학술논문

A TLR/AKT/FoxO3 immune tolerance--like pathway disrupts the repair capacity of oligodendrocyte progenitors
Document Type
Report
Source
Journal of Clinical Investigation. May, 2018, Vol. 128 Issue 5, p2025, 17 p.
Subject
Toll-like receptors -- Health aspects
Immune response -- Genetic aspects
Cellular signal transduction -- Genetic aspects -- Health aspects
Transcription factors -- Health aspects
Gene expression -- Health aspects
Health care industry
Language
English
ISSN
0021-9738
Abstract
Cerebral white matter injury (WMI) persistently disrupts myelin regeneration by oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs). We identified a specific bioactive hyaluronan fragment (bHAf) that downregulates myelin gene expression and chronically blocks OPC maturation and myelination via a tolerance-like mechanism that dysregulates pro-myelination signaling via AKT. Desensitization of AKT occurs via TLR4 but not TLR2 or CD44. OPC differentiation was selectively blocked by bHAf in a maturation-dependent fashion at the late OPC (preOL) stage by a noncanonical TLR4/TRIF pathway that induced persistent activation of the FoxO3 transcription factor downstream of AKT. Activated FoxO3 selectively localized to oligodendrocyte lineage cells in white matter lesions from human preterm neonates and adults with multiple sclerosis. FoxO3 constraint of OPC maturation was bHAf dependent, and involved interactions at the FoxO3 and MBP promoters with the chromatin remodeling factor Brg1 and the transcription factor Olig2, which regulate OPC differentiation. WMI has adapted an immune tolerance-like mechanism whereby persistent engagement of TLR4 by bHAf promotes an OPC niche at the expense of myelination by engaging a FoxO3 signaling pathway that chronically constrains OPC differentiation.
Introduction Immune tolerance (IT) is a transient state in cells of the innate immune system where repeated exposure to pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) or damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) renders cells [...]