In the developing central nervous system, pre-myelinating oligodendrocytes contact and sample candidate nerve axons by extending and retracting process extensions. Some contacts stabilize and mature, leading to the initiation of axon wrapping, myelin sheath formation, and sheath elongation by oligodendrocytes. Although axonal signals influence the overall process of myelination, which precise steps and oligodendrocyte cell behaviors require signaling from axons is incompletely understood. In this study, we investigated whether cell behaviors during the early events of myelination involve input from axons or are mediated by an oligodendrocyte-autonomous myelination program. To address this, we utilized in vivo time-lapse imaging in embryonic and larval zebrafish during the initial hours and days of axon wrapping and myelination. Transgenic reporter lines marked individual axon subtypes or oligodendrocyte membranes. In the larval zebrafish spinal cord, individual axon subtypes supported distinct nascent sheath growth rates and pruning frequencies. Oligodendrocytes ensheathed individual axon subtypes at different rates during a two-day period after initial axon wrapping. When the ratio of oligodendrocytes to target axons was increased by ablating spinal projection axons, local spinal neuron axons supported a constant ensheathment rate despite the increased ratio of oligodendrocytes to target axons. We conclude that properties of individual axon subtypes instruct oligodendrocyte behaviors during initial stages of myelination by differentially controlling nascent sheath growth and stabilization. 
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                            Evolutionary Origins of the Oligodendrocyte Cell Type and Adaptive Myelination
                        
                    
    
            Oligodendrocytes are multifunctional central nervous system (CNS) glia that are essential for neural function in gnathostomes. The evolutionary origins and specializations of the oligodendrocyte cell type are among the many remaining mysteries in glial biology and neuroscience. The role of oligodendrocytes as CNS myelinating glia is well established, but recent studies demonstrate that oligodendrocytes also participate in several myelin-independent aspects of CNS development, function, and maintenance. Furthermore, many recent studies have collectively advanced our understanding of myelin plasticity, and it is now clear that experience-dependent adaptations to myelination are an additional form of neural plasticity. These observations beg the questions of when and for which functions the ancestral oligodendrocyte cell type emerged, when primitive oligodendrocytes evolved new functionalities, and the genetic changes responsible for these evolutionary innovations. Here, I review recent findings and propose working models addressing the origins and evolution of the oligodendrocyte cell type and adaptive myelination. The core gene regulatory network (GRN) specifying the oligodendrocyte cell type is also reviewed as a means to probe the existence of oligodendrocytes in basal vertebrates and chordate invertebrates. 
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                            - Award ID(s):
- 1845603
- PAR ID:
- 10338031
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Frontiers in Neuroscience
- Volume:
- 15
- ISSN:
- 1662-453X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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