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1.
P0 protein, the dominant protein in peripheral nervous system myelin, was studied immunocytochemically in both developing and mature Schwann cells. Trigeminal and sciatic nerves from newborn, 7-d, and adult rats were processed for transmission electron microscopy. Alternating 1- micrometer-thick Epon sections were stained with paraphenylenediamine (PD) or with P0 antiserum according to the peroxidase-antiperoxidase method. To localize P0 in Schwann cell cytoplasm and myelin membranes, the distribution of immunostaining observed in 1-micrometer sections was mapped on electron micrographs of identical areas found in adjacent thin sections. The first P0 staining was observed around axons and/or in cytoplasm of Schwann cells that had established a 1:1 relationship with axons. In newborn nerves, staining of newly formed myelin sheaths was detected more readily with P0 antiserum than with PD. Myelin sheaths with as few as three lamellae could be identified with the light microscope. Very thin sheaths often stained less intensely and part of their circumference frequently was unstained. Schmidt-Lanterman clefts found in more mature sheaths also were unstained. As myelination progressed, intensely stained myelin rings became much more numerous and, in adult nerves, all sheaths were intensely and uniformly stained. Particulate P0 staining also was observed in juxtanuclear areas of Schwann cell cytoplasm. It was most prominent during development, then decreased, but still was detected in adult nerves. The cytoplasmic areas stained by P0 antiserum were rich in Golgi complex membranes.  相似文献   

2.
The myelin sheath insulates neuronal axons and markedly increases the nerve conduction velocity. In the peripheral nervous system (PNS), Schwann cell precursors migrate along embryonic neuronal axons to their final destinations, where they eventually wrap around individual axons to form the myelin sheath after birth. ErbB2 and ErbB3 tyrosine kinase receptors form a heterodimer and are extensively expressed in Schwann lineage cells. ErbB2/3 is thought to be one of the primary regulators controlling the entire Schwann cell development. ErbB3 is the bona fide Schwann cell receptor for the neuronal ligand neuregulin-1. Although ErbB2/3 is well known to regulate both Schwann cell precursor migration and myelination by Schwann cells in fishes, it still remains unclear whether in mammals, ErbB2/3 actually regulates Schwann cell precursor migration. Here, we show that knockdown of ErbB3 using a Schwann cell-specific promoter in mice causes delayed migration of Schwann cell precursors. In contrast, littermate control mice display normal migration. Similar results are seen in an in vitro migration assay using reaggregated Schwann cell precursors. Also, ErbB3 knockdown in mice reduces myelin thickness in sciatic nerves, consistent with the established role of ErbB3 in myelination. Thus, ErbB3 plays a key role in migration, as well as in myelination, in mouse Schwann lineage cells, presenting a genetically conservative role of ErbB3 in Schwann cell precursor migration.  相似文献   

3.
In peripheral nerves, Schwann cells form the myelin sheath that insulates axons and allows rapid propagation of action potentials. Although a number of regulators of Schwann cell development are known, the signaling pathways that control myelination are incompletely understood. In this study, we show that Gpr126 is essential for myelination and other aspects of peripheral nerve development in mammals. A mutation in Gpr126 causes a severe congenital hypomyelinating peripheral neuropathy in mice, and expression of differentiated Schwann cell markers, including Pou3f1, Egr2, myelin protein zero and myelin basic protein, is reduced. Ultrastructural studies of Gpr126-/- mice showed that axonal sorting by Schwann cells is delayed, Remak bundles (non-myelinating Schwann cells associated with small caliber axons) are not observed, and Schwann cells are ultimately arrested at the promyelinating stage. Additionally, ectopic perineurial fibroblasts form aberrant fascicles throughout the endoneurium of the mutant sciatic nerve. This analysis shows that Gpr126 is required for Schwann cell myelination in mammals, and defines new roles for Gpr126 in axonal sorting, formation of mature non-myelinating Schwann cells and organization of the perineurium.  相似文献   

4.
Nona  S. N.  Thomlinson  A. M.  Stafford  C. A. 《Brain Cell Biology》1998,27(11):791-803
Summary. In crushed goldfish optic nerve, regenerating axons cross the site of lesion within 10 days following injury. Some 30 days later, Schwann cells accumulate at the lesion, where they myelinate the new axons. In this study, we have used immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy to examine the cellular environment of the crush site prior to the establishment of Schwann cells in order to learn more about the early events that contribute to axonal regeneration. During the first week following injury, macrophages enter the site of lesion and efficiently phagocytose the debris. The infiltration of macrophages precedes the arrival of regenerating axons that abut and surround these phagocytes. Based on EM morphology and phagocytic capacity, macrophages of the type observed at the site of lesion are not present in the degenerating distal nerve segment, where debris clearance is shared between conventional microglia and astrocytes over a period of several weeks. During this period, axon bundles emerging distally from the injury zone become enwrapped by astrocyte processes, thereby re-establishing the characteristic fascicular cytoarchitecture of the optic nerve. The process of fasciculation also leads to the displacement of myelin debris to the margins of the fiber bundles, where it is trapped by the astrocytes. Our results suggest that the early robust appearance of macrophages at the lesion, and their effectiveness as phagocytes compared with the microglia distally, may contribute to the vigorous axonal regeneration across the crush, beyond which axons<197>excepting the pioneers<197>extend through newly formed debris-free channels delineated by astrocyte processes.  相似文献   

