Published October 14, 2019 | Version v1
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Myelin sheath structure and regeneration in peripheral nerve injury repair

Description

Observing the structure and regeneration of the myelin sheath in peripheral nerves following injury and during repair would help in understanding the pathogenesis and treatment of neurological diseases caused by an abnormal myelin sheath. In the present study, transmission electron microscopy, immunofluorescence staining, and transcriptome analyses were used to investigate the structure and regeneration of the myelin sheath after end-to-end anastomosis, autologous nerve transplantation, and nerve tube transplantation in a rat model of sciatic nerve injury, with normal optic nerve, oculomotor nerve, sciatic nerve, and Schwann cells used as controls. The results suggested that the double-bilayer was the structural unit that constituted the myelin sheath. The major feature during regeneration was the compaction of the myelin sheath, wherein the distance between the 2 layers of cell membrane in the double-bilayer became shorter and the adjacent double-bilayers tightly closed together and formed the major dense line. The expression level of myelin basic protein was positively correlated with the formation of the major dense line, and the compacted myelin sheath could not be formed without the anchoring of the lipophilin particles to the myelin sheath.

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liu-et-al-2019-myelin-sheath-structure-and-regeneration-in-peripheral-nerve-injury-repair.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.1910292116
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:9706

Funding

Chongqing Municipal Finance
Special Fund Project
China Scholarship Council
201806995007

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division, Pritzker School of Medicine
Department(s)
Cancer Biology, Surgery