1. Quantitative analysis of lipid debris accumulation caused by cuprizone induced myelin degradation in different CNS areas.
- Author
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Ozsvár A, Szipőcs R, Ozsvár Z, Baka J, Barzó P, Tamás G, and Molnár G
- Subjects
- Aged, Animals, Axons drug effects, Axons metabolism, Axons pathology, Brain drug effects, Brain metabolism, Brain surgery, Brain Neoplasms pathology, Brain Neoplasms surgery, Demyelinating Diseases metabolism, Female, Humans, Lipid Droplets drug effects, Lipid Droplets pathology, Male, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Myelin Sheath drug effects, Myelin Sheath metabolism, Tissue Culture Techniques, Brain pathology, Cuprizone toxicity, Demyelinating Diseases pathology, Lipid Metabolism, Myelin Sheath pathology
- Abstract
Degradation of myelin sheath is thought to be the cause of neurodegenerative diseases, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), but definitive agreement on the mechanism of how myelin is lost is currently lacking. Autoimmune initiation of MS has been recently questioned by proposing that the immune response is a consequence of oligodendrocyte degeneration. To study the process of myelin breakdown, we induced demyelination with cuprizone and applied coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) microscopy, a non-destructive label-free method to image lipid structures in living tissue. We confirmed earlier results showing a brain region dependent myelin destructive effect of cuprizone. In addition, high resolution in situ CARS imaging revealed myelin debris forming lipid droplets alongwith myelinated axon fibers. Quantification of lipid debris with custom-made software for segmentation and three dimensional reconstruction revealed brain region dependent accumulation of lipid drops inversely correlated with the thickness of myelin sheaths. Finally, we confirmed that in situ CARS imaging is applicable to living human brain tissue in brain slices derived from a patient. Thus, CARS microscopy is potent tool for quantitative monitoring of myelin degradation in unprecedented spatiotemporal resolution during oligodendrocyte damage. We think that the accumulation of lipid drops around degrading myelin might be instrumental in triggering subsequent inflammatory processes., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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