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Antagonistic Functions of MBP and CNP Establish Cytosolic Channels in CNS Myelin
ISSN
2211-1247
Date Issued
2017
Author(s)
Snaidero, Nicolas
Velte, Caroline
Myllykoski, Matti
Raasakka, Arne
Ignatev, Alexander
Erwig, Michelle S.
Kursula, Petri
DOI
10.1016/j.celrep.2016.12.053
Abstract
The myelin sheath is a multilamellar plasma membrane extension of highly specialized glial cells laid down in regularly spaced segments along axons. Recent studies indicate that myelin is metabolically active and capable of communicating with the underlying axon. To be functionally connected to the neuron, oligodendrocytes maintain non-compacted myelin as cytoplasmic nanochannels. Here, we used high-pressure freezing for electron microscopy to study these cytoplasmic regions within myelin close to their native state. We identified 2,030-cyclic nucleotide 30-phosphodiesterase (CNP), an oligodendrocyte- specific protein previously implicated in the maintenance of axonal integrity, as an essential factor in generating and maintaining cytoplasm within the myelin compartment. We provide evidence that CNP directly associates with and organizes the actin cytoskeleton, thereby providing an intracellular strut that counteracts membrane compaction by myelin basic protein (MBP). Our study provides amolecular and structural framework for understanding how myelin maintains its cytoplasm to function as an active axon-glial unit.
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