Liver X receptors alpha and beta promote myelination and remyelination in the cerebellum.

Authors
  • GORGIEVSKI Victor
  • MEFFRE Delphine
  • SHACKLEFORD Ghjuvan ghjacumu
  • HICHOR Mehdi
  • TZAVARA Eleni t.
  • TROUSSON Amalia
  • GHOUMARI Abdel m.
  • DEBOUX Cyrille
  • NAIT OUMESMAR Brahim
  • LIERE Philippe
  • SCHUMACHER Michael
  • BAULIEU Etienne emile
  • CHARBONNIER Frederic
  • GRENIER Julien
  • MASSAAD Charbel
Publication date
2015
Publication type
Journal Article
Summary The identification of new pathways governing myelination provides innovative avenues for remyelination. Liver X receptors (LXRs) a and beta are nuclear receptors activated by oxysterols that originated from the oxidation of cholesterol. They are crucial for cholesterol homeostasis, a major lipid constituent of myelin sheaths that are formed by oligodendrocytes. However, the role of LXRs in myelin generation and maintenance is poorly understood. Here, we show that LXRs are involved in myelination and remyelination processes. LXRs and their ligands are present in oligodendrocytes. We found that mice invalidated for LXRs exhibit altered motor coordination and spatial learning, thinner myelin sheaths, and reduced myelin gene expression. Conversely, activation of LXRs by either 25-hydroxycholesterol or synthetic TO901317 stimulates myelin gene expression at the promoter, mRNA, and protein levels, directly implicating LXR alpha/beta in the transcriptional control of myelin gene expression. Interestingly, activation of LXRs also promotes oligodendroglial cell maturation and remyelination after lysolecithin-induced demyelination of organotypic cerebellar slice cultures. Together, our findings represent a conceptual advance in the transcriptional control of myelin gene expression and strongly support a new role of LXRs as positive modulators in central (re) myelination processes.
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Topics of the publication
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