神经科学
少突胶质细胞
生物
转子性能试验
运动学习
神经可塑性
中枢神经系统
髓鞘
运动活动
内分泌学
作者
Yuan Pan,Jared Hysinger,Belgin Yalçın,James Lennon,Youkyeong Gloria Byun,Preethi Raghavan,Nicole Schindler,Corina Anastasaki,Jit Chatterjee,Lijun Ni,Haojun Xu,Karen Malacon,Samin Maleki Jahan,Alexis E. Ivec,Benjamin E. Aghoghovwia,Christopher Mount,Surya Nagaraja,Suzanne M. Scheaffer,Laura D. Attardi,David H. Gutmann,Michelle Monje
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41593-024-01654-y
摘要
Abstract Neurogenetic disorders, such as neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), can cause cognitive and motor impairments, traditionally attributed to intrinsic neuronal defects such as disruption of synaptic function. Activity-regulated oligodendroglial plasticity also contributes to cognitive and motor functions by tuning neural circuit dynamics. However, the relevance of oligodendroglial plasticity to neurological dysfunction in NF1 is unclear. Here we explore the contribution of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) to pathological features of the NF1 syndrome in mice. Both male and female littermates (4–24 weeks of age) were used equally in this study. We demonstrate that mice with global or OPC-specific Nf1 heterozygosity exhibit defects in activity-dependent oligodendrogenesis and harbor focal OPC hyperdensities with disrupted homeostatic OPC territorial boundaries. These OPC hyperdensities develop in a cell-intrinsic Nf1 mutation-specific manner due to differential PI3K/AKT activation. OPC-specific Nf1 loss impairs oligodendroglial differentiation and abrogates the normal oligodendroglial response to neuronal activity, leading to impaired motor learning performance. Collectively, these findings show that Nf1 mutation delays oligodendroglial development and disrupts activity-dependent OPC function essential for normal motor learning in mice.
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