4.8 Article

Dynamics of oligodendrocyte generation in multiple sclerosis

Journal

NATURE
Volume 566, Issue 7745, Pages 538-+

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0842-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council
  2. Swedish Cancer Foundation
  3. Tobias Stiftelsen
  4. SSF
  5. Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse
  6. ERC
  7. Torsten Soderberg Foundation
  8. Multiple Sclerosis Society of Great Britain and Northern Ireland [207495]

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Oligodendrocytes wrap nerve fibres in the central nervous system with layers of specialized cell membrane to form myelin sheaths(1). Myelin is destroyed by the immune system in multiple sclerosis, but myelin is thought to regenerate and neurological function can be recovered. In animal models of demyelinating disease, myelin is regenerated by newly generated oligodendrocytes, and remaining mature oligodendrocytes do not seem to contribute to this process(2-4). Given the major differences in the dynamics of oligodendrocyte generation and adaptive myelination between rodents and humans(5-9), it is not clear how well experimental animal models reflect the situation in multiple sclerosis. Here, by measuring the integration of C-14 derived from nuclear testing in genomic DNA(10), we assess the dynamics of oligodendrocyte generation in patients with multiple sclerosis. The generation of new oligodendrocytes was increased several-fold in normal-appearing white matter in a subset of individuals with very aggressive multiple sclerosis, but not in most subjects with the disease, demonstrating an inherent potential to substantially increase oligodendrocyte generation that fails in most patients. Oligodendrocytes in shadow plaques-thinly myelinated lesions that are thought to represent remyelinated areas-were old in patients with multiple sclerosis. The absence of new oligodendrocytes in shadow plaques suggests that remyelination of lesions occurs transiently or not at all, or that myelin is regenerated by pre-existing, and not new, oligodendrocytes in multiple sclerosis. We report unexpected oligodendrocyte generation dynamics in multiple sclerosis, and this should guide the use of current, and the development of new, therapies.

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