Transcript profiling of different types of multiple sclerosis lesions yields FGF1 as a promoter of remyelination

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作者
Hema Mohan
Anita Friese
Stefanie Albrecht
Markus Krumbholz
Christina L Elliott
Ariel Arthur
Ramesh Menon
Cinthia Farina
Andreas Junker
Christine Stadelmann
Susan C Barnett
Inge Huitinga
Hartmut Wekerle
Reinhard Hohlfeld
Hans Lassmann
Tanja Kuhlmann
Chris Linington
Edgar Meinl
机构
[1] Ludwig Maximilian University Munich,Institute of Clinical Neuroimmunology
[2] University Hospital Münster,Institute of Neuropathology
[3] University of Glasgow,Division of Clinical Neurosciences
[4] Institute of Experimental Neurology (INSpe),Division of Neuroscience
[5] San Raffaele Scientific Institute,The Netherlands Brain Bank
[6] Institute for Neuropathology,Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology
[7] Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience,Center for Brain Research
[8] Hertie Senior Professorship,Present address: Department of Neurology
[9] Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (SyNergy),undefined
[10] Medical University of Vienna,undefined
[11] University of Münster,undefined
来源
Acta Neuropathologica Communications | / 2卷
关键词
Multiple sclerosis; Remyelination; Demyelination; Fibroblast growth factor;
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摘要
Chronic demyelination is a pathological hallmark of multiple sclerosis (MS). Only a minority of MS lesions remyelinates completely. Enhancing remyelination is, therefore, a major aim of future MS therapies. Here we took a novel approach to identify factors that may inhibit or support endogenous remyelination in MS. We dissected remyelinated, demyelinated active, and demyelinated inactive white matter MS lesions, and compared transcript levels of myelination and inflammation-related genes using quantitative PCR on customized TaqMan Low Density Arrays. In remyelinated lesions, fibroblast growth factor (FGF) 1 was the most abundant of all analyzed myelination-regulating factors, showed a trend towards higher expression as compared to demyelinated lesions and was significantly higher than in control white matter. Two MS tissue blocks comprised lesions with adjacent de- and remyelinated areas and FGF1 expression was higher in the remyelinated rim compared to the demyelinated lesion core. In functional experiments, FGF1 accelerated developmental myelination in dissociated mixed cultures and promoted remyelination in slice cultures, whereas it decelerated differentiation of purified primary oligodendrocytes, suggesting that promotion of remyelination by FGF1 is based on an indirect mechanism. The analysis of human astrocyte responses to FGF1 by genome wide expression profiling showed that FGF1 induced the expression of the chemokine CXCL8 and leukemia inhibitory factor, two factors implicated in recruitment of oligodendrocytes and promotion of remyelination. Together, this study presents a transcript profiling of remyelinated MS lesions and identified FGF1 as a promoter of remyelination. Modulation of FGF family members might improve myelin repair in MS.
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