4.7 Article

Does paranode formation and maintenance require partitioning of neurofascin 155 into lipid rafts?

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 13, Pages 3176-3185

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5427-03.2004

Keywords

myelin; oligodendrocyte; node of Ranvier; paranode; lipid raft; axoglial junction

Categories

Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [R01 NS041078, NS10861, R37 NS038878, F31 NS010861, R37 NS044916, R01 NS010861, NS44916, R01 NS038878, NS38878, R01 NS044916, NS41078] Funding Source: Medline

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Paranodal axoglial junctions in myelinated nerve fibers are essential for efficient action potential conduction and ion channel clustering. We show here that, in the mature CNS, a fraction of the oligodendroglial 155 kDa isoform of neurofascin (NF-155), a major constituent of paranodal junctions, has key biochemical characteristics of a lipid raft-associated protein. However, despite its robust expression, NF-155 is detergent soluble before paranodes form and in purified oligodendrocyte cell cultures. Only during its progressive localization to paranodes is NF-155 ( 1) associated with detergent-insoluble complexes that float at increasingly lower densities of sucrose and ( 2) retained in situ after detergent treatment. Finally, mutant animals with disrupted paranodal junctions, including those lacking specific myelin lipids, have significantly reduced levels of raft-associated NF-155. Together, these results suggest that trans interactions between oligodendroglial NF-155 and axonal ligands result in cross-linking, stabilization, and formation of paranodal lipid raft assemblies.

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