5.
During peripheral nerve myelination, Schwann cells sort larger axons, ensheath them, and eventually wrap their membrane to form the myelin sheath. These processes involve extensive changes in cell shape, but the exact mechanisms involved are still unknown. Neural Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein (N-WASP) integrates various extracellular signals to control actin dynamics and cytoskeletal reorganization through activation of the Arp2/3 complex. By generating mice lacking N-WASP in myelinating Schwann cells, we show that N-WASP is crucial for myelination. In N-WASP-deficient nerves, Schwann cells sort and ensheath axons, but most of them fail to myelinate and arrest at the promyelinating stage. Yet, a limited number of Schwann cells form unusually short internodes, containing thin myelin sheaths, with the occasional appearance of myelin misfoldings. These data suggest that regulation of actin filament nucleation in Schwann cells by N-WASP is crucial for membrane wrapping, longitudinal extension, and myelination.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
G C Owens  R P Bunge 《Neuron》1991,7(4):565-575
To elucidate the role of myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG) in the axon-Schwann cell interaction leading to myelination, neonatal rodent Schwann cells were infected in vitro with a recombinant retrovirus expressing MAG antisense RNA or MAG sense RNA. Stably infected Schwann cells and uninfected cells were then cocultured with purified sensory neurons under conditions permitting extensive myelination in vitro. A proportion of the Schwann cells infected with the MAG antisense virus did not myelinate axons and expressed lower levels of MAG than control myelinating Schwann cells, as measured by immunofluorescence. Electron microscopy revealed that the affected cells failed to segregate large axons and initiate a myelin spiral despite having formed a basal lamina, which normally triggers Schwann cell differentiation. Cells infected with the MAG sense virus formed normal compact myelin. These observations strongly suggest that MAG is the critical Schwann cell component induced by neuronal interaction that initiates peripheral myelination.  相似文献   

8.
In order to test our hypothesis that myelin-forming Schwann cells early during development, after having been eliminated from their parent axons, colonize neighbouring unmyelinated axons, we studied the distribution of Schwann cells at the PNS–CNS border in the feline S1 dorsal spinal root during pre- and postnatal development using electron microscopy and autoradiography. Myelination of axons peripheral to the PNS–CNS border began about 1.5 weeks before birth. The adult distribution of one-third myelinated and two-thirds unmyelinated axons was noted 3 weeks after birth. Analysis based on to-scale reconstructions of axon and Schwann cell samples from the first 6 postnatal weeks gave the following results. 1) CNS tissue appeared in the proximal part of the root around birth and expanded peripherally during the first three postnatal weeks. (2) The number of Schwann cells associated with myelinated axons decreased. (3) The number of Schwann cells associated with unmyelinated axons increased. (4) The mitotic activity of the Schwann cells was low at birth and nil after the first postnatal weak. (5) Apoptotic cell units were virtually absent. (6) Aberrant Schwann cells, i.e. short and very short Schwann cells with distorted and degenerating myelin sheaths, were common. (7) The endoneurial space contained numerous Schwannoid cells i.e. solitary cells surrounded by a basal lamina. (8) Cytoplasmic contacts between unmyelinated axons and aberrant Schwann cells or Schwannoid cells were observed. We take these results to support our hypothesis.  相似文献   

