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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Káradóttir R, Hamilton NB, Bakiri Y, Attwell D. Spiking and nonspiking classes of oligodendrocyte precursor glia in CNS white matter. Nat Neurosci. 2008 Apr;11(4):450-6. PubMed Abstract

  
Comments on Paper and Primary News
  Primary News: Excitable Glia Liven Up White Matter

Comment by:  Ben Barres, ARF Advisor
Submitted 7 March 2008  |  Permalink Posted 7 March 2008

This study demonstrated two groups of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) in developing and adult white matter. Although these are glial cells, one of the groups of OPCs is found to be highly electrically excitable, firing repetitive action potentials when depolarized. This same group responds to glutamate and is found to be highly vulnerable to ischemia. These findings are extremely interesting for several reasons. It has always been thought that only neurons are electrically excitable, but this work now shows that many OPCs are also highly excitable. As these same cells have been shown to receive synaptic inputs, they now appear to resemble neurons in many key respects, and thus it is possible that these cells are participating in some sort of novel white matter circuit activity that may be key to the normal functioning of white matter. Thus, it will be interesting to further understand their functional roles and how these functions are perturbed when these cells are lost in ischemia.

The other interesting question raised by these new findings is whether they are...  Read more


  Comment by:  Steven Greenberg (Disclosure)
Submitted 10 March 2008  |  Permalink Posted 10 March 2008

Abnormalities of the white matter are a universal component of aging. These white matter changes appear as hyperintensities on T2-weighted MRI sequences or as alterations of anisotropy, diffusivity, or magnetization transfer on more sensitive MRI techniques. They correlate neuropathologically to rarefaction and mild gliosis of the white matter rather than frank infarction (1). Though the cause of white matter change is still not fully defined, its association with microvascular processes such as arteriosclerosis and cerebral amyloid angiopathy suggests a chronic ischemic mechanism, i.e., a kind of slow-developing stroke. Although once thought to be incidental and clinically unimportant, white matter lesions are now recognized for their association with cognitive impairment, depression, and future risk of dementia (2-4). They are more prevalent in Alzheimer disease than similar aged controls (5) and may act in concert with the Alzheimer process to produce worse clinical impairments than either disorder alone (6).

The current paper by Karadottir and colleagues puts a new spin...  Read more

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