Literature DB >> 31049881

Ultrastructural Analysis of Thalamus Damages in a Mouse Model of Osmotic-Induced Demyelination.

Joanna Bouchat1, Jacques Gilloteaux1,2, Valérie Suain3, Daniel Van Vlaender1, Jean-Pierre Brion3, Charles Nicaise4.   

Abstract

A murine model used to investigate the osmotic demyelination syndrome (ODS) demonstrated ultrastructural damages in thalamus nuclei. Following chronic hyponatremia, significant myelinolysis was merely detected 48 h after the rapid reinstatement of normonatremia (ODS 48 h). In ODS samples, oligodendrocytes and astrocytes revealed injurious changes associated with a few cell deaths while both cell types seemed to endure a sort of survival strategy: (a) ODS 12 h oligodendrocytes displayed nucleoplasm with huge heterochromatic compaction, mitochondria hypertrophy, and most reclaimed an active NN cell aspect at ODS 48 h. (b) Astrocytes responded to the osmotic stress by overall cell shrinkage with clasmatodendrosis, these changes accompanied nucleus wrinkling, compacted and segregated nucleolus, destabilization of astrocyte-oligodendrocyte junctions, loss of typical GFAP filaments, and detection of round to oblong woolly, proteinaceous aggregates. ODS 48 h astrocytes regained an active nucleus aspect, without restituting GFAP filaments and still contained cytoplasmic proteinaceous deposits. (c) Sustaining minor shrinking defects at ODS 12 h, neurons showed slight axonal injury. At ODS 48 h, neuron cell bodies emerged again with deeply indented nucleus and, owing nucleolus translational activation, huge amounts of polysomes along with secretory-like activities. (d) In ODS, activated microglial cells got stuffed with huge lysosome bodies out of captures cell damages, leaving voids in interfascicular and sub-vascular neuropil. Following chronic hyponatremia, the murine thalamus restoration showed macroglial cells acutely turned off transcriptional and translational activities during ODS and progressively recovered activities, unless severely damaged cells underwent cell death, leading to neuropil disruption and demyelination.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Astrocytopathy; Clasmatodendrosis; Oligodendrocytopathy; Osmotic demyelination syndrome

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31049881     DOI: 10.1007/s12640-019-00041-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurotox Res        ISSN: 1029-8428            Impact factor:   3.911


  34 in total

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8.  Deletion of astrocyte connexins 43 and 30 leads to a dysmyelinating phenotype and hippocampal CA1 vacuolation.

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2009-06-17       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  Connexin 47 (Cx47)-deficient mice with enhanced green fluorescent protein reporter gene reveal predominant oligodendrocytic expression of Cx47 and display vacuolized myelin in the CNS.

Authors:  Benjamin Odermatt; Kerstin Wellershaus; Anke Wallraff; Gerald Seifert; Joachim Degen; Carsten Euwens; Babette Fuss; Heinrich Büssow; Karl Schilling; Christian Steinhäuser; Klaus Willecke
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10.  THE FINE STRUCTURE OF ASTROCYTES IN THE CEREBRAL CORTEX AND THEIR RESPONSE TO FOCAL INJURY PRODUCED BY HEAVY IONIZING PARTICLES.

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Journal:  J Cell Biol       Date:  1965-05-01       Impact factor: 10.539

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