9.
10.
《The Journal of cell biology》1986,103(6):2439-2448
The cellular and subcellular localization of the neural cell adhesion molecules L1, N-CAM, and myelin-associated glycoprotein (MAG), their shared carbohydrate epitope L2/HNK-1, and the myelin basic protein (MBP) were studied by pre- and post-embedding immunoelectron microscopic labeling procedures in developing mouse sciatic nerve. L1 and N-CAM showed a similar staining pattern. Both were localized on small, non-myelinated, fasciculating axons and axons ensheathed by non- myelinating Schwann cells. Schwann cells were also positive for L1 and N-CAM in their non-myelinating state and at the onset of myelination, when the Schwann cell processes had turned approximately 1.5 loops. Thereafter, neither axon nor Schwann cell could be detected to express the L1 antigen, whereas N-CAM was found in the periaxonal area and, more weakly, in compact myelin of myelinated fibers. Compact myelin, Schmidt-Lanterman incisures, paranodal loops, and finger-like processes of Schwann cells at nodes of Ranvier were L1-negative. At the nodes of Ranvier, the axolemma was also always L1- and N-CAM-negative. The L2/HNK-1 carbohydrate epitope coincided in its cellular and subcellular localization most closely to that observed for L1. MAG appeared on Schwann cells at the time L1 expression ceased. MAG was then expressed at sites of axon-myelinating Schwann cell apposition and non-compacted loops of developing myelin. When compaction of myelin occurred, MAG remained present only at the axon-Schwann cell interface; Schmidt- Lanterman incisures, inner and outer mesaxons, and paranodal loops, but not at finger-like processes of Schwann cells at nodes of Ranvier or compacted myelin. All three adhesion molecules and the L2/HNK-1 epitope could be detected in a non-uniform staining pattern in basement membrane of Schwann cells and collagen fibrils of the endoneurium. MBP was detectable in compacted myelin, but not in Schmidt-Lanterman incisures, inner and outer mesaxon, paranodal loops, and finger-like processes at nodes of Ranvier, nor in the periaxonal regions of myelinated fibers, thus showing a complementary distribution to MAG. These studies show that axon-Schwann cell interactions are characterized by the sequential appearance of cell adhesion molecules and MBP apparently coordinated in time and space. From this sequence it may be deduced that L1 and N-CAM are involved in fasciculation, initial axon-Schwann cell interaction, and onset of myelination, with MAG to follow and MBP to appear only in compacted myelin. In contrast to L1, N- CAM may be further involved in the maintenance of compact myelin and axon-myelin apposition of larger diameter axons.  相似文献   

11.
Immunocytological localization of the major glycoprotein of peripheral myelin P0 and its associated carbohydrate structures L2/HNK-1 and L3 was performed at the light- and electron-microscopic levels in mouse sciatic nerves at several developmental stages and in adulthood. P0 was first expressed on Schwann cells at the time that Schwann cells associated with axons on a 1:1 basis. P0 remains expressed at all times of myelin formation and in compact myelin. After cessation of myelination P0 is no longer detectable in the uncompacted parts of myelin, i.e., Schmidt-Lanterman incisures, paranodal loops, and outer and inner mesaxons. P0 is not detectable on basement membranes, interstitial collagens, and non-myelin-forming Schwann cells. The associated carbohydrate epitope L2 does not follow the expression of P0 at any developmental or adult stage. Until 21 days the L2 epitope is confined to nonmyelinated fibers. In sciatic nerves of mice older than 8 weeks, however, only a few nonmyelinated fibers remain L2-positive. L2 immunoreactivity is clearly seen in a subpopulation of compact myelin figures largely associated with motor fibers. The L3 epitope is never detectable on nonmyelinated fibers and becomes first visible when compact myelin is discerned. Unlike the L2 epitope L3 is present in most, if not all, compact myelin figures. These observations suggest that P0 may be involved in ensheathment of axons by Schwann cells at the decisive stages of initiation of myelination and later on, possibly in conjunction with the L3 carbohydrate structure, in maintenance of compact myelin. The appearance of the L2 carbohydrate epitopes in compact myelin of largely motor and fewer sensory nerve fibers at times when morphogenesis of myelin has ceased remains to be elucidated in functional terms.  相似文献   

12.
Membrane-membrane interactions between axons and Schwann cells are required for initial myelin formation in the peripheral nervous system. However, recent studies of double myelination in sympathetic nerve have indicated that myelin sheaths continue to exist after complete loss of axonal contact (Kidd, G. J., and J. W. Heath. 1988. J. Neurocytol. 17:245-261). This suggests that myelin maintenance may be regulated either by diffusible axonal factors or by nonaxonal mechanisms. To test these hypotheses, axons involved in double myelination in the rat superior cervical ganglion were destroyed by chronic guanethidine treatment. Guanethidine-induced sympathectomy resulted in a Wallerian-like pattern of myelin degeneration within 10 d. In doubly myelinated configurations the axon, inner myelin sheath (which lies in contact with the axon), and approximately 75% of outer myelin sheaths broke down by this time. Degenerating outer sheaths were not found at later periods. It is probably that outer sheaths that degenerated were only partially displaced from the axon at the commencement of guanethidine treatment. In contrast, analysis of serial sections showed that completely displaced outer internodes remained ultrastructurally intact. These internodes survived degeneration of the axon and inner sheath, and during the later time points (2-6 wk) they enclosed only connective tissue elements and reorganized Schwann cells/processes. Axonal regeneration was not observed within surviving outer internodes. We therefore conclude that myelin maintenance in the superior cervical ganglion is not dependent on direct axonal contact or diffusible axonal factors. In addition, physical association of Schwann cells with the degenerating axon may be an important factor in precipitating myelin breakdown during Wallerian degeneration.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
The effect of two inhibitors of cholesterol biosynthesis, triparanol and AY 9944, on peripheral nerve myelination, was studied. Suckling mice were intraperitoneally injected with both drugs on 3 consecutive days and were sacrificed 6 hr after the last injection; others were suckled by an injected mother and sacrificed at 2½ days of age. A single mouse which had been injected with both drugs at 1, 2, and 3 days of age was sacrificed 2 wk after the last injection. Membranous and crystalline intracytoplasmic inclusions were observed in the Schwann cells of the sciatic nerves of all the experimental animals. Both the number of unmyelinated single axons and the number of myelin lamellae around each myelinating axon in the sciatic nerves were recorded for treated mice and of mice suckled by treated mothers. The sciatic nerve of the experimental mice contained a larger proportion of unmyelinated single axons and smaller numbers of myelin lamellae around the myelinating axons, when compared with age-matched controls. The results suggest that a decrease of endogenous cholesterol in suckling mice may affect peripheral nerve myelination in two ways: by retarding the "triggering" of myelination in unmyelinated axons and by decreasing the rate of myelination already in progress.  相似文献   

