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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Karnezis T, Mandemakers W, McQualter JL, Zheng B, Ho PP, Jordan KA, Murray BM, Barres B, Tessier-Lavigne M, Bernard CC. The neurite outgrowth inhibitor Nogo A is involved in autoimmune-mediated demyelination. Nat Neurosci. 2004 Jul;7(7):736-44. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Comment by:  Michael D'Andrea
Submitted 13 July 2004  |  Permalink Posted 13 July 2004

The idea that damage to axons might be prevented and/or repaired by augmenting the activity of myelin-derived inhibitors of neurite outgrowth is exciting. It opens the door to the development of new molecular targets. The contribution of an aberrant immune system has been the hallmark of several human diseases, such as systemic lupus erythematosus, autoimmune diabetes, myasthenia gravis, Alzheimer’s disease (AD), multiple sclerosis (MS), etc. Autoantibodies plague the host in a battle where the “good guys” end up doing more harm than good. This is especially true in cases where the autoantigen resembles an unrelated antigen through molecular mimicry or epitope spreading (intramolecular and intermolecular).

Much excitement has arisen from the discovery of Nogo and its receptor, NgR. A quick literature search brings up several hundred publications on this topic since their discovery in 2000 and 2001, respectively. Nogo is an inhibitor of axonal outgrowth, and its receptor is widely expressed in the cells of the CNS. In this report, Karnezis et al. show that blocking the...  Read more

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REAGENTS/MATERIAL:

Used C57BL/6 x 129S7 background mice to study the Nogo mutation since it is a doubly targeted allele in these mice.

Antibodies: mouse monoclonal antibody to MOG (clone 8-18C5), Rabbit Anti-MOG(35–55) and polyclonal antibodies to Nogo(623–640)were prepared and used.

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