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1.
The apposed membranes of myelinating Schwann cells are joined by several types of junctional specializations known as autotypic or reflexive junctions. These include tight, gap, and adherens junctions, all of which are found in regions of noncompact myelin: the paranodal loops, incisures of Schmidt-Lanterman, and mesaxons. The molecular components of autotypic tight junctions have not been established. Here we report that two homologues of Discs Lost-multi PDZ domain protein (MUPP)1, and Pals-associated tight junction protein (PATJ), are differentially localized in myelinating Schwann cells and associated with different claudins. PATJ is mainly found at the paranodal loops, where it colocalized with claudin-1. MUPP1 and claudin-5 colocalized in the incisures, and the COOH-terminal region of claudin-5 interacts with MUPP1 in a PSD-95/Disc Large/zona occludens (ZO)-1 (PDZ)-dependent manner. In developing nerves, claudin-5 and MUPP1 appear together in incisures during the first postnatal week, suggesting that they coassemble during myelination. Finally, we show that the incisures also contain four other PDZ proteins that are found in epithelial tight junctions, including three membrane-associated guanylate-kinase proteins (membrane-associated guanylate-kinase inverted-2, ZO-1, and ZO-2) and the adaptor protein Par-3. The presence of these different tight junction proteins in regions of noncompact myelin may be required to maintain the intricate cytoarchitecture of myelinating Schwann cells.  相似文献   

2.
Myelination allows the fast propagation of action potentials at a low energetic cost. It provides an insulating myelin sheath regularly interrupted at nodes of Ranvier where voltage-gated Na+ channels are concentrated. In the peripheral nervous system, the normal function of myelinated fibers requires the formation of highly differentiated and organized contacts between the myelinating Schwann cells, the axons and the extracellular matrix. Some of the major molecular complexes that underlie these contacts have been identified. Compact myelin which forms the bulk of the myelin sheath results from the fusion of the Schwann cell membranes through the proteins P0, PMP22 and MBP. The basal lamina of myelinating Schwann cells contains laminin-2 which associates with the glial complex dystroglycan/DPR2/L-periaxin. Non compact myelin, found in paranodal loops, periaxonal and abaxonal regions, and Schmidt-Lanterman incisures, presents reflexive adherens junctions, tight junctions and gap junctions, which contain cadherins, claudins and connexins, respectively. Axo-glial contacts determine the formation of distinct domains on the axon, the node, the paranode, and the juxtaparanode. At the paranodes, the glial membrane is tightly attached to the axolemma by septate-like junctions. Paranodal and juxtaparanodal axoglial complexes comprise an axonal transmembrane protein of the NCP family associated in cis and in trans with cell adhesion molecules of the immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF-CAM). At nodes, axonal complexes are composed of Na+ channels and IgSF-CAMs. Schwann cell microvilli, which loosely cover the node, contain ERM proteins and the proteoglycans syndecan-3 and -4. The fundamental role of the cellular contacts in the normal function of myelinated fibers has been supported by rodent models and the detection of genetic alterations in patients with peripheral demyelinating neuropathies such as Charcot-Marie-Tooth diseases. Understanding more precisely their molecular basis now appears essential as a requisite step to further examine their involvement in the pathogenesis of peripheral neuropathies in general.  相似文献   

