학술논문

Secondary Degeneration Impairs Myelin Ultrastructural Development in Adulthood following Adolescent Neurotrauma in the Rat Optic Nerve
Document Type
article
Source
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Vol 24, Iss 4, p 3343 (2023)
Subject
myelin
axon
white matter
neurodevelopment
CNS injury
oligodendrocyte
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Chemistry
QD1-999
Language
English
ISSN
1422-0067
1661-6596
Abstract
Adolescence is a critical period of postnatal development characterized by social, emotional, and cognitive changes. These changes are increasingly understood to depend on white matter development. White matter is highly vulnerable to the effects of injury, including secondary degeneration in regions adjacent to the primary injury site which alters the myelin ultrastructure. However, the impact of such alterations on adolescent white matter maturation is yet to be investigated. To address this, female piebald-virol-glaxo rats underwent partial transection of the optic nerve during early adolescence (postnatal day (PND) 56) with tissue collection two weeks (PND 70) or three months later (PND 140). Axons and myelin in the transmission electron micrographs of tissue adjacent to the injury were classified and measured based on the appearance of the myelin laminae. Injury in adolescence impaired the myelin structure in adulthood, resulting in a lower percentage of axons with compact myelin and a higher percentage of axons with severe myelin decompaction. Myelin thickness did not increase as expected into adulthood after injury and the relationship between the axon diameter and myelin thickness in adulthood was altered. Notably, dysmyelination was not observed 2 weeks postinjury. In conclusion, injury in adolescence altered the developmental trajectory, resulting in impaired myelin maturation when assessed at the ultrastructural level in adulthood.