A role of oligodendrocytes in information processing

Sharlen Moore(Johns Hopkins University), Martin Meschkat(Nanoscale Microscopy and Molecular Physiology of the Brain Cluster of Excellence 171 — DFG Research Center 103), Torben Ruhwedel(Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine), Andrea Trevisiol(Sunnybrook Health Science Centre), Iva D. Tzvetanova(European University Cyprus), Arne Battefeld(Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience), Kathrin Kusch(Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine), Maarten H. P. Kole(Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience), Nicola Strenzke(Universitätsmedizin Göttingen), Wiebke Möbius(Nanoscale Microscopy and Molecular Physiology of the Brain Cluster of Excellence 171 — DFG Research Center 103), Livia de Hoz(Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine), Klaus‐Armin Nave(Nanoscale Microscopy and Molecular Physiology of the Brain Cluster of Excellence 171 — DFG Research Center 103)
Nature Communications
October 30, 2020
Cited by 133Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Myelinating oligodendrocytes enable fast propagation of action potentials along the ensheathed axons. In addition, oligodendrocytes play diverse non-canonical roles including axonal metabolic support and activity-dependent myelination. An open question remains whether myelination also contributes to information processing in addition to speeding up conduction velocity. Here, we analyze the role of myelin in auditory information processing using paradigms that are also good predictors of speech understanding in humans. We compare mice with different degrees of dysmyelination using acute multiunit recordings in the auditory cortex, in combination with behavioral readouts. We find complex alterations of neuronal responses that reflect fatigue and temporal acuity deficits. We observe partially discriminable but similar deficits in well myelinated mice in which glial cells cannot fully support axons metabolically. We suggest a model in which myelination contributes to sustained stimulus perception in temporally complex paradigms, with a role of metabolically active oligodendrocytes in cortical information processing.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis