Publication | Open Access
Deletion of Mitochondrial Anchoring Protects Dysmyelinating Shiverer: Implications for Progressive MS
36
Citations
31
References
2015
Year
Neurological DisorderImmunologyNeurological ProgressSnph DeletionNeurologyNeuropathologyNeuroimmunologyAutoimmune DiseaseDisease Multiple SclerosisMitochondrial AnchoringNeurodegenerationNeurodegenerative DiseasesAmyotrophic Lateral SclerosisNeuroanatomyNeuroscienceProgressