4.0 Article

The osmotic demyelination syndrome: the resilience of thalamic neurons is verified with transmission electron microscopy

Journal

ULTRASTRUCTURAL PATHOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 4-6, Pages 450-480

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/01913123.2020.1853865

Keywords

Murine; thalamus; neuron; cell body; nucleus; nucleolus; ultrastructure; osmotic demyelination syndrome; cell injury; restoration

Funding

  1. Belgian Foundation Recherche Alzheimer/Stichting Alzheimer Onderzoek Fund Aline [14001]
  2. Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique Medicale [T.0023.15]

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The murine model of osmotic demyelinating syndrome (ODS) was used to study changes in extrapontine zones of the CNS before, during and after ODS induction, without immune response. The study revealed neuron Wallerian-type deteriorations, transient stoppage of transcriptional activities, and reactivated nucleus transcriptions in nerve cell bodies after ODS recovery.
The development of a murine model of osmotic demyelinating syndrome (ODS) allowed to study changes incurred in extrapontine zones of the CNS and featured neuron and glial cell changes in the relay thalamic ventral posterolateral (VPL) and ventral posteromedial (VPM) nuclei before, during and after ODS induction, and characterized without immune response. There, the neuron Wallerian-type deteriorations were verified with fine structure modifications of the neuron cell body, including some nucleus topology and its nucleolus changes. Morphologic analyses showed a transient stoppage of transcriptional activities while myelinated axons in the surrounding neuropil incurred diverse damages, previously reported. Even though the regional thalamus myelin deterioration was clearly recognized with light microscopy 48 h after osmotic recovery of ODS, ultrastructure analyses demonstrated that, at that time, the same damaged parenchyma regions contained nerve cell bodies that have already reactivated nucleus transcriptions and neuroplasm translations because peculiar accumulations of fibro-granular materials, similar to those detected in restored ODS astrocytes, were revealed in these restructuring nerve cell bodies. Their aspects suggested to be accumulations of ribonucleoproteins. The findings suggested that progressive neural function's recovery in the murine model could imitate some aspects of human ODS recovery cases.

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