3.
Correction     
The Schwann cell myelin sheath is a multilamellar structure with distinct structural domains in which different proteins are localized. Intracellular dye injection and video microscopy were used to show that functional gap junctions are present within the myelin sheath that allow small molecules to diffuse between the adaxonal and perinuclear Schwann cell cytoplasm. Gap junctions are localized to periodic interruptions in the compact myelin called Schmidt–Lanterman incisures and to paranodes; these regions contain at least one gap junction protein, connexin32 (Cx32). The radial diffusion of low molecular weight dyes across the myelin sheath was not interrupted in myelinating Schwann cells from cx32-null mice, indicating that other connexins participate in forming gap junctions in these cells. Owing to the unique geometry of myelinating Schwann cells, a gap junction-mediated radial pathway may be essential for rapid diffusion between the adaxonal and perinuclear cytoplasm, since this radial pathway is approximately one million times faster than the circumferential pathway.  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the potential role of contactin and contactin-associated protein (Caspr) in the axonal–glial interactions of myelination. In the nervous system, contactin is expressed by neurons, oligodendrocytes, and their progenitors, but not by Schwann cells. Expression of Caspr, a homologue of Neurexin IV, is restricted to neurons. Both contactin and Caspr are uniformly expressed at high levels on the surface of unensheathed neurites and are downregulated during myelination in vitro and in vivo. Contactin is downregulated along the entire myelinated nerve fiber. In contrast, Caspr expression initially remains elevated along segments of neurites associated with nascent myelin sheaths. With further maturation, Caspr is downregulated in the internode and becomes strikingly concentrated in the paranodal regions of the axon, suggesting that it redistributes from the internode to these sites. Caspr expression is similarly restricted to the paranodes of mature myelinated axons in the peripheral and central nervous systems; it is more diffusely and persistently expressed in gray matter and on unmyelinated axons. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated that Caspr is localized to the septate-like junctions that form between axons and the paranodal loops of myelinating cells. Caspr is poorly extracted by nonionic detergents, suggesting that it is associated with the axon cytoskeleton at these junctions. These results indicate that contactin and Caspr function independently during myelination and that their expression is regulated by glial ensheathment. They strongly implicate Caspr as a major transmembrane component of the paranodal junctions, whose molecular composition has previously been unknown, and suggest its role in the reciprocal signaling between axons and glia.  相似文献   

5.
Action potential (AP) propagation in myelinated nerves requires clustered voltage gated sodium and potassium channels. These channels must be specifically localized to nodes of Ranvier where the AP is regenerated. Several mechanisms have evolved to facilitate and ensure the correct assembly and stabilization of these essential axonal domains. This review highlights the current understanding of the axon intrinsic and glial extrinsic mechanisms that control the formation and maintenance of the nodes of Ranvier in both the peripheral nervous system (PNS) and central nervous system (CNS).Axons conduct electrical signals, called action potentials (APs), among neurons in a circuit in response to sensory input, and between motor neurons and muscles. In mammals and other vertebrates, many axons are myelinated. Myelin, made by Schwann cells and oligodendrocytes in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) and central nervous system (CNS), respectively, is a multilamellar sheet of glial membrane that wraps around axons to increase transmembrane resistance and decrease membrane capacitance. Although myelin is traditionally viewed as a passive contributor to nervous system function, it is now recognized that myelinating glia also play many active roles including regulation of axon diameter, axonal energy metabolism, and the clustering of ion channels at gaps in the myelin sheath called nodes of Ranvier. Together, the active and passive properties conferred on axons by myelin, result in axons with high AP conduction velocities, low metabolic demands, and reduced space requirements as compared with unmyelinated axons. Thus, myelin and the clustering of ion channels in axons permitted the evolution of the complex nervous systems found in vertebrates. This review highlights the current understanding of the axonal intrinsic and glial extrinsic mechanisms that control the formation and maintenance of the nodes of Ranvier in both the PNS and CNS.  相似文献   

6.
Action potential conduction in myelinated nerve fibers depends on a polarized axonal membrane. Voltage-gated Na(+) and K(+) channels are clustered at nodes of Ranvier and mediate the transmembrane currents necessary for rapid saltatory conduction. Paranodal junctions flank nodes and function as attachment sites for myelin and as paracellular and membrane protein diffusion barriers. Common molecular mechanisms, directed by myelinating glia, are used to establish these axonal membrane domains. Initially, heterophilic interactions between glial and axonal cell adhesion molecules define the locations where nodes or paranodes form. Subsequently, within each domain, axonal cell adhesion molecules are stabilized and retained through interactions with cytoskeletal and scaffolding proteins, including ankyrins and spectrins.  相似文献   

