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1.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 6499, 2023 10 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37838794

ABSTRACT

Previous work has shown that motor skill learning stimulates and requires generation of myelinating oligodendrocytes (OLs) from their precursor cells (OLPs) in the brains of adult mice. In the present study we ask whether OL production is also required for non-motor learning and cognition, using T-maze and radial-arm-maze tasks that tax spatial working memory. We find that maze training stimulates OLP proliferation and OL production in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), anterior corpus callosum (genu), dorsal thalamus and hippocampal formation of adult male mice; myelin sheath formation is also stimulated in the genu. Genetic blockade of OL differentiation and neo-myelination in Myrf conditional-knockout mice strongly impairs training-induced improvements in maze performance. We find a strong positive correlation between the performance of individual wild type mice and the scale of OLP proliferation and OL generation during training, but not with the number or intensity of c-Fos+ neurons in their mPFC, underscoring the important role played by OL lineage cells in cognitive processing.


Subject(s)
Cognitive Training , Memory, Short-Term , Humans , Mice , Animals , Male , Oligodendroglia , Mice, Knockout , Cognition , Myelin Sheath/physiology
2.
Development ; 147(13)2020 07 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32661019

ABSTRACT

New neurons are generated in the postnatal rodent hypothalamus, with a subset of tanycytes in the third ventricular (3V) wall serving as neural stem/progenitor cells. However, the precise stem cell niche organization, the intermediate steps and the endogenous regulators of postnatal hypothalamic neurogenesis remain elusive. Quantitative lineage-tracing in vivo revealed that conditional deletion of fibroblast growth factor 10 (Fgf10) from Fgf10-expressing ß-tanycytes at postnatal days (P)4-5 results in the generation of significantly more parenchymal cells by P28, composed mostly of ventromedial and dorsomedial neurons and some glial cells, which persist into adulthood. A closer scrutiny in vivo and ex vivo revealed that the 3V wall is not static and is amenable to cell movements. Furthermore, normally ß-tanycytes give rise to parenchymal cells via an intermediate population of α-tanycytes with transient amplifying cell characteristics. Loss of Fgf10 temporarily attenuates the amplification of ß-tanycytes but also appears to delay the exit of their α-tanycyte descendants from the germinal 3V wall. Our findings suggest that transience of cells through the α-tanycyte domain is a key feature, and Fgf10 is a negative regulator of postnatal hypothalamic neurogenesis.


Subject(s)
Fibroblast Growth Factor 10/metabolism , Hypothalamus/cytology , Hypothalamus/metabolism , Neurogenesis/physiology , Animals , Cell Movement/physiology , Ependymoglial Cells/cytology , Ependymoglial Cells/metabolism , Female , Fibroblast Growth Factor 10/genetics , Male , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Neural Stem Cells/cytology , Neural Stem Cells/metabolism , Neurogenesis/genetics , Neuroglia/cytology , Neuroglia/metabolism , Neurons/cytology , Neurons/metabolism
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