Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Nonsynaptic junctions on myelinating glia promote preferential myelination of electrically active axons

2015; Nature Portfolio; Volume: 6; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/ncomms8844

ISSN

2041-1723

Autores

Hiroaki Wake, Fernando C. Ortíz, Dong Ho Woo, Philip R. Lee, Marı́a Cecilia Angulo, R. Douglas Fields,

Tópico(s)

Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research

Resumo

Abstract The myelin sheath on vertebrate axons is critical for neural impulse transmission, but whether electrically active axons are preferentially myelinated by glial cells, and if so, whether axo-glial synapses are involved, are long-standing questions of significance to nervous system development, plasticity and disease. Here we show using an in vitro system that oligodendrocytes preferentially myelinate electrically active axons, but synapses from axons onto myelin-forming oligodendroglial cells are not required. Instead, vesicular release at nonsynaptic axo-glial junctions induces myelination. Axons releasing neurotransmitter from vesicles that accumulate in axon varicosities induces a local rise in cytoplasmic calcium in glial cell processes at these nonsynaptic functional junctions, and this signalling stimulates local translation of myelin basic protein to initiate myelination.

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