Astrogliosis During Acute and Chronic Cuprizone Demyelination and Implications for Remyelination

In multiple sclerosis, microglia/macrophage activation and astrocyte reactivity are important components of the lesion environment that can impact remyelination. The current study characterizes these glial populations relative to expression of candidate regulatory molecules in cuprizone demyelinated...

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Main Authors: Norah Hibbits, Jun Yoshino, Tuan Q. Le, Regina C. Armstrong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-10-01
Series:ASN Neuro
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1042/AN20120062
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spelling doaj-02da708c61e94a5191d34c8e877382ad2020-11-25T03:38:47ZengSAGE PublishingASN Neuro1759-09141759-90912012-10-01410.1042/AN2012006210.1042_AN20120062Astrogliosis During Acute and Chronic Cuprizone Demyelination and Implications for RemyelinationNorah Hibbits0Jun Yoshino1Tuan Q. Le2Regina C. Armstrong3 Neuroscience Program, Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences 4301 Jones Bridge Road Bethesda, MD 20814, U.S.A. Department of Psychology and Program of Neuroscience Colgate University Hamilton, NY 13346, U.S.A. Department of Anatomy, Physiology, and Genetics, Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences 4301 Jones Bridge Road Bethesda, MD 20814, U.S.A. Department of Anatomy, Physiology, and Genetics, Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences 4301 Jones Bridge Road Bethesda, MD 20814, U.S.A.In multiple sclerosis, microglia/macrophage activation and astrocyte reactivity are important components of the lesion environment that can impact remyelination. The current study characterizes these glial populations relative to expression of candidate regulatory molecules in cuprizone demyelinated corpus callosum. Importantly, periods of recovery after acute or chronic cuprizone demyelination are examined to compare conditions of efficient versus limited remyelination, respectively. Microglial activation attenuates after early demyelination. In contrast, astrocyte reactivity persists throughout demyelination and a 6-week recovery period following either acute or chronic demyelination. This astrocyte reaction is characterized by (a) early proliferation, (b) increased expression of GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein), Vim (vimentin), Fn1 (fibronectin) and CSPGs (chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans) and (c) elaboration of a dense network of processes. Glial processes elongated in the axonal plane persist throughout lesion areas during both the robust remyelination that follows acute demyelination and the partial remyelination that follows chronic demyelination. However, prolonged astrocyte reactivity with chronic cuprizone treatment does not progress to barrier formation, i.e. dense compaction of astrocyte processes to wall off the lesion area. Multiple candidate growth factors and inflammatory signals in the lesion environment show strong correlations with GFAP across the acute cuprizone demyelination and recovery time course, yet there is more divergence across the progression of chronic cuprizone demyelination and recovery. However, differential glial scar formation does not appear to be responsible for differential remyelination during recovery in the cuprizone model. The astrocyte phenotype and lesion characteristics in this demyelination model inform studies to identify triggers of non-remyelinating sclerosis in chronic multiple sclerosis lesions.https://doi.org/10.1042/AN20120062
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Norah Hibbits
Jun Yoshino
Tuan Q. Le
Regina C. Armstrong
spellingShingle Norah Hibbits
Jun Yoshino
Tuan Q. Le
Regina C. Armstrong
Astrogliosis During Acute and Chronic Cuprizone Demyelination and Implications for Remyelination
ASN Neuro
author_facet Norah Hibbits
Jun Yoshino
Tuan Q. Le
Regina C. Armstrong
author_sort Norah Hibbits
title Astrogliosis During Acute and Chronic Cuprizone Demyelination and Implications for Remyelination
title_short Astrogliosis During Acute and Chronic Cuprizone Demyelination and Implications for Remyelination
title_full Astrogliosis During Acute and Chronic Cuprizone Demyelination and Implications for Remyelination
title_fullStr Astrogliosis During Acute and Chronic Cuprizone Demyelination and Implications for Remyelination
title_full_unstemmed Astrogliosis During Acute and Chronic Cuprizone Demyelination and Implications for Remyelination
title_sort astrogliosis during acute and chronic cuprizone demyelination and implications for remyelination
publisher SAGE Publishing
series ASN Neuro
issn 1759-0914
1759-9091
publishDate 2012-10-01
description In multiple sclerosis, microglia/macrophage activation and astrocyte reactivity are important components of the lesion environment that can impact remyelination. The current study characterizes these glial populations relative to expression of candidate regulatory molecules in cuprizone demyelinated corpus callosum. Importantly, periods of recovery after acute or chronic cuprizone demyelination are examined to compare conditions of efficient versus limited remyelination, respectively. Microglial activation attenuates after early demyelination. In contrast, astrocyte reactivity persists throughout demyelination and a 6-week recovery period following either acute or chronic demyelination. This astrocyte reaction is characterized by (a) early proliferation, (b) increased expression of GFAP (glial fibrillary acidic protein), Vim (vimentin), Fn1 (fibronectin) and CSPGs (chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans) and (c) elaboration of a dense network of processes. Glial processes elongated in the axonal plane persist throughout lesion areas during both the robust remyelination that follows acute demyelination and the partial remyelination that follows chronic demyelination. However, prolonged astrocyte reactivity with chronic cuprizone treatment does not progress to barrier formation, i.e. dense compaction of astrocyte processes to wall off the lesion area. Multiple candidate growth factors and inflammatory signals in the lesion environment show strong correlations with GFAP across the acute cuprizone demyelination and recovery time course, yet there is more divergence across the progression of chronic cuprizone demyelination and recovery. However, differential glial scar formation does not appear to be responsible for differential remyelination during recovery in the cuprizone model. The astrocyte phenotype and lesion characteristics in this demyelination model inform studies to identify triggers of non-remyelinating sclerosis in chronic multiple sclerosis lesions.
url https://doi.org/10.1042/AN20120062
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