Lack of Collagen XV Impairs Peripheral Nerve Maturation and, When Combined with Laminin-41 1 Deficiency, Leads to Basement Membrane Abnormalities and Sensorimotor Dysfunction.

Autor: Rasi, Karolina, Hurskainen, Merja, Kallio, Mika, Stavén, Saara, Sormunen, Raija, Heape, Anthony M., Avila, Robin L., Kirschner, Daniel, Muona, Anu, Tolonen, Uolevi, Tanila, Heikki, Huhtala, Pirkko, Soininen, Raija, Pihiajaniemi, Taina
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Neuroscience; 10/27/2010, Vol. 30 Issue 43, p14490-14501, 12p
Abstrakt: Although the Schwann cell basement membrane (BM) is required for normal Schwann cell terminal differentiation, the role of BM- associated collagens in peripheral nerve maturation is poorly understood. Collagen XV is a BM zone component strongly expressed in peripheral nerves, and we show that its absence in mice leads to loosely packed axons in C-fibers and polyaxonal myelination. The simultaneous lack of collagen XV and another peripheral nerve component affecting myelination, laminin a4, leads to severely impaired radial sorting and myelination, and the maturation of the nerve is permanently compromised, contrasting with the slow repair observed in Lama4 single knock-out mice. Moreover, the Coll5al Lama4 double knock-out (DKO) mice initially lack C-fibers and, even over 1 year of age have only a few, abnormal C-fibers. The Lama4 knock-out results in motor and tactile sensory impairment, which is exacerbated by a simultaneous CollSal knock-out, whereas sensitivity to heat-induced pain is increased in the DKO mice. Lack of collagen XV results in slower sensory nerve conduction, whereas the Lama4 and DKO mice exhibit increased sensory nerve action potentials and decreased compound muscle action potentials; x-ray diffraction revealed less mature myelin in the sciatic nerves of the latter than in controls. Ultrastructural analyses revealed changes in the Schwann cell BM in all three mutants, ranging from severe (DKO) to nearly normal (CollSal "). Collagen XV thus contributes to peripheral nerve maturation and C-fiber formation, and its simultaneous deletion from neural BM zones with laminin a4 leads to a DKO phenotype distinct from those of both single knock-outs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index