16.
Neurons regulate Schwann cell genes by diffusible molecules   总被引:3,自引:1,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
  相似文献   

17.
The myelin sheath forms by the spiral wrapping of a glial membrane around the axon. The mechanisms responsible for this process are unknown but are likely to involve coordinated changes in the glial cell cytoskeleton. We have found that inhibition of myosin II, a key regulator of actin cytoskeleton dynamics, has remarkably opposite effects on myelin formation by Schwann cells (SC) and oligodendrocytes (OL). Myosin II is necessary for initial interactions between SC and axons, and its inhibition or down-regulation impairs their ability to segregate axons and elongate along them, preventing the formation of a 1:1 relationship, which is critical for peripheral nervous system myelination. In contrast, OL branching, differentiation, and myelin formation are potentiated by inhibition of myosin II. Thus, by controlling the spatial and localized activation of actin polymerization, myosin II regulates SC polarization and OL branching, and by extension their ability to form myelin. Our data indicate that the mechanisms regulating myelination in the peripheral and central nervous systems are distinct.  相似文献   

18.
The myelin sheaths that surround the thick axons of the peripheral nervous system are produced by the highly specialized Schwann cells. Differentiation of Schwann cells and myelination occur in discrete steps. Each of these requires coordinated expression of specific proteins in a precise sequence, yet the regulatory mechanisms controlling protein expression during these events are incompletely understood. Here we report that Schwann cell-specific ablation of the enzyme Dicer1, which is required for the production of small non-coding regulatory microRNAs, fully arrests Schwann cell differentiation, resulting in early postnatal lethality. Dicer−/− Schwann cells had lost their ability to myelinate, yet were still capable of sorting axons. Both cell death and, paradoxically, proliferation of immature Schwann cells was markedly enhanced, suggesting that their terminal differentiation is triggered by growth-arresting regulatory microRNAs. Using microRNA microarrays, we identified 16 microRNAs that are upregulated upon myelination and whose expression is controlled by Dicer in Schwann cells. This set of microRNAs appears to drive Schwann cell differentiation and myelination of peripheral nerves, thereby fulfilling a crucial function for survival of the organism.  相似文献   

19.
20.
A study of myelination with electron microscopy has been carried out on the spinal cord of young rats and cats. In longitudinal and transverse sections the intimate relationship of the growing axons with the oligodendrocytes was observed. Early naked axons appear to be embedded within the cytoplasm and processes of the oligodendrocytes from which they are limited only by the intimately apposed membranes of both elements (axon-oligocytic membrane). In a transverse section several axons are observed to be in a single oligodendrocyte. The process of myelination consists in the laying down, within the cytoplasm of the oligodendrocyte and around the axon, of concentric membranous myelin layers. The first of these layers is deposited at a certain distance (200 to 600 A or more) from the axon-oligocytic membrane. This and all the other subsequently formed membranes have higher electron density and are apparently formed by the coalescence and fusion of vesicles (of 200 to 800 A) and membranes found in large amounts within the cytoplasm of the oligodendrocytes. At an early stage the myelin layers may be discontinuous and some vesicular material may even be trapped among them or between the myelin proper and the axon-oligocytic membrane. Then, when the 8th to 10th layer is deposited, the complete coalescence and alignment of the lamellae leads to the characteristic orderly multilayered organization of the myelin sheath. Myelination in the central nervous system appears to be a process of membrane synthesis within the cytoplasm of the oligodendrocyte and not a result of the wrapping of the plasma membranes as postulated in Geren's hypothesis for the peripheral nerve fibers. The possible participation of Schwann cell cytoplasm in peripheral myelination is now being investigated.  相似文献   

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