Systematic approaches to central nervous system myelin

2012-09 | journal article; research paper

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​Systematic approaches to central nervous system myelin​
de Monasterio-Schrader, P.; Jahn, O. ; Tenzer, S.; Wichert, S. P.; Patzig, J. & Werner, H. B.​ (2012) 
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences69(17) pp. 2879​-2894​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00018-012-0958-9 

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Authors
de Monasterio-Schrader, Patricia; Jahn, Olaf ; Tenzer, Stefan; Wichert, Sven P.; Patzig, Julia; Werner, Hauke B.
Abstract
Rapid signal propagation along vertebrate axons is facilitated by their insulation with myelin, a plasma membrane specialization of glial cells. The recent application of 'omics' approaches to the myelinating cells of the central nervous system, oligodendrocytes, revealed their mRNA signatures, enhanced our understanding of how myelination is regulated, and established that the protein composition of myelin is much more complex than previously thought. This review provides a meta-analysis of the > 1,200 proteins thus far identified by mass spectrometry in biochemically purified central nervous system myelin. Contaminating proteins are surprisingly infrequent according to bioinformatic prediction of subcellular localization and comparison with the transcriptional profile of oligodendrocytes. The integration of datasets also allowed the subcategorization of the myelin proteome into functional groups comprising genes that are coregulated during oligodendroglial differentiation. An unexpectedly large number of myelin-related genes cause-when mutated in humans-hereditary diseases affecting the physiology of the white matter. Systematic approaches to oligodendrocytes and myelin thus provide valuable resources for the molecular dissection of developmental myelination, glia-axonal interactions, leukodystrophies, and demyelinating diseases.
Issue Date
September-2012
Journal
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 
ISSN
1420-682X
eISSN
1420-9071
Language
English

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