Insulin-like growth factor-I ameliorates demyelination induced by tumor necrosis factor-alpha in transgenic mice |
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Authors: | Ye Ping Kollias George D'Ercole A Joseph |
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Affiliation: | Division of Endocrinology, Department of Pediatrics, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7039, USA. ping_ye@med.unc.edu |
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Abstract: | Our groups have reported that tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) causes myelin damage and apoptosis of oligodendrocytes and their precursors in vitro and in vivo. We also have reported that insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) can protect cultured oligodendrocytes and their precursors from TNF-alpha-induced damage. In this study, we investigated whether IGF-I can protect oligodendrocytes and myelination from TNF-alpha-induced damage in vivo by cross-breeding TNF-alpha transgenic (Tg) mice with IGF-I Tg mice that overexpress IGF-I exclusively in brain. At 8 weeks of age, compared with those of wild-type (WT) mice, the brain weights of TNF-alpha Tg mice were decreased by approximately 20%, and those of IGF-I Tg mice were increased by approximately 20%. The brain weights of mice that carry both TNF-alpha and IGF-I transgenes (TNF-alpha/IGF-I Tg mice) did not differ from those of WT mice. As judged by histochemical staining and immunostaining, myelin content in the cerebellum of TNF-alpha/IGF-I Tg mice was similar to that in WT mice and much more than that in TNF-alpha Tg mice. Consistently, Western immunoblot analysis showed that myelin basic protein (MBP) abundance in the cerebellum of TNF-alpha/IGF-I Tg mice was double that in TNF-alpha Tg mice. In comparison with WT mice, the number of oligodendrocytes was decreased by approximately 36% in TNF-alpha Tg mice, whereas it was increased in IGF-I Tg mice by approximately 40%. Oligodendrocyte number in TNF-alpha/IGF-I Tg mice was almost twice that in TNF-alpha Tg mice. Furthermore, IGF-I overexpression significantly reduced TNF-alpha-induced increases in apoptotic cell number, active caspase-3 abundance, and degradaion of MBP. Our results indicate that IGF-I is capable of protecting myelin and oligodendrocytes from TNF-alpha-induced damage in vivo. |
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Keywords: | IGF‐I TNF‐α brain myelination oligodendrocytes development transgenic mice |
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