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Plexin-B1 safeguards astrocyte agility and glial alignment to facilitate wound corralling and axon pathfinding in mouse spinal cord injury model

Nature Communications. 2025-11; 
Haofei Ni, Zhilai Zhou, Molly Estill, Dalia Halawani, Chrystian Junqueira Alves, Li Shen, Ning Xie, Roland H Friedel, Hongyan Zou Nash Family Department of Neuroscience, Friedman Brain Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
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Abstract

Glial spatial organization is critical for neural repair after spinal cord injury (SCI). In response to injury, reactive astrocytes extend hypertrophic processes to corral the lesion core and sequester debris and inflammatory cells. How these long, arborized processes remain intact, and how astrocytes avoid collisions to assemble a glial bridge to guide axon pathfinding across lesion site remains unclear. Here we identify the guidance receptor Plexin‑B1 as a regulator of membrane integrity, process plasticity, and astrocyte alignment. Live‑cell imaging reveal that Plexin‑B1 deletion triggers membrane shedding and slows extension and retraction of astrocytic processes. The loss of astrocyte agility disrupt... More

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