Petratos Steven, Theotokis Paschalis, Kim Min Jung, Azari Michael F, Lee Jae Young
Department of Neuroscience, Central Clinical School, Monash University, Prahran, VIC, Australia.
Laboratory of Experimental Neurology and Neuroimmunology, Department of Neurology, AHEPA University Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Front Cell Neurosci. 2020 Aug 4;14:227. doi: 10.3389/fncel.2020.00227. eCollection 2020.
Myelin is a dynamic membrane that is important for coordinating the fast propagation of action potentials along small or large caliber axons (0.1-10 μm) some of which extend the entire length of the spinal cord. Due to the heterogeneity of electrical and energy demands of the variable neuronal populations, the axo-myelinic and axo-glial interactions that regulate the biophysical properties of myelinated axons also vary in terms of molecular interactions at the membrane interfaces. An important topic of debate in neuroscience is how myelin is maintained and modified under neuronal control and how disruption of this control (due to disease or injury) can initiate and/or propagate neurodegeneration. One of the key molecular signaling cascades that have been investigated in the context of neural injury over the past two decades involves the myelin-associated inhibitory factors (MAIFs) that interact with Nogo receptor 1 (NgR1). Chief among the MAIF superfamily of molecules is a reticulon family protein, Nogo-A, that is established as a potent inhibitor of neurite sprouting and axon regeneration. However, an understated role for NgR1 is its ability to control axo-myelin interactions and Nogo-A specific ligand binding. These interactions may occur at axo-dendritic and axo-glial synapses regulating their functional and dynamic membrane domains. The current review provides a comprehensive analysis of how neuronal NgR1 can regulate myelin thickness and plasticity under normal and disease conditions. Specifically, we discuss how NgR1 plays an important role in regulating paranodal and juxtaparanodal domains through specific signal transduction cascades that are important for microdomain molecular architecture and action potential propagation. Potential therapeutics designed to target NgR1-dependent signaling during disease are being developed in animal models since interference with the involvement of the receptor may facilitate neurological recovery. Hence, the regulatory role played by NgR1 in the axo-myelinic interface is an important research field of clinical significance that requires comprehensive investigation.
髓磷脂是一种动态膜,对于协调动作电位沿小口径或大口径轴突(0.1 - 10μm)的快速传播很重要,其中一些轴突延伸至脊髓的全长。由于不同神经元群体对电和能量需求的异质性,调节有髓轴突生物物理特性的轴突 - 髓磷脂和轴突 - 神经胶质相互作用在膜界面的分子相互作用方面也有所不同。神经科学中一个重要的争论话题是髓磷脂如何在神经元控制下维持和修饰,以及这种控制的破坏(由于疾病或损伤)如何引发和/或传播神经退行性变。在过去二十年中,在神经损伤背景下研究的关键分子信号级联之一涉及与Nogo受体1(NgR1)相互作用的髓磷脂相关抑制因子(MAIFs)。MAIF分子超家族中的主要成员是一种网状蛋白家族蛋白Nogo - A,它被确定为神经突萌发和轴突再生的有效抑制剂。然而,NgR1一个未被充分重视的作用是其控制轴突 - 髓磷脂相互作用和Nogo - A特异性配体结合的能力。这些相互作用可能发生在轴突 - 树突和轴突 - 神经胶质突触处,调节它们的功能和动态膜结构域。本综述全面分析了神经元NgR1如何在正常和疾病条件下调节髓磷脂厚度和可塑性。具体而言,我们讨论了NgR1如何通过特定的信号转导级联在调节结旁和结旁毗邻结构域中发挥重要作用,这些级联对于微结构域分子结构和动作电位传播很重要。由于干扰该受体的参与可能促进神经功能恢复,因此在动物模型中正在开发针对疾病期间NgR1依赖性信号传导的潜在疗法。因此,NgR1在轴突 - 髓磷脂界面所起的调节作用是一个具有临床意义的重要研究领域,需要进行全面研究。