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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Ishibashi T, Dakin KA, Stevens B, Lee PR, Kozlov SV, Stewart CL, Fields RD. Astrocytes promote myelination in response to electrical impulses. Neuron. 2006 Mar 16;49(6):823-32. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Surprise! Astrocytes Mediate Activity-Stimulated Myelination

Comment by:  Ben Barres, ARF Advisor
Submitted 18 March 2006  |  Permalink Posted 18 March 2006

This paper has significant potential implications for multiple sclerosis, and one can reasonably speculate about potential relevance to Alzheimer disease, as well. The general principle the authors are describing, that is, that electrical activity in neurons releases a signal—in this case ATP—that tells the astrocytes to release other signals that then feed back on neighboring cells such as oligodendrocytes is quite interesting.

One possible connection to neurodegenerative disease is that there is much evidence that astrocytes are releasing signals that are crucial for the promotion of CNS neuron survival, though no one yet knows what these astrocyte-derived trophic signals are. Could electrical activity in neurons induce astrocytes to release more of these neurotrophic signals? If so, decreased activity with aging or in neurodegenerative disease certainly might lead to less release of trophic signals (which in turn could lead to failure of myelin maintenance).

In fact, I showed previously that LIF and CNTF are co-mitogens for oligodendrocyte precursor cells (  Read more


  Comment by:  Philip Landfield
Submitted 21 March 2006  |  Permalink Posted 21 March 2006

The paper by Ishibashi, Fields, and colleagues describes a systematic and thorough series of experiments that does much to advance our understanding of the interactions between axonal electrical activity and induction of myelination programs in oligodendrocytes. The studies elucidate an indirect pathway that is initiated by axonal ATP release during action potential activity and mediated by astrocyte release of the cytokine, leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), which acts in a paracrine mode to activate oligodendrocyte myelination processes.

As noted in the article, several of the steps in this sequence have been described previously, including the links of LIF and astrocyte functions to oligodendrocyte maturation and myelination (e.g., Bugga et al., 1998; Meyer-Franke et al., 1999). However, the present work identifies a novel integrated pathway, providing the first evidence that activity-dependent promotion of myelination is mediated by ATP release from axons followed by ATP-induced LIF...  Read more


  Comment by:  George Bartzokis
Submitted 21 March 2006  |  Permalink Posted 21 March 2006

Myelin, brain aging, and Alzheimer disease
The protracted myelination of the human brain throughout life results in a roughly quadratic (inverted U) trajectory of myelin content, reaching a maximum in mid-life and then declining in older age. The extensive scope of myelination is arguably the most uniquely human aspect of our brain. It results in the high processing speeds underlying our cognitive functions, and is extremely vulnerable during both brain development and degeneration. In this "myelin model" of the human brain, the breakdown of myelin integrity in old age is hypothesized to also be the first step in the development of uniquely human age-related diseases such as Alzheimer disease (AD) (for review, see Bartzokis, 2004, 2004a).

The model posits that many of the risk factors associated with AD, such as brain cholesterol and iron levels, head trauma, and apolipoprotein E (ApoE) alleles, may affect age-related myelin breakdown and thus contribute to the ultimate manifestations of age-related cognitive decline and degenerative brain disorders. For example,...  Read more

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