- Omura, T;
- Omura, K;
- Tedeschi, A;
- Riva, P;
- Painter, MW;
- Rojas, L;
- Martin, J;
- Lisi, V;
- Huebner, EA;
- Latremoliere, A;
- Yin, Y;
- Barrett, LB;
- Singh, B;
- Lee, S;
- Crisman, T;
- Gao, F;
- Li, S;
- Kapur, K;
- Geschwind, DH;
- Kosik, KS;
- Coppola, G;
- He, Z;
- Carmichael, ST;
- Benowitz, LI;
- Costigan, M;
- Woolf, CJ
Axon regeneration in the CNS requires reactivating injured neurons' intrinsic growth state and enabling growth in an inhibitory environment. Using an inbred mouse neuronal phenotypic screen, we find that CAST/Ei mouse adult dorsal root ganglion neurons extend axons more on CNS myelin than the other eight strains tested, especially when pre-injured. Injury-primed CAST/Ei neurons also regenerate markedly in the spinal cord and optic nerve more than those from C57BL/6 mice and show greater sprouting following ischemic stroke. Heritability estimates indicate that extended growth in CAST/Ei neurons on myelin is genetically determined, and two whole-genome expression screens yield the Activin transcript Inhba as most correlated with this ability. Inhibition of Activin signaling in CAST/Ei mice diminishes their CNS regenerative capacity, whereas its activation in C57BL/6 animals boosts regeneration. This screen demonstrates that mammalian CNS regeneration can occur and reveals a molecular pathway that contributes to this ability. Omura et al. screened for neuronal growth on myelin and find CAST/Ei inbred mice are uniquely able to regenerate axons in the injured CNS through Activin signaling. Enhancing Activin signaling confers a CNS-regenerative capacity in normally non-regenerative mouse strains.