AI Article Synopsis

  • Opalin is a unique myelin protein found only in mammals, and researchers studied its role by disrupting the Opalin gene in mice to see how it affects myelination and behavior.
  • The Opalin-knockout mice appeared normal with no major differences in myelin composition, oligodendrocyte markers, or myelinated axon structures compared to normal mice.
  • While these mutant mice displayed similar sensory and motor behaviors as normal mice, they did show subtle differences in exploratory activity when introduced to new environments, indicating Opalin may fine-tune behavior rather than being essential for myelination.

Article Abstract

Opalin, a central nervous system-specific myelin protein phylogenetically unique to mammals, has been suggested to play a role in mammalian-specific myelin. To elucidate the role of Opalin in mammalian myelin, we disrupted the Opalin gene in mice and analyzed the impacts on myelination and behavior. Opalin-knockout (Opalin-/-) mice were born at a Mendelian ratio and had a normal body shape and weight. Interestingly, Opalin-/- mice had no obvious abnormalities in major myelin protein compositions, expression of oligodendrocyte lineage markers, or domain organization of myelinated axons compared with WT mice (Opalin+/+) mice. Electron microscopic observation of the optic nerves did not reveal obvious differences between Opalin+/+ and Opalin-/- mice in terms of fine structures of paranodal loops, transverse bands, and multi-lamellae of myelinated axons. Moreover, sensory reflex, circadian rhythm, and locomotor activity in the home cage, as well as depression-like behavior, in the Opalin-/- mice were indistinguishable from the Opalin+/+ mice. Nevertheless, a subtle but significant impact on exploratory activity became apparent in Opalin-/- mice exposed to a novel environment. These results suggest that Opalin is not critical for central nervous system myelination or basic sensory and motor activities under conventional breeding conditions, although it might be required for fine-tuning of exploratory behavior.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5113975PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0166732PLOS

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