AI Article Synopsis

  • Mature myelin, previously thought to be metabolically inert, actually undergoes rapid lipid turnover, with the protein quaking (Qki) playing a crucial role in maintaining myelin lipid levels.
  • Depletion of Qki in oligodendrocytes led to quick demyelination and neurological deficits in mice, while a high-fat diet helped alleviate these symptoms.
  • The study links Qki to the regulation of lipid metabolism genes through its role as a coactivator of the PPARβ-RXRα complex, shedding light on lipid metabolism's importance in maintaining healthy myelin and its implications for demyelinating diseases like multiple sclerosis.

Article Abstract

Lipid-rich myelin forms electrically insulating, axon-wrapping multilayers that are essential for neural function, and mature myelin is traditionally considered metabolically inert. Surprisingly, we discovered that mature myelin lipids undergo rapid turnover, and quaking (Qki) is a major regulator of myelin lipid homeostasis. Oligodendrocyte-specific Qki depletion, without affecting oligodendrocyte survival, resulted in rapid demyelination, within 1 week, and gradually neurological deficits in adult mice. Myelin lipids, especially the monounsaturated fatty acids and very-long-chain fatty acids, were dramatically reduced by Qki depletion, whereas the major myelin proteins remained intact, and the demyelinating phenotypes of Qki-depleted mice were alleviated by a high-fat diet. Mechanistically, Qki serves as a coactivator of the PPARβ-RXRα complex, which controls the transcription of lipid-metabolism genes, particularly those involved in fatty acid desaturation and elongation. Treatment of Qki-depleted mice with PPARβ/RXR agonists significantly alleviated neurological disability and extended survival durations. Furthermore, a subset of lesions from patients with primary progressive multiple sclerosis were characterized by preferential reductions in myelin lipid contents, activities of various lipid metabolism pathways, and expression level of QKI-5 in human oligodendrocytes. Together, our results demonstrate that continuous lipid synthesis is indispensable for mature myelin maintenance and highlight an underappreciated role of lipid metabolism in demyelinating diseases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7191000PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI131800DOI Listing

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