Oregon Health and Science University PY - 2020 T1 - Injury-induced inhibition of bystander neurons requires dsarm and signaling from glia TI - Injury-induced inhibition of bystander neurons requires dsarm and signaling from glia UR - https://digitalcollections.ohsu.edu/record/8600/files/Hsu.JiunMin.2020.pdf Y1 - 2020 ER -