Expanding the function of oligodendrocytes to brain energy metabolism
Klaus‐Armin Nave, Ebrahim Asadollahi, Andrew Octavian Sasmita
Abstract
Oligodendrocytes are best known for wrapping myelin, a unique specialization that enables energy-efficient and fast axonal impulse propagation in white matter tracts and fibers of the cortical circuitry. However, myelinating oligodendrocytes have additional metabolic functions that are only gradually understood, including the regulated release of pyruvate/lactate and extracellular vesicles, both of which are in support of the axonal energy balance. The axon-supportive functions of glial cells are older than myelin in nervous system evolution and implicate oligodendrocyte dysfunction and loss of myelin integrity as a risk factor for progressive neurodegeneration in brain diseases.
Topics & Concepts
OligodendrocyteNeuroscienceMyelinWhite matterAxonNeurodegenerationBiologyCentral nervous systemExtracellularCell biologyMedicinePathologyMagnetic resonance imagingRadiologyDiseaseNeurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanismsNeuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration MechanismsMicroRNA in disease regulation