7.
In myelinated fibers of the vertebrate nervous system, glial-ensheathing cells interact with axons at specialized adhesive junctions, the paranodal septate-like junctions. The axonal proteins paranodin/Caspr and contactin form a cis complex in the axolemma at the axoglial adhesion zone, and both are required to stabilize the junction. There has been intense speculation that an oligodendroglial isoform of the cell adhesion molecule neurofascin, NF155, expressed at the paranodal loop might be the glial receptor for the paranodin/Caspr-contactin complex, particularly since paranodin/Caspr and NF155 colocalize to ectopic sites in the CNS of the dysmyelinated mouse Shiverer mutant. We report that the extracellular domain of NF155 binds specifically to transfected cells expressing the paranodin/Caspr-contactin complex at the cell surface. This region of NF155 also binds the paranodin/Caspr-contactin complex from brain lysates in vitro. In support of the functional significance of this interaction, NF155 antibodies and the extracellular domain of NF155 inhibit myelination in myelinating cocultures, presumably by blocking the adhesive relationship between the axon and glial cell. These results demonstrate that the paranodin/Caspr-contactin complex interacts biochemically with NF155 and that this interaction is likely to be biologically relevant at the axoglial junction.  相似文献   

8.
9.
In the sciatic nerve, two major classes of Schwann cells are present which differ in their capability to produce myelin. Myelinating Schwann cells surround most of the axons with the formation of a typical myelin sheath. Nonmyelinating Schwann cells serve to insulate individual axons without formation of myelin. These dissimilarities between the two types of Schwann cells provided an interesting model for studying mechanisms underlying myelination and the formation of contacts between axons and myelinating cells. It is demonstrated here that the endogenous lectin cerebellar soluble lectin (CSL), implicated in myelin stabilization and in formation of contact between axon and myelinating cells in the CNS and in the sciatic nerve, is undetectable in non-myelinating Schwann cells. In contrast, most axons surrounded by these cells contained the major axonal glycoprotein ligand of CSL, a 31-kDa glycoprotein which is present in large amounts. The possible relationship between the presence of CSL in Schwann cells and their capacity to interact with axons and to produce myelin are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Myelinogenesis is a complex process that involves substantial and dynamic changes in plasma membrane architecture and myelin interaction with axons. Highly ramified processes of oligodendrocytes in the central nervous system (CNS) make axonal contact and then extrapolate to wrap around axons and form multilayer compact myelin sheathes. Currently, the mechanisms governing myelin sheath assembly and axon selection by myelinating cells are not fully understood. Here, we generated a transgenic mouse line expressing the membrane‐anchored green fluorescent protein (mEGFP) in myelinating cells, which allow live imaging of details of myelinogenesis and cellular behaviors in the nervous systems. mEGFP expression is driven by the promoter of 2'‐3'‐cyclic nucleotide 3'‐phosphodiesterase (CNP) that is expressed in the myelinating cell lineage. Robust mEGFP signals appear in the membrane processes of oligodendrocytes in the CNS and Schwann cells in the peripheral nervous system (PNS), wherein mEGFP expression defines the inner layers of myelin sheaths and Schmidt‐Lanterman incisures in adult sciatic nerves. In addition, mEGFP expression can be used to track the extent of remyelination after demyelinating injury in a toxin‐induced demyelination animal model. Taken together, the membrane‐anchored mEGFP expression in the new transgenic line would facilitate direct visualization of dynamic myelin membrane formation and assembly during development and process remodeling during remyelination after various demyelinating injuries. genesis 52:341–349, 2014. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
A novel hypoxically regulated intercellular junction protein (claudin-like protein of 24 kDa, CLP24) has been identified that shows homology to the myelin protein 22/epithelial membrane protein 1/claudin family of cell junction proteins, which are involved in the modulation of paracellular permeability. The CLP24 protein contains four predicted transmembrane domains and a C-terminal protein-protein interaction domain. These domains are characteristic of the four transmembrane spanning (tetraspan) family of proteins, which includes myelin protein 22, and are involved in cell adhesion at tight, gap and adherens junctions. Expression profiling analyses show that CLP24 is highly expressed in lung, heart, kidney and placental tissues. Cellular studies confirm that the CLP24 protein localizes to cell-cell junctions and co-localizes with the beta-catenin adherens junction-associated protein but not with tight junctions. Over-expression of CLP24 results in decreased adhesion between cells, and functional paracellular flux studies confirm that over-expression of the CLP24 protein modulates the junctional barrier function. These data therefore suggest that CLP24 is a novel, hypoxically regulated tetraspan adherens junction protein that modulates cell adhesion, paracellular permeability and angiogenesis.  相似文献   

