Published December 7, 2016
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Unexpected central role of the androgen receptor in the spontaneous regeneration of myelin
Description
Lost myelin can be replaced after injury or during demyelinating
diseases in a regenerative process called remyelination. In the central
nervous system (CNS), the myelin sheaths, which protect axons and
allow the fast propagation of electrical impulses, are produced by
oligodendrocytes. The abundance and widespread distribution of
oligodendrocyte progenitors (OPs) within the adult CNS account for
this remarkable regenerative potential. Here, we report a key role for
the male gonad, testosterone, and androgen receptor (AR) in CNS
remyelination. After lysolecithin-induced demyelination of the male
mouse ventral spinal cord white matter, the recruitment of glial
fibrillary acidic protein-expressing astrocytes was compromised in the
absence of testes and testosterone signaling via AR. Concomitantly, the
differentiation of OPs into oligodendrocytes forming myelin basic
protein (MBP)+ and proteolipid protein-positive myelin was impaired.
Instead, in the absence of astrocytes, axons were remyelinated by protein
zero (P0)+ and peripheral myelin protein 22-kDa (PMP22)+ myelin,
normally only produced by Schwann cells in the peripheral nervous
system. Thus, testosterone favors astrocyte recruitment and spontaneous
oligodendrocyte-mediated remyelination. This finding may have
important implications for demyelinating diseases, psychiatric disorders,
and cognitive aging. The testosterone dependency of CNS oligodendrocyte
remyelination may have roots in the evolutionary history
of the AR, because the receptor has evolved from an ancestral 3-ketosteroid
receptor through gene duplication at the time when myelin
appeared in jawed vertebrates.
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