Astrocytes promote oligodendrogenesis after white matter damage via brain-derived neurotrophic factor

N Miyamoto, T Maki, A Shindo, AC Liang… - Journal of …, 2015 - Soc Neuroscience
N Miyamoto, T Maki, A Shindo, AC Liang, M Maeda, N Egawa, K Itoh, EK Lo, J Lok, M Ihara
Journal of Neuroscience, 2015Soc Neuroscience
Oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) in the adult brain contribute to white matter
homeostasis. After white matter damage, OPCs compensate for oligodendrocyte loss by
differentiating into mature oligodendrocytes. However, the underlying mechanisms remain to
be fully defined. Here, we test the hypothesis that, during endogenous recovery from white
matter ischemic injury, astrocytes support the maturation of OPCs by secreting brain-derived
neurotrophic factor (BDNF). For in vitro experiments, cultured primary OPCs and astrocytes …
Oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) in the adult brain contribute to white matter homeostasis. After white matter damage, OPCs compensate for oligodendrocyte loss by differentiating into mature oligodendrocytes. However, the underlying mechanisms remain to be fully defined. Here, we test the hypothesis that, during endogenous recovery from white matter ischemic injury, astrocytes support the maturation of OPCs by secreting brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). For in vitro experiments, cultured primary OPCs and astrocytes were prepared from postnatal day 2 rat cortex. When OPCs were subjected to chemical hypoxic stress by exposing them to sublethal CoCl2 for 7 d, in vitro OPC differentiation into oligodendrocytes was significantly suppressed. Conditioned medium from astrocytes (astro-medium) restored the process of OPC maturation even under the stressed conditions. When astro-medium was filtered with TrkB-Fc to remove BDNF, the BDNF-deficient astro-medium no longer supported OPC maturation. For in vivo experiments, we analyzed a transgenic mouse line (GFAPcre/BDNFwt/fl) in which BDNF expression is downregulated specifically in GFAP+ astrocytes. Both wild-type (GFAPwt/BDNFwt/fl mice) and transgenic mice were subjected to prolonged cerebral hypoperfusion by bilateral common carotid artery stenosis. As expected, compared with wild-type mice, the transgenic mice exhibited a lower number of newly generated oligodendrocytes and larger white matter damage. Together, these findings demonstrate that, during endogenous recovery from white matter damage, astrocytes may promote oligodendrogenesis by secreting BDNF.
SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The repair of white matter after brain injury and neurodegeneration remains a tremendous hurdle for a wide spectrum of CNS disorders. One potentially important opportunity may reside in the response of residual oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs). OPCs may serve as a back-up for generating mature oligodendrocytes in damaged white matter. However, the underlying mechanisms are still mostly unknown. Here, we use a combination of cell biology and an animal model to report a new pathway in which astrocyte-derived BDNF supports oligodendrogenesis and regeneration after white matter damage. These findings provide new mechanistic insight into white matter physiology and pathophysiology, which would be broadly and clinically applicable to CNS disease.
Soc Neuroscience