Experimental and Regenerative Neurosciences, School of Animal Biology, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia.
PLoS One. 2013 Jun 11;8(6):e65710. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0065710. Print 2013.
Partial injury to the central nervous system (CNS) is exacerbated by additional loss of neurons and glia via toxic events known as secondary degeneration. Using partial transection of the rat optic nerve (ON) as a model, we have previously shown that myelin decompaction persists during secondary degeneration. Failure to repair myelin abnormalities during secondary degeneration may be attributed to insufficient OPC proliferation and/or differentiation to compensate for loss of oligodendrocyte lineage cells (oligodendroglia). Following partial ON transection, we found that sub-populations of oligodendroglia and other olig2+ glia were differentially influenced by injury. A high proportion of NG2+/olig2-, NG2+/olig2+ and CC1-/olig2+ cells proliferated (Ki67+) at 3 days, prior to the onset of death (TUNEL+) at 7 days, suggesting injury-related cues triggered proliferation rather than early loss of oligodendroglia. Despite this, a high proportion (20%) of the NG2+/olig2+ OPCs were TUNEL+ at 3 months, and numbers remained chronically lower, indicating that proliferation of these cells was insufficient to maintain population numbers. There was significant death of NG2+/olig2- and NG2-/olig2+ cells at 7 days, however population densities remained stable, suggesting proliferation was sufficient to sustain cell numbers. Relatively few TUNEL+/CC1+ cells were detected at 7 days, and no change in density indicated that mature CC1+ oligodendrocytes were resistant to secondary degeneration in vivo. Mature CC1+/olig2- oligodendrocyte density increased at 3 days, reflecting early oligogenesis, while the appearance of shortened myelin internodes at 3 months suggested remyelination. Taken together, chronic OPC decreases may contribute to the persistent myelin abnormalities and functional loss seen in ON during secondary degeneration.
中枢神经系统(CNS)的部分损伤会通过已知的二次退化中的毒性事件导致神经元和神经胶质细胞的额外损失而加剧。我们以前使用大鼠视神经(ON)的部分横切作为模型,已经表明在二次退化过程中髓鞘疏松持续存在。在二次退化过程中未能修复髓鞘异常可能归因于少突胶质前体细胞(少突胶质细胞)的增殖和/或分化不足以弥补少突胶质细胞谱系细胞的损失。在部分 ON 横切后,我们发现少突胶质细胞和其他 olig2+胶质细胞的亚群受到损伤的影响不同。大量的 NG2+/olig2-、NG2+/olig2+和 CC1-/olig2+细胞在 3 天前(7 天出现 TUNEL+)增殖(Ki67+),这表明损伤相关的线索引发了增殖而不是少突胶质细胞的早期丢失。尽管如此,在 3 个月时,仍有很大比例(20%)的 NG2+/olig2+OPC 呈 TUNEL+,并且数量持续较低,表明这些细胞的增殖不足以维持群体数量。NG2+/olig2-和 NG2-/olig2+细胞在 7 天时有明显的死亡,但群体密度保持稳定,表明增殖足以维持细胞数量。在 7 天时,检测到相对较少的 TUNEL+/CC1+细胞,并且密度没有变化表明成熟的 CC1+少突胶质细胞在体内对二次退化具有抗性。成熟的 CC1+/olig2-少突胶质细胞密度在 3 天增加,反映了早期的少突胶质生成,而在 3 个月时出现缩短的髓鞘节段表明髓鞘再生。总之,慢性 OPC 减少可能导致在二次退化过程中 ON 中持续存在的髓鞘异常和功能丧失。