MiR-145-5p: Its Roles in Oligodendrocyte Differentiation and Its Contributions to the Pathophysiology of Demyelinating Disease
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a debilitating disease in which demyelinated lesions form in the central nervous system (CNS). A specific microRNA, miR-145-5p, is dysregulated both in blood samples from RRMS patients and in chronic lesions from progressive MS patients. In the context of remyelination, mi...
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Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
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ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-406172020-06-12T03:29:17Z MiR-145-5p: Its Roles in Oligodendrocyte Differentiation and Its Contributions to the Pathophysiology of Demyelinating Disease Kornfeld, Samantha F. Kothary, Rashmi Oligodendrocyte MiR-145 Myelin Multiple sclerosis Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a debilitating disease in which demyelinated lesions form in the central nervous system (CNS). A specific microRNA, miR-145-5p, is dysregulated both in blood samples from RRMS patients and in chronic lesions from progressive MS patients. In the context of remyelination, miR-145-5p regulation may be important as it exhibits strong differential regulation in oligodendrocytes (OLs), the myelinating cells of the CNS, and is also expressed in other CNS glial cell types. Dysregulation of miR-145-5p may therefore play into pathologies observed in both relapsing-remitting (RRMS) and progressive MS. Using pre-clinical rodent models, we aimed to determine how altering normal expression of miR-145-5p specifically affects OL maturation, and how the dysregulation observed in MS may affect various aspects of disease. First using a miR-145 knockdown model in primary rat OLs, we found in vitro that miR-145-5p plays a role both in maintaining oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) in their proliferative state and preventing premature differentiation to OLs and that knockdown of miR-145 in OLs enhanced their differentiation. These effects were due at least in part to miR-145-5p regulation of a critical myelin gene transcription factor. The effects of miR-145-5p were further assessed in a miR-145 knockout mouse model in vivo. Contrary to in vitro assays, enhanced myelination was not detectable during development in these animals, nor when remyelination was assessed using the cuprizone toxic model of acute demyelination. However, chronic cuprizone exposure resulted in striking remyelination and functional recovery in miR-145 deficient animals. Sparse remyelination in wild-type animals with chronic cuprizone exposure was concomitant with upregulation of miR-145-5p, which was not the case with acute exposure, identifying miR-145-5p dysregulation as a unique feature of chronic demyelination. Specific assessment of miR-145-5p overexpression in OLs in vitro resulted in severe differentiation deficits and eventual apoptosis, driven molecularly by altered expression of multiple pathways critical to successful OL differentiation and subsequent myelination. Finally, we induced an inflammatory model of demyelination, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), in our miR-145 knockout mouse to assess the role of miR-145-5p in autoimmune-mediated myelin damage. The clinical severity of EAE in miR-145 deficient animals was reduced, and this was accompanied by reduced loss of myelin and lessened immune cell infiltration in miR-145 knockout spinal cords. Alterations in both astrocytic and microglial activation were detected with loss of miR-145, suggesting that improved clinical outcomes in this model may be underpinned by changes in EAE-mediated neuroinflammation. Collectively, these data suggest that miR-145-5p plays differing roles in both progressive and inflammatory MS, affecting multiple glial cell types in the CNS. Excitingly, loss of miR-145 expression in our mouse model of chronic demyelination allowed extensive remyelination and functional recovery following chronic demyelination, and in EAE improved clinical outcomes driven by underlying improvements in myelin retention and altered neuroinflammatory reactions. Thus, miR-145-5p merits further investigation as a potential therapeutic target to help overcome both remyelination failure in all forms of progressive MS and inflammation-driven demyelination in RRMS and early secondary progressive MS (SPMS). 2020-06-10T19:50:25Z 2020-06-10T19:50:25Z 2020-06-10 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40617 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-24845 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa |
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Oligodendrocyte MiR-145 Myelin Multiple sclerosis |
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Oligodendrocyte MiR-145 Myelin Multiple sclerosis Kornfeld, Samantha F. MiR-145-5p: Its Roles in Oligodendrocyte Differentiation and Its Contributions to the Pathophysiology of Demyelinating Disease |
description |
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a debilitating disease in which demyelinated lesions form in the central nervous system (CNS). A specific microRNA, miR-145-5p, is dysregulated both in blood samples from RRMS patients and in chronic lesions from progressive MS patients. In the context of remyelination, miR-145-5p regulation may be important as it exhibits strong differential regulation in oligodendrocytes (OLs), the myelinating cells of the CNS, and is also expressed in other CNS glial cell types. Dysregulation of miR-145-5p may therefore play into pathologies observed in both relapsing-remitting (RRMS) and progressive MS. Using pre-clinical rodent models, we aimed to determine how altering normal expression of miR-145-5p specifically affects OL maturation, and how the dysregulation observed in MS may affect various aspects of disease.
