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Myelin insulation as a risk factor for axonal degeneration in autoimmune demyelinating disease.

Erik SchäffnerMar Bosch-QueraltJulia M EdgarMaria LehningJudith StraußNiko FleischerTheresa KunglPeter WieghoferStefan A BerghoffTilo ReinertMartin KruegerMarkus MorawskiWiebke MöbiusAlonso Barrantes-FreerJens StielerTing SunGesine SaherMarkus H SchwabChristoph WredeMaximilian FroschMarco PrinzDaniel S ReichAlexander FlügelChristine StadelmannRobert FledrichKlaus-Armin NaveRuth M Stassart
Published in: Nature neuroscience (2023)
Axonal degeneration determines the clinical outcome of multiple sclerosis and is thought to result from exposure of denuded axons to immune-mediated damage. Therefore, myelin is widely considered to be a protective structure for axons in multiple sclerosis. Myelinated axons also depend on oligodendrocytes, which provide metabolic and structural support to the axonal compartment. Given that axonal pathology in multiple sclerosis is already visible at early disease stages, before overt demyelination, we reasoned that autoimmune inflammation may disrupt oligodendroglial support mechanisms and hence primarily affect axons insulated by myelin. Here, we studied axonal pathology as a function of myelination in human multiple sclerosis and mouse models of autoimmune encephalomyelitis with genetically altered myelination. We demonstrate that myelin ensheathment itself becomes detrimental for axonal survival and increases the risk of axons degenerating in an autoimmune environment. This challenges the view of myelin as a solely protective structure and suggests that axonal dependence on oligodendroglial support can become fatal when myelin is under inflammatory attack.
Keyphrases
  • multiple sclerosis
  • white matter
  • spinal cord injury
  • optic nerve
  • oxidative stress
  • endothelial cells
  • drug induced
  • pluripotent stem cells