PMP2 regulates myelin thickening and ATP production during remyelination

Author:

Hong Jiayue1,Garfolo Rebekah1,Kabre Sejal1ORCID,Humml Christian2,Velanac Viktorija2,Roué Clémence1,Beck Brianna1,Jeanette Haley1,Haslam Sarah1,Bach Martin1,Arora Simar1,Acheta Jenica1,Nave Klaus‐Armin2,Schwab Markus H.23,Jourd'heuil David4,Poitelon Yannick1,Belin Sophie1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics Albany Medical College Albany New York USA

2. Department of Neurogenetics Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences Göttingen Germany

3. Paul Flechsig Institute of Neuropathology University Hospital Leipzig Leipzig Germany

4. Department of Molecular and Cellular Physiology Albany Medical College Albany New York USA

Abstract

AbstractIt is well established that axonal Neuregulin 1 type 3 (NRG1t3) regulates developmental myelin formation as well as EGR2‐dependent gene activation and lipid synthesis. However, in peripheral neuropathy disease context, elevated axonal NRG1t3 improves remyelination and myelin sheath thickness without increasing Egr2 expression or activity, and without affecting the transcriptional activity of canonical myelination genes. Surprisingly, Pmp2, encoding for a myelin fatty acid binding protein, is the only gene whose expression increases in Schwann cells following overexpression of axonal NRG1t3. Here, we demonstrate PMP2 expression is directly regulated by NRG1t3 active form, following proteolytic cleavage. Then, using a transgenic mouse model overexpressing axonal NRG1t3 (NRG1t3OE) and knocked out for PMP2, we demonstrate that PMP2 is required for NRG1t3‐mediated remyelination. We demonstrate that the sustained expression of Pmp2 in NRG1t3OE mice enhances the fatty acid uptake in sciatic nerve fibers and the mitochondrial ATP production in Schwann cells. In sum, our findings demonstrate that PMP2 is a direct downstream mediator of NRG1t3 and that the modulation of PMP2 downstream NRG1t3 activation has distinct effects on Schwann cell function during developmental myelination and remyelination.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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