
University of Louisville researchers have discovered that a protein previously known for its role in kidney function also plays a significant role in the nervous system. In an article featured in the April 13 issue of , they show that the adaptor protein CD2AP is a key player in a type of neural growth known as collateral sprouting.
In the first research to be published on this protein鈥檚 role in the nervous system, Benjamin Harrison, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Anatomical Sciences and Neurobiology and lead author of the article, and his colleagues show that CD2AP, an adaptor protein, orchestrates a complex arrangement of other proteins that controls the branching of nerve axons, the tendrils reaching out from the nerve cell to connect to other nerve cells, skin and organs. This nerve growth occurs in uninjured nerve cells as they extend their reach and create new connections.
鈥淐D2AP brings in all the correct players, forms a multi-protein complex and coordinates that multi-protein complex to achieve growth of the neurons,鈥 Harrison said. 鈥淭here are a whole bunch of proteins that it could bring together, but it only brings together the correct proteins to create the correct response. In this case, it changes the structure of the axons through sprouting and elongation.鈥
This axon sprouting may be helpful, but too much of it can be harmful. In normal adult cells, this growth creates new connections and can lead to improved functionality after an injury or stroke. However, if the axons sprout uncontrollably, the result can be exacerbated epilepsy, blood pressure spikes or neuropathic pain. The researchers hope this new understanding of the nerve growth process will lead to therapies that can improve healing and recovery of function following nerve damage while minimizing excessive growth.
鈥淭hrough targeting this molecule, we could help the body鈥檚 natural healing process to coordinate the appropriate growth,鈥 Harrison said.
The research team, based in the lab of Jeffrey Petruska, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Anatomical Sciences and Neurobiology and the Department of Neurological Surgery and the article鈥檚 corresponding author, identified CD2AP as a player in the neurological system via a to detect genes associated with neuron growth. Their research examined how CD2AP interacts with various molecules in controlling the neural sprouting process, particularly its relationship with nerve growth factor (NGF).
鈥淧eople have been studying nerve growth factor and the responses it induces for a while, but this protein (CD2AP) forms a nice link between NGF and the response in the cell,鈥 Harrison said.
Previous research also has associated CD2AP with genetic changes among individuals with Alzheimer鈥檚 disease and it may be helpful in understanding the mechanisms involved in Parkinson鈥檚 Disease, Huntington鈥檚 Disease and spinal cord injuries.
Petruska says this work relates closely to other research being conducted at UofL鈥檚 (KSCIRC). He says that understanding these molecular processes could one day be used to amplify the activity-based therapies such as locomotor training now being done with spinal cord injury patients by UofL faculty at Frazier Rehab Center, a part of KentuckyOne Health. Locomotor training helps spinal cord injury patients achieve functional recovery through standing and stepping activity.
鈥淲e are starting to discover that there are different modes of nerve growth and different sets of genes that control different kinds of growth,鈥 Petruska said. 鈥淭his is particularly important as it relates to locomotor training. When you train, you enhance the growth factor environment of the injured spinal cord, and those growth factors are involved in the axon plasticity. This mode that we study is dependent on the growth factors.鈥
Harrison, who also is part of the (KBRIN), plans to pursue research aimed at developing a drug to provide appropriate nerve growth for spinal cord injury patients.
鈥淢y dream,鈥 Harrison said, 鈥渋s to one day do a clinical trial with a drug that targets this protein and can enhance the ability of the patients to respond to the activity-based rehabilitation (locomotor training) that they are doing at Frazier Rehab Center.鈥
High school student Cassa Drury earned co-authorship on publication of original research
One member of the research team and a co-author on the publication that first described in the nervous system is Cassa Drury, a junior at Louisville鈥檚 duPont Manual High School. Drury has worked in the lab of Petruska, since he mentored her during middle school science fair competitions. As a middle schooler, Drury competed in science fairs at the national and international level with her research on the neurological systems of planaria worms under Petruska鈥檚 guidance.
In the team鈥檚 research into CD2AP, Drury recorded and analyzed changes in the nerve cells for the publication鈥檚 primary author, Harrison. Drury, a high school sophomore at the time, was working in the lab as part of a self-directed learning program offered by her high school.
Drury recorded the length and number of branches in images of neural cells that had been treated with different amounts of CD2AP and those that were not treated to determine the protein鈥檚 effect on nerve growth.
鈥淐assie was the one who did measurements in the cultured neurons to determine that the protein was a positive regulator of growth,鈥 Harrison said.
That work earned Drury a listing as fifth author on the publication, released in the April 13 edition of . A total of 14 authors are credited on the article.
Drury is eager to follow the research to which she has contributed.
鈥淚 am really interested to see where this research goes,鈥 Drury said. 鈥淭his connection is a really strong one and I am excited to see what comes out of it and what Ben ends up doing. I hope he can hand them a drug. That would be wonderful.鈥


























