Inosine induces axonal rewiring and improves behavioral outcome after stroke

P Chen, DE Goldberg, B Kolb… - Proceedings of the …, 2002 - National Acad Sciences
P Chen, DE Goldberg, B Kolb, M Lanser, LI Benowitz
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2002National Acad Sciences
Cerebral infarct (stroke) often causes devastating and irreversible losses of function, in part
because of the brain's limited capacity for anatomical reorganization. The purine nucleoside
inosine has previously been shown to induce neurons to express a set of growth-associated
proteins and to extend axons in culture and in vivo. We show here that in adult rats with
unilateral cortical infarcts, inosine stimulated neurons on the undamaged side of the brain to
extend new projections to denervated areas of the midbrain and spinal cord. This growth …
Cerebral infarct (stroke) often causes devastating and irreversible losses of function, in part because of the brain's limited capacity for anatomical reorganization. The purine nucleoside inosine has previously been shown to induce neurons to express a set of growth-associated proteins and to extend axons in culture and in vivo. We show here that in adult rats with unilateral cortical infarcts, inosine stimulated neurons on the undamaged side of the brain to extend new projections to denervated areas of the midbrain and spinal cord. This growth was paralleled by improved performance on several behavioral measures.
National Acad Sciences