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Injury-induced perivascular niche supports alternative differentiation of adult rodent CNS progenitor cells.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Ulanska-Poutanen, Justyna 
Mieczkowski, Jakub 
Konarzewska, Katarzyna 
Kaza, Beata 

Abstract

Following CNS demyelination, oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) are able to differentiate into either remyelinating oligodendrocytes (OLs) or remyelinating Schwann cells (SCs). However, the signals that determine which type of remyelinating cell is generated and the underlying mechanisms involved have not been identified. Here, we show that distinctive microenvironments created in discrete niches within demyelinated white matter determine fate decisions of adult OPCs. By comparative transcriptome profiling we demonstrate that an ectopic, injury-induced perivascular niche is enriched with secreted ligands of the BMP and Wnt signalling pathways, produced by activated OPCs and endothelium, whereas reactive astrocyte within non-vascular area express the dual BMP/Wnt antagonist Sostdc1. The balance of BMP/Wnt signalling network is instructive for OPCs to undertake fate decision shortly after their activation: disruption of the OPCs homeostasis during demyelination results in BMP4 upregulation, which, in the absence of Socstdc1, favours SCs differentiation.

Description

Keywords

Schwann cells, adult CNS progenitors, neuroscience, perivascular niche, rat, remyelination, Animals, Astrocytes, Bone Morphogenetic Proteins, Cell Differentiation, Cellular Microenvironment, Central Nervous System, Demyelinating Diseases, Endothelial Cells, Gene Expression Regulation, Ligands, Oligodendroglia, Peripheral Nervous System, RNA, Messenger, Rats, Stem Cell Niche, Stem Cells, Wnt Signaling Pathway, Wounds and Injuries

Journal Title

Elife

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2050-084X
2050-084X

Volume Title

7

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_PC_12009)
This work was funded by the National Science Centre grants, NN 401 584238 (MZ) and 2012/07/N/ NZ3/01943 (JU-P), a programme grant from the UK Multiple Sclerosis Society (RJMF, CZ) and a core support grant from the Wellcome Trust and MRC to the Wellcome Trust – Medical Research Council Cambridge Stem Cell Institute (RJMF).