| Literature DB >> 19521541 |
Philip R Lee1, R Douglas Fields.
Abstract
Myelination is a highly dynamic process that continues well into adulthood in humans. Several recent gene expression studies have found abnormal expression of genes involved in myelination in the prefrontal cortex of brains from patients with schizophrenia and other psychiatric illnesses. Defects in myelination could contribute to the pathophysiology of psychiatric illness by impairing information processing as a consequence of altered impulse conduction velocity and synchrony between cortical regions carrying out higher level cognitive functions. Myelination can be altered by impulse activity in axons and by environmental experience. Psychiatric illness is treated by psychotherapy, behavioral modification, and drugs affecting neurotransmission, raising the possibility that myelinating glia may not only contribute to such disorders, but that activity-dependent effects on myelinating glia could provide one of the cellular mechanisms contributing to the therapeutic effects of these treatments. This review examines evidence showing that genes and gene networks important for myelination can be regulated by functional activity in axons.Entities:
Keywords: ATP; LIF; activity; axon; depression; oligodendrocyte; schizophrenia; white matter
Year: 2009 PMID: 19521541 PMCID: PMC2694662 DOI: 10.3389/neuro.05.004.2009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neuroanat ISSN: 1662-5129 Impact factor: 3.856
Figure 1Impulse activity in axons regulates oligodendrocyte development and myelination at several stages and via different signals. (A) Immature OPCs (NG2+ cells) in white matter on an electrically silent unmyelinated axon. Such cells persist in significant numbers in the adult brain. (B) Electrical activity causes ATP release from axons, which generates adenosine that stimulates differentiation of NG2 cells to a mature oligodendrocyte, and promotes myelination (Stevens et al., 2002). K+ is released from electrically active axons. Blocking K+ channels in oligodendrocytes in culture has been shown to regulate oligodendrocyte proliferation and lineage progression (Ghiani et al., 1999). (C) Electrical activity can also alter the expression of cell adhesion molecules on the axon that are involved in initiating myelination (Itoh et al., 1995, 1997). This has been shown to regulate myelination by Schwann cells in the PNS, but the same molecule (L1-CAM) is involved in myelination by oligodendrocytes (Barbin et al., 2004). (D) The release of the neurotransmitters Glu (glutamate) or GABA from synapses formed on NG2 cells (Kukley et al., 2007), could provide another mechanism to regulate myelination in response to functional activity. (E) After NG2 cells differentiate into oligodendrocytes, ATP released from axons firing action potentials stimulates the synthesis and release of the cytokine LIF from astrocytes, which promotes myelination (Ishibashi et al., 2006). Myelination during development and postnatally may be regulated by several other unidentified activity-dependent signaling molecules affecting development of oligodendrocytes and myelin formation. Electrical activity in axons, via the release of neurotransmitters, ions and ATP may influence gene expression in oligodendrocytes by histone modification, RNA transport, local translation and regulate mRNA stability and translation by miRNAs.
Figure 2NG2. DRG axons grown in culture for 3 weeks were immunostained for neurofilament (red) to identify axons and DAPI (blue) to label cell nuclei. (A) Immature oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) were plated onto DRG axons and immunostained for the immature OPC marker NG2 (green) after 2 days in co-culture. NG2+ positive OPCs have differentiated into multipolar cells with many processes contacting multiple axons in order to initiate the myelination process. (B) OPCs grown in co-culture with DRG axons for 7 days were immunostained with myelin basic protein (MBP), a component of the myelin sheath. Immature OPCs have differentiated into a myelination phenotype with expression of MBP and the formation of multiple segments of compact myelin associated with the axons. Scale bar = 15 μm.