| Literature DB >> 19779566 |
Michel Brahic1, Jean-Pierre Roussarie.
Abstract
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19779566 PMCID: PMC2743189 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Figure 1Diagrammatic view of CNS myelin.
Myelin is an extension of the plasma membrane of the oligodendrocyte. Compact myelin is devoid of cytoplasm. Cytoplasmic channels, which are continuous with the oligodendrocyte cytoplasm, form the so-called inner and outer myelin loops as well as the longitudinal incisures.
Figure 2Hypothetical mechanisms for the traffic of Theiler's virus from the axon into the surrounding myelin, in the absence of axonal degeneration.
Viral particles are shown in blue, replication complexes in red. Pathway 1: Viral particles (blue) are engulfed in double-membrane autophagosomes. Following fusion of the autophagosome with a lysosome and digestion of its inner membrane, the particles, which are resistant to low pH and to proteases, are in a single-membrane vesicle that fuses with the axolemma, thereby releasing the virus in the periaxonal space. Entry in the myelin requires the presence of a viral receptor. Pathway 2: The outer membrane of the double-membrane vesicle fuses with the axolemma. The single-membrane vesicle that is released from the axon fuses with the membrane of the myelin inner loop and delivers viral particles into the myelin. This is an unlikely pathway since the viral RNA cannot be released from the virus particle without interaction with a receptor. Pathway 3: A pathway similar to pathway 2, but in this case replication complexes (red), instead of viral particles, are transferred from the axon into the myelin where replication can resume. Pathway 4: Engulfment of replication complexes may take place in the axon, where autophagy is known to be prominent. Pathway 5: Viral particles or replication complexes are transferred from the axon into the myelin by a hypothetical mechanism analogous to the axon clearing mechanism described in peripheral nerves [21]. A double membrane (axolemma plus myelin) engulfs axonal material, including viral products. Two fusion events, (axolemma/axolemma) and (myelin/myelin), result in the intoduction of a double-membrane vesicle containing viral material into the myelin inner loop.