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Neuroglial Interactions

Jack Rosenbluth M.D.
Professor of Physiology and Neuroscience (assigned to Rehabilitation Medicine)

Departments of Physiology and Neuroscience and Rehabilitation Medicine

 
Research Summary
Damage to myelin in diseases such as multiple sclerosis can block nerve conduction, causing severe motor and sensory loss. Yet in some animal mutants in which myelin never forms, the nerve fibers do, in fact, conduct, and motor or sensory losses do not occur. These variable consequences of myelin loss or deficiency depend partly on plastic changes in axonal ion channel distribution, controlled by the ensheathing glial cells, and partly on variable damage to axons, depending on the nature of the disease. We analyze these processes in animal models of myelin loss, or failure of myelin formation, mediated by immune mechanisms, trauma and genetic deficiency.

Myelin lost because of disease or injury reforms in some cases but not in others. Failure to remyelinate may be due to toxic or immune inhibitory factors or to the absence of growth or trophic factors. Replacing myelin loss after disease or trauma can be accomplished by transplanting new glial cells. We tag donor cells with dyes or take them from a transgenic cell line containing an identifiable marker. We can then track the transplanted cells and follow their behavior and differentiation in vivo. We can also manipulate their behavior by using transfected donor cells that express one of several growth factors in order to establish the role of these factors in cell survival, proliferation, migration and myelin formation.

 
Related Images
Image 1 Immunostained section of a spinal cord in which dorsal column myelin formation was blocked by implanting an antigalactocerebroside-producing hybridoma.
 
Research Information
Research Interests Neuroglial Interactions
Research Keywords axo-glial interactions, demyelination, multiple sclerosis, myelin development, oligodendroglia
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