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Oligodendrocyte precursor cells prune axons in the mouse neocortex

Authors :
JoAnn Buchanan
Leila Elabbady
Forrest Collman
Nikolas L. Jorstad
Trygve E. Bakken
Carolyn Ott
Jenna Glatzer
Adam A. Bleckert
Agnes L. Bodor
Derrick Brittan
Daniel J. Bumbarger
Gayathri Mahalingam
Sharmishtaa Seshamani
Casey Schneider-Mizell
Marc M. Takeno
Russel Torres
Wenjing Yin
Rebecca D. Hodge
Manuel Castro
Sven Dorkenwald
Dodam Ih
Chris S. Jordan
Nico Kemnitz
Kisuk Lee
Ran Lu
Thomas Macrina
Shang Mu
Sergiy Popovych
William M. Silversmith
Ignacio Tartavull
Nicholas L. Turner
Alyssa M. Wilson
William Wong
Jingpeng Wu
Aleksandar Zlateski
Jonathan Zung
Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz
Ed S. Lein
H. Sebastian Seung
Dwight E. Bergles
R. Clay Reid
Nuno Maçarico da Costa
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Neurons in the developing brain undergo extensive structural refinement as nascent circuits adopt their mature form1. This transformation is facilitated by the engulfment and degradation of excess axonal branches and inappropriate synapses by surrounding glial cells, including microglia and astrocytes2,3. However, the small size of phagocytic organelles and the complex, highly ramified morphology of glia has made it difficult to determine the contribution of these and other glial cell types to this process. Here, we used large scale, serial electron microscopy (ssEM) with computational volume segmentation to reconstruct the complete 3D morphologies of distinct glial types in the mouse visual cortex. Unexpectedly, we discovered that the fine processes of oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), a population of abundant, highly dynamic glial progenitors4, frequently surrounded terminal axon branches and included numerous phagolysosomes (PLs) containing fragments of axons and presynaptic terminals. Single- nucleus RNA sequencing indicated that cortical OPCs express key phagocytic genes, as well as neuronal transcripts, consistent with active axonal engulfment. PLs were ten times more abundant in OPCs than in microglia in P36 mice, and declined with age and lineage progression, suggesting that OPCs contribute very substantially to refinement of neuronal circuits during later phases of cortical development.

Subjects

Subjects :
nervous system

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cb54ddc8b7fdcf38d4f76fe738b7196b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.05.29.446047