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Oligodendrocytes Provide Antioxidant Defense Function for Neurons by Secreting Ferritin Heavy Chain
ISSN
1550-4131
Date Issued
2020
Author(s)
Mukherjee, Chaitali
Kling, Tina
Russo, Belisa
Miebach, Kerstin
Kess, Eva
Pedro, Liliana D.
Weikert, Ulrich
Fard, Maryam K.
Kannaiyan, Nirmal
Rossner, Moritz
Aicher, Marie-Louise
Goebbels, Sandra
Krämer-Albers, Eva-Maria
Schneider, Anja
DOI
10.1016/j.cmet.2020.05.019
Abstract
An evolutionarily conserved function of glia is to provide metabolic and structural support for neurons. To identify molecules generated by glia and with vital functions for neurons, we used Drosophila melanogaster as a screening tool, and subsequently translated the findings to mice. We found that a cargo receptor operating in the secretory pathway of glia was essential to maintain axonal integrity by regulating iron buffering. Ferritin heavy chain was identified as the critical secretory cargo, required for the protection against iron-mediated ferroptotic axonal damage. In mice, ferritin heavy chain is highly expressed by oligodendrocytes and secreted by employing an unconventional secretion pathway involving extracellular vesicles. Disrupting the release of extracellular vesicles or the expression of ferritin heavy chain in oligodendrocytes causes neuronal loss and oxidative damage in mice. Our data point to a role of oligodendrocytes in providing an antioxidant defense system to support neurons against iron-mediated cytotoxicity.