13.
N.n. tibialis were investigated in 5--10-day-old rats, using electron microscopy. All the main types of membrane junctions were found in the area of forming nodose: hemi-desmosomal, serial desmosomal, continuous, septate, gap and tight junctions. The junctions were both of glio-glial and axon-glial type. These types may be stages of a unified process of membrane interaction. They are located in multiple loci and form intermediate dense myelin line upon merging. Such junctions result form aggregation and retraction of outer para-membrane electron dense material. The same mechanism of inner surface membrane coupling was observed in lamellipodia of lemmocytes. Thus "inside out" local junctions were formed. Merging of these junctions forms the main dense line of myelin. Consequently, compact myelin, tHus formed, should be considered as a gigantic complex membrane junction.  相似文献   

14.
Oligodendrocyte-specific protein (OSP)/claudin-11 is a recently identified transmembrane protein found in CNS myelin and testis with unknown function. Herein we demonstrate that Osp null mice exhibit both neurological and reproductive deficits: CNS nerve conduction is slowed, hindlimb weakness is conspicuous, and males are sterile. Freeze fracture reveals that tight junction intramembranous strands are absent in CNS myelin and between Sertoli cells of mutant mice. Our results demonstrate that OSP is the mediator of parallel-array tight junction strands and distinguishes this protein from other intrinsic membrane proteins in tight junctions. These novel results provide direct evidence of the pivotal role of the claudin family in generating the paracellular physical barrier of tight junctions necessary for spermatogenesis and normal CNS function.  相似文献   

15.
Development of nodes of Ranvier   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
The architecture and function of the nodes of Ranvier depend on several specialized cell contacts between the axon and myelinating glial cells. These sites contain highly organized multimolecular complexes of ion channels and cell adhesion molecules, closely connected with the cytoskeleton. Recent findings are beginning to reveal how this organization is achieved during the development of myelinated nerves. The role of membrane proteins involved in axoglial interactions and of associated cytoplasmic molecules is being elucidated, while studies of mutant mice have underlined the importance of glial cells and the specific role of axonal proteins in the organization of axonal domains.  相似文献   

16.
Axon branch removal at developing synapses by axosome shedding   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Bishop DL  Misgeld T  Walsh MK  Gan WB  Lichtman JW 《Neuron》2004,44(4):651-661
In many parts of the developing nervous system, the number of axonal inputs to each postsynaptic cell is dramatically reduced. This synapse elimination has been extensively studied at the neuromuscular junction, but how axons are lost is unknown. Here, we combine time-lapse imaging of fluorescently labeled axons and serial electron microscopy to show that axons at neuromuscular junctions are removed by an unusual cellular mechanism. As axons disappear, they shed numerous membrane bound remnants. These "axosomes" contain a high density of synaptic organelles and are formed by engulfment of axon tips by Schwann cells. After this engulfment, the axosome's contents mix with the cytoplasm of the glial cell. Axosome shedding might underlie other forms of axon loss and may provide a pathway for interactions between axons and glia.  相似文献   

17.
Myelin basic protein (MBP) is a major structural component of myelin. It is expressed exclusively in myelinating glia (oligodendrocytes in the CNS and Schwann cells in the PNS) and is localized to the cytoplasmic surface of the plasma membrane and myelin membrane produced by these cells. The work described here concerns the mechanism of plasma membrane localization of MBP in myelinating glial cells and whether it involves differentiated functions specific to these cells or general functions of plasma membrane assembly common to all cells. To this end, the subcellular localization of endogenous MBP in mouse oligodendrocytes was compared with that of transiently expressed MBP in monkey fibroblasts (Cos-1 cells) transfected with an MBP expression vector containing cDNA for rat 14K MBP. The steady-state levels of MBP-specific RNA and of MBP polypeptide expressed in the transfected fibroblasts were comparable to the levels expressed in oligodendrocytes in primary culture. MBP localization was analyzed in whole cells by immunofluorescence and in specific intracellular compartments by subcellular fractionation. The results show that MBP expressed in wild-type oligodendrocytes is localized to the plasma membrane. In contrast, MBP expressed in transfected fibroblasts appears dispersed in the cytoplasm and is distributed uniformly among the various subcellular fractions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The development of the node of Ranvier has been previously described using thin-section electron microscopy. Using freeze-fracture, we have examined the development of glial and axonal membrane specializations before and during myelination. The spinal roots of the newborn rat are composed of bundles of unmyelinated and partially myelinated axons. At this early stage of development, the axons are engulfed by Schwann cells, while certain axons are segregated into a one to one relationship with myelinating cells. Patches of uniformly shaped 150- to 300-Å particles are readily distinguished against a relatively nonparticulate axonal E face. Patches of less uniform particles are found in the axonal P face, however, they are difficult to distinguish from a particulate background. Thin processes are found closely applied to the axonal membrane on the sides of a particle patch. While engulfing the axon with one or two noncompacted windings, the Schwann cell is predominantly restricted to one side of such a particle patch. As the number of windings covering the axon increases, so does the size of the particle patch, until an annulus of particles, similar to that of an adult node, is observed. The paucity of isolated particle patches in axolemma suggests that recognition and segregation of axons by Schwann cells are followed by a rapid initiation of myelination. Throughout the early periods of myelination there is evidence of endocytotic and exocytotic events at the nodal membrane associated with the appearance of 230-Å dimeric particles in the axolemma. Despite the paucity of windings and complete absence of compaction, the fracture faces of the glial and axonal membranes show linear organizations of particles. Scalloped regions in the P face of the nodal axolemma display dimeric-particle rows oriented along the scallop. These rows adopt a more circumferential orientation when the overlying glial process is wound into a paranodal location. While the spacing of dimeric-particle rows is maintained at a constant 360 Å, the number of rows per scallop necessarily decreases with compaction of the paranodal loops until a state similar to that of the adult, in which there are approximately two rows per scallop, is reached. In regions of close apposition between axon and Schwann cell, a linear arrangement of 160- and 75-Å particles in the glial fracture faces occurs prior to the appearance of tight junctions between glial loops and prior to compaction. Though the paranodes on each side of most nodes observed developed symmetrically, some asymmetric half-nodes have been observed.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The ultrastructure of neuromuscular connections on developing dorsolongitudinal flight muscles were studied in the moth Antheraea polyphemus. Undifferentiated membrane contacts between axon terminals and muscle-fiber anlagen are present in the diapause pupa. They persist during the period of nerve outgrowth, which probably provides a pathway of contact guidance. By the 4th day of adult development some of these contact areas have differentiated into structures similar to neuromuscular junctions although differentiation of muscle structure does not start earlier than the eighth day. Dense-cored vesicles are abundant in many axon terminals at the beginning of development. They later decrease in number quite rapidly. The significance of the above-mentioned early junctions, their possible mode of action and the role of the dense-cored vesicles are discussed. It is proposed that they exercise a stimulating (trophic) influence on the growth of the undifferentiated muscular tissue. The imaginal neuromuscular junctions are formed during the second half of adult development. Clusters of vesicles and electron-dense depositions along the inner face of the axo- and lemma seem to initiate junction formation. Glial processes then grow between the axo- and sarcolemma and divide the large contact area into several small segments. Mutual invaginations and protrusions of the sarcolemma and the glial cell membrane subsequently form an extensive "rete synapticum." Six days before eclosion the glial and sarcoplasmic parts of the rete synapticum are similar in size. Up to eclosion, all glial processes shrink and increase in electron density. Most of the observations are discussed also in relation to findings in vertebrates.  相似文献   

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