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Jmy regulates oligodendrocyte differentiation via modulation of actin cytoskeleton dynamics
Author(s) -
Azevedo Maria M.,
Domingues Helena S.,
Cordelières Fabrice P.,
Sampaio Paula,
Seixas Ana I.,
Relvas João B.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
glia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.954
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1098-1136
pISSN - 0894-1491
DOI - 10.1002/glia.23342
Subject(s) - oligodendrocyte , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , myelin , cytoskeleton , actin , actin cytoskeleton , neuroscience , actin remodeling of neurons , cell , central nervous system , genetics
During central nervous system development, oligodendrocytes form structurally and functionally distinct actin‐rich protrusions that contact and wrap around axons to assemble myelin sheaths. Establishment of axonal contact is a limiting step in myelination that relies on the oligodendrocyte's ability to locally coordinate cytoskeletal rearrangements with myelin production, under the control of a transcriptional differentiation program. The molecules that provide fine‐tuning of actin dynamics during oligodendrocyte differentiation and axon ensheathment remain largely unidentified. We performed transcriptomics analysis of soma and protrusion fractions from rat brain oligodendrocyte progenitors and found a subcellular enrichment of mRNAs in newly‐formed protrusions. Approximately 30% of protrusion‐enriched transcripts encode proteins related to cytoskeleton dynamics, including the junction mediating and regulatory protein Jmy, a multifunctional regulator of actin polymerization. Here, we show that expression of Jmy is upregulated during myelination and is required for the assembly of actin filaments and protrusion formation during oligodendrocyte differentiation. Quantitative morphodynamics analysis of live oligodendrocytes showed that differentiation is driven by a stereotypical actin network‐dependent “cellular shaping” program. Disruption of actin dynamics via knockdown of Jmy leads to a program fail resulting in oligodendrocytes that do not acquire an arborized morphology and are less efficient in contacting neurites and forming myelin wraps in co‐cultures with neurons. Our findings provide new mechanistic insight into the relationship between cell shape dynamics and differentiation in development.