Neurobiology of Disease (Jun 2005)

PDGF and FGF2 pathways regulate distinct oligodendrocyte lineage responses in experimental demyelination with spontaneous remyelination

  • Joshua C. Murtie,
  • Yong-Xing Zhou,
  • Tuan Q. Le,
  • Adam C. Vana,
  • Regina C. Armstrong

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1
pp. 171 – 182

Abstract

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Repair of myelin damage in the adult CNS requires oligodendrocyte progenitor (OP) proliferation and subsequent differentiation into remyelinating oligodendrocytes. Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF2) have been predicted to act individually and/or cooperatively to generate remyelinating oligodendrocytes. Analysis of PDGF alpha receptor (PDGFαR) heterozygous (+/−) mice indicates that PDGFαR expression modulates oligodendrocyte density in non-lesioned adult CNS. Analysis of cuprizone demyelination and recovery in PDGFαR+/− mice, FGF2 knockout (−/−) mice, and PDGFαR+/− FGF2−/− mice demonstrated that:( 1) OP proliferation and oligodendrocyte regeneration is impaired in PDGFαR heterozygotes, (2) PDGFαR+/− and FGF2−/− deletions do not act cooperatively to impair OP amplification, (3) oligodendrocyte differentiation is more frequent in FGF2−/− mice, and (4) FGF2 deletion in combination with the PDGFαR+/− genotype rescues impaired oligodendrocyte regeneration of PDGFαR heterozygotes. These findings demonstrate distinct roles for PDGF and FGF2 in vivo in the context of a demyelinating disease with spontaneous remyelination.

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