## Abstract Oligodendrocytes elaborate an extensive network of multibranched processes and flat membranous sheets. Microtubules (MT) participate in the elaboration and stabilization of myelin‐forming processes and are essential for cellular sorting processes. Microtubule‐associated proteins (MAPs)
Neu differentiation factor regulates tau protein and mRNA in cultured neonatal oligodendrocytes
✍ Scribed by Patrizia LoPresti; Nancy A. Muma; George H. De Vries
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 468 KB
- Volume
- 35
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0894-1491
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Axonal signals activate myelinogenesis via regulation of the extent to which oligodendrocyte (OLG) processes wrap around the axon. The cytoskeleton in OLG processes is actively involved in myelination and is a putative target for axonal regulation of myelination. The axon‐associated neuregulins may regulate the cytoskeleton extensions in OLG processes. Here, we report that the neuregulin neu differentiation factor (NDF) increases the expression of tau mRNA and tau protein in OLGs. Treatment of neonatal OLGs with α‐NDF or β‐NDF resulted in dramatic increases in the length of OLG processes, which appeared either as singular unbranched extensions or as a network of extensively branched processes. By immunoblot analysis with tau‐1 mAb, which recognizes the dephosphorylated form of the tau proteins, neonatal OLGs treated with α‐NDF or β‐NDF, had an increase in tau protein levels. The increase of tau levels in β‐NDF–treated cells is much greater than the twofold increase present in α‐NDF–treated cells. By immunoblot analysis with the phosphorylation‐insensitive tau‐5 mAb, β‐NDF–treated cells had a twofold increase in tau. Immunoblot analysis suggest that α‐NDF and β‐NDF promote a twofold increase in the tau protein levels in OLG, with the β‐factor also promoting a tau dephosphorylation. Using promoters spanning the amino‐terminal region of tau, we found that OLGs treated with α‐NDF or β‐NDF contained approximately twofold more tau mRNA than untreated cells. However, there was no qualitative difference between control and NDF‐treated cells in the pattern of tau mRNA isoforms expressed. A model is proposed in which the axonal NDF‐induced regulation of tau expression in OLGs may be part of the mechanism by which the axon regulates myelination. GLIA 35:147–155, 2001. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Oligodendrocytes and neurons derive from the same cell type but develop distinct morphologic and functional properties as they mature in vivo. Both cells express tau protein, a developmentally regulated protein in the central nervous system. The regulation of tau has been investigated e
Oligodendrocytes are responsible for the formation and maintenance of the myelin sheaths in the central nervous system (CNS), and microtubules essentially participate in the elaboration and stabilization of myelin-containing cellular processes. We have shown before that the two major groups of neuro
## Abstract Mouse epidermal melanoblasts/melanocytes preferentially proliferated from disaggregated epidermal cell suspensions derived from newborn mouse skin in a serum‐free melanoblast/melanocyte‐proliferation medium supplemented with dibutyryl adenosine 3′:5′‐cyclic monophosphate (DBcAMP) and/or
## Abstract Glucocorticoids (GCs) modulate insulin‐like growth factor action in cartilage through mechanisms that are complex and insufficiently defined, especially in the context of cranio‐facial growth. Because the family of IGF‐binding proteins (IGFBP‐1 to ‐6) is important in the regulation of I