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1.
BMJ Neurol Open ; 6(1): e000560, 2024.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38389586

One of the most promising approaches to delay, prevent or reverse disability progression in multiple sclerosis (MS) is to enhance endogenous remyelination and limit axonal degeneration. In clinical trials of remyelinating drugs, there is a need for reliable, sensitive and clinically relevant outcome measures. The visual pathway, which is frequently affected by MS, provides a unique model system to evaluate remyelination of acute and chronic MS lesions in vivo and non-invasively. In this review, we discuss the different measures that have been used and scrutinise visual outcome measure selection in current and future remyelination trials.

2.
Elife ; 92020 05 28.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32452761

Contact repulsion of growing axons is an essential mechanism for spinal nerve patterning. In birds and mammals the embryonic somites generate a linear series of impenetrable barriers, forcing axon growth cones to traverse one half of each somite as they extend towards their body targets. This study shows that protein disulphide isomerase provides a key component of these barriers, mediating contact repulsion at the cell surface in chick half-somites. Repulsion is reduced both in vivo and in vitro by a range of methods that inhibit enzyme activity. The activity is critical in initiating a nitric oxide/S-nitrosylation-dependent signal transduction pathway that regulates the growth cone cytoskeleton. Rat forebrain grey matter extracts contain a similar activity, and the enzyme is expressed at the surface of cultured human astrocytic cells and rat cortical astrocytes. We suggest this system is co-opted in the brain to counteract and regulate aberrant nerve terminal growth.


Axon Guidance/physiology , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Nitric Oxide/metabolism , Protein Disulfide-Isomerases/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Animals , Astrocytes/physiology , Cell Line , Chick Embryo , Chickens , Developmental Biology , Gene Knockdown Techniques , Growth Cones/physiology , Humans , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Neurosciences , Procollagen-Proline Dioxygenase/genetics , Procollagen-Proline Dioxygenase/metabolism , Protein Disulfide-Isomerases/genetics , Rats , Somites/embryology , Somites/physiology , Spinal Nerves/embryology , Spinal Nerves/physiology
3.
Physiol Rep ; 6(4)2018 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29479840

The genetics underlying variation in health-related musculoskeletal phenotypes can be investigated in a mouse model. Quantitative trait loci (QTLs) affecting musculoskeletal traits in the LG/J and SM/J strain lineage remain to be refined and corroborated. The aim of this study was to map muscle and bone traits in males (n = 506) of the 50th filial generation of advanced intercross lines (LG/SM AIL) derived from the two strains. Genetic contribution to variation in all musculoskeletal traits was confirmed; the SNP heritability of muscle mass ranged between 0.46 and 0.56; and the SNP heritability of tibia length was 0.40. We used two analytical software, GEMMA and QTLRel, to map the underlying QTLs. GEMMA required substantially less computation and recovered all the QTLs identified by QTLRel. Seven significant QTLs were identified for muscle weight (Chr 1, 7, 11, 12, 13, 15, and 16), and two for tibia length, (Chr 1 and 13). Each QTL explained 4-5% of phenotypic variation. One muscle and both bone loci replicated previous findings; the remaining six were novel. Positional candidates for the replicated QTLs were prioritized based on in silico analyses and gene expression in muscle tissue. In summary, we replicated existing QTLs and identified novel QTLs affecting muscle weight, and replicated bone length QTLs in LG/SM AIL males. Heritability estimates substantially exceed the cumulative effect of the QTLs, hence a richer genetic architecture contributing to muscle and bone variability could be uncovered with a larger sample size.


Hybridization, Genetic , Muscle, Skeletal/physiology , Quantitative Trait Loci , Animals , Female , Inbreeding , Male , Mice , Muscle, Skeletal/growth & development , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Quantitative Trait, Heritable
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