- Liu, Kai;
- Lu, Yi;
- Lee, Jae K;
- Samara, Ramsey;
- Willenberg, Rafer;
- Sears-Kraxberger, Ilse;
- Tedeschi, Andrea;
- Park, Kevin Kyungsuk;
- Jin, Duo;
- Cai, Bin;
- Xu, Bengang;
- Connolly, Lauren;
- Steward, Oswald;
- Zheng, Binhai;
- He, Zhigang
Despite the essential role of the corticospinal tract (CST) in controlling voluntary movements, successful regeneration of large numbers of injured CST axons beyond a spinal cord lesion has never been achieved. We found that PTEN/mTOR are critical for controlling the regenerative capacity of mouse corticospinal neurons. After development, the regrowth potential of CST axons was lost and this was accompanied by a downregulation of mTOR activity in corticospinal neurons. Axonal injury further diminished neuronal mTOR activity in these neurons. Forced upregulation of mTOR activity in corticospinal neurons by conditional deletion of Pten, a negative regulator of mTOR, enhanced compensatory sprouting of uninjured CST axons and enabled successful regeneration of a cohort of injured CST axons past a spinal cord lesion. Furthermore, these regenerating CST axons possessed the ability to reform synapses in spinal segments distal to the injury. Thus, modulating neuronal intrinsic PTEN/mTOR activity represents a potential therapeutic strategy for promoting axon regeneration and functional repair after adult spinal cord injury.