| Literature DB >> 35282773 |
Mansour Haidar1, Melanie Loix1, Sam Vanherle1, Tess Dierckx1, Tim Vangansewinkel2, Pascal Gervois2, Esther Wolfs2, Ivo Lambrichts2, Jeroen F J Bogie1, Jerome J A Hendriks1.
Abstract
Foamy macrophages containing abundant intracellular myelin remnants are an important pathological hallmark of multiple sclerosis. Reducing the intracellular lipid burden in foamy macrophages is considered a promising therapeutic strategy to induce a phagocyte phenotype that promotes central nervous system repair. Recent research from our group showed that sustained intracellular accumulation of myelin-derived lipids skews these phagocytes toward a disease-promoting and more inflammatory phenotype. Our data now demonstrate that disturbed lipophagy, a selective form of autophagy that helps with the degradation of lipid droplets, contributes to the induction of this phenotype. Stimulating autophagy using the natural disaccharide trehalose reduced the lipid load and inflammatory phenotype of myelin-laden macrophages. Importantly, trehalose was able to boost remyelination in the ex vivo brain slice model and the in vivo cuprizone-induced demyelination model. In summary, our results provide a molecular rationale for impaired metabolism of myelin-derived lipids in macrophages, and identify lipophagy induction as a promising treatment strategy to promote remyelination.Entities:
Keywords: Lipid droplets; lipophagy; multiple sclerosis; phagocyte; remyelination
Year: 2022 PMID: 35282773 DOI: 10.1080/15548627.2022.2047343
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autophagy ISSN: 1554-8627 Impact factor: 16.016