Connor J R, Menzies S L
Department of Neuroscience and Anatomy, M.S. Hershey Medical Center, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine 17033, USA.
Glia. 1996 Jun;17(2):83-93. doi: 10.1002/(SICI)1098-1136(199606)17:2<83::AID-GLIA1>3.0.CO;2-7.
Oligodendrocytes are the predominant iron-containing cells in the brain. Iron-containing oligodendrocytes are found near neuronal cell bodies, along blood vessels, and are particularly abundant within white matter tracts. Iron-positive cells in white matter are present from birth and eventually reside in defined patches of cells in the adult. These patches of iron-containing cells typically have a blood vessel in their center. Ferritin, the iron storage protein, is also expressed early in development in oligodendrocytes in a regional and cellular pattern similar to that seen for iron. Recently, the functionally distinct subunits of ferritin have been analyzed; only heavy (H)-chain ferritin is found in oligodendrocytes early in development. H-ferritin is associated with high iron utilization and low iron storage. Consistent with the expression of H-ferritin is the expression of transferrin receptors (for iron acquisition) on immature oligodendrocytes. Transferrin protein accumulation and mRNA expression in the brain are both dependent on a viable population of oligodendrocytes and may have an autocrine function to assist oligodendrocytes in iron acquisition. Although apparently the majority of oligodendrocytes in white matter tracts contain ferritin, transferrin, and iron, not all of them do, indicating that there is a subset of oligodendrocytes in white matter tracts. The only known function of oligodendrocytes is myelin production, and both a direct and indirect relationship exists between iron acquisition and myelin production. Iron is directly involved in myelin production as a required co-factor for cholesterol and lipid biosynthesis and indirectly because of its requirement for oxidative metabolism (which occurs in oligodendrocytes at a higher rate than other brain cells). Factors (such as cytokines) and conditions such as iron deficiency may reduce iron acquisition by oligodendrocytes and the susceptibility of oligodendrocytes to oxidative injury may be a result of their iron-rich cytoplasm. Thus, the many known phenomena that decrease oligodendrocyte survival and/or myelin production may mediate their effect through a final common pathway that involves disruptions in iron availability or intracellular management of iron.
少突胶质细胞是大脑中主要的含铁细胞。含铁的少突胶质细胞存在于神经元细胞体附近、血管周围,在白质束中尤为丰富。白质中的铁阳性细胞在出生时就已存在,最终在成体中定位于特定的细胞斑块。这些含铁细胞斑块的中心通常有一条血管。铁储存蛋白铁蛋白在少突胶质细胞发育早期也以与铁相似的区域和细胞模式表达。最近,对铁蛋白功能不同的亚基进行了分析;在发育早期的少突胶质细胞中仅发现重链(H)铁蛋白。H铁蛋白与高铁利用率和低铁储存有关。与H铁蛋白的表达一致的是未成熟少突胶质细胞上转铁蛋白受体(用于获取铁)的表达。大脑中转铁蛋白的积累和mRNA表达均依赖于有活力的少突胶质细胞群体,并且可能具有自分泌功能以协助少突胶质细胞获取铁。尽管白质束中的大多数少突胶质细胞显然都含有铁蛋白、转铁蛋白和铁,但并非全部如此,这表明白质束中存在少突胶质细胞亚群。少突胶质细胞唯一已知的功能是产生髓鞘,铁的获取与髓鞘产生之间存在直接和间接的关系。铁作为胆固醇和脂质生物合成所需的辅助因子直接参与髓鞘产生,间接参与是因为其对氧化代谢的需求(少突胶质细胞中的氧化代谢速率高于其他脑细胞)。细胞因子等因素以及缺铁等情况可能会减少少突胶质细胞对铁的获取,少突胶质细胞对氧化损伤的易感性可能是其富含铁的细胞质导致的。因此,许多已知的降低少突胶质细胞存活和/或髓鞘产生的现象可能通过涉及铁可用性破坏或细胞内铁管理的最终共同途径来介导其作用。