Microglia-mediated demyelination protects against CD8(+) T cell-driven axon degeneration in mice carrying PLP defects.
Axon degeneration and functional decline in myelin diseases are often attributed to loss of myelin but their relation is not fully understood. Perturbed myelinating glia can instigate chronic neuroinflammation and contribute to demyelination and axonal damage. Here we study mice with distinct defects in the proteolipid protein 1 gene that develop axonal damage which is driven by cytotoxic T cells targeting myelinating oligodendrocytes. We show that persistent ensheathment with perturbed myelin poses a risk for axon degeneration, neuron loss, and behavioral decline. We demonstrate that CD8(+) T cell-driven axonal damage is less likely to progress towards degeneration when axons are efficiently demyelinated by activated microglia. Mechanistically, we show that cytotoxic T cell effector molecules induce cytoskeletal alterations within myelinating glia and aberrant actomyosin constriction of axons at paranodal domains. Our study identifies detrimental axon-glia-immune interactions which promote neurodegeneration and possible therapeutic targets for disorders associated with myelin defects and neuroinflammation.
SEEK ID: http://lmmeisd-2.srv.mwn.de/publications/4
PubMed ID: 37903797
Projects: Published Datasets
Publication type: Journal
Journal: Nat Commun
Citation: Nat Commun. 2023 Oct 30;14(1):6911. doi: 10.1038/s41467-023-42570-2.
Date Published: 30th Oct 2023
Registered Mode: by PubMed ID
Views: 150
Created: 27th Jun 2024 at 12:12
This item has not yet been tagged.
None