First using a miR-145 knockdown model in primary rat OLs, we found in vitro that miR-145-5p plays a role both in maintaining oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) in their proliferative state and preventing premature differentiation to OLs and that knockdown of miR-145 in OLs enhanced their differentiation. These effects were due at least in part to miR-145-5p regulation of a critical myelin gene transcription factor. The effects of miR-145-5p were further assessed in a miR-145 knockout mouse model in vivo. Contrary to in vitro assays, enhanced myelination was not detectable during development in these animals, nor when remyelination was assessed using the cuprizone toxic model of acute demyelination. However, chronic cuprizone exposure resulted in striking remyelination and functional recovery in miR-145 deficient animals. Sparse remyelination in wild-type animals with chronic cuprizone exposure was concomitant with upregulation of miR-145-5p, which was not the case with acute exposure, identifying miR-145-5p dysregulation as a unique feature of chronic demyelination. Specific assessment of miR-145-5p overexpression in OLs in vitro resulted in severe differentiation deficits and eventual apoptosis, driven molecularly by altered expression of multiple pathways critical to successful OL differentiation and subsequent myelination.
Finally, we induced an inflammatory model of demyelination, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), in our miR-145 knockout mouse to assess the role of miR-145-5p in autoimmune-mediated myelin damage. The clinical severity of EAE in miR-145 deficient animals was reduced, and this was accompanied by reduced loss of myelin and lessened immune cell infiltration in miR-145 knockout spinal cords. Alterations in both astrocytic and microglial activation were detected with loss of miR-145, suggesting that improved clinical outcomes in this model may be underpinned by changes in EAE-mediated neuroinflammation.
Collectively, these data suggest that miR-145-5p plays differing roles in both progressive and inflammatory MS, affecting multiple glial cell types in the CNS. Excitingly, loss of miR-145 expression in our mouse model of chronic demyelination allowed extensive remyelination and functional recovery following chronic demyelination, and in EAE improved clinical outcomes driven by underlying improvements in myelin retention and altered neuroinflammatory reactions. Thus, miR-145-5p merits further investigation as a potential therapeutic target to help overcome both remyelination failure in all forms of progressive MS and inflammation-driven demyelination in RRMS and early secondary progressive MS (SPMS). |
author2 |
Kothary, Rashmi |
author_facet |
Kothary, Rashmi Kornfeld, Samantha F. |
author |
Kornfeld, Samantha F. |
author_sort |
Kornfeld, Samantha F. |
title |
MiR-145-5p: Its Roles in Oligodendrocyte Differentiation and Its Contributions to the Pathophysiology of Demyelinating Disease |
title_short |
MiR-145-5p: Its Roles in Oligodendrocyte Differentiation and Its Contributions to the Pathophysiology of Demyelinating Disease |
title_full |
MiR-145-5p: Its Roles in Oligodendrocyte Differentiation and Its Contributions to the Pathophysiology of Demyelinating Disease |
title_fullStr |
MiR-145-5p: Its Roles in Oligodendrocyte Differentiation and Its Contributions to the Pathophysiology of Demyelinating Disease |
title_full_unstemmed |
MiR-145-5p: Its Roles in Oligodendrocyte Differentiation and Its Contributions to the Pathophysiology of Demyelinating Disease |
title_sort |
mir-145-5p: its roles in oligodendrocyte differentiation and its contributions to the pathophysiology of demyelinating disease |
publisher |
Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40617 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-24845 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kornfeldsamanthaf mir1455pitsrolesinoligodendrocytedifferentiationanditscontributionstothepathophysiologyofdemyelinatingdisease |
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