Skip to main content
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2006 Dec 27;64(2):230–243. doi: 10.1007/s00018-006-6412-0

Autotaxin (NPP-2) in the brain: cell type-specific expression and regulation during development and after neurotrauma

N E Savaskan 1,, L Rocha 2, M R Kotter 3, A Baer 3, G Lubec 3, L A van Meeteren 1, Y Kishi 4, J Aoki 4, W H Moolenaar 1, R Nitsch 2, A U Bräuer 2,
PMCID: PMC11136012  PMID: 17192809

Abstract.

Autotaxin is a secreted cell motility-stimulating exo-phosphodiesterase with lysophospholipase D activity that generates bioactive lysophosphatidic acid. Lysophosphatidic acid has been implicated in various neural cell functions such as neurite remodeling, demyelination, survival and inhibition of axon growth. Here, we report on the in vivo expression of autotaxin in the brain during development and following neurotrauma. We found that autotaxin is expressed in the proliferating subventricular and choroid plexus epithelium during embryonic development. After birth, autotaxin is mainly found in white matter areas in the central nervous system. In the adult brain, autotaxin is solely expressed in leptomeningeal cells and oligodendrocyte precursor cells. Following neurotrauma, autotaxin is strongly up-regulated in reactive astrocytes adjacent to the lesion. The present study revealed the cellular distribution of autotaxin in the developing and lesioned brain and implies a function of autotaxin in oligodendrocyte precursor cells and brain injuries.

Keywords. LPA signaling, S1P, axonal growth and regeneration, hippocampus, brain development, G protein-coupled receptors, myelination, oligodendrocyte precursor cells

Footnotes

Received 18 September 2006; received after revision 30 October 2006; accepted 4 December 2006

Contributor Information

N. E. Savaskan, Email: n.savaskan@nki.nl

A. U. Bräuer, FAX: +49 30 450 528 908, Email: anja.braeuer@charite.de


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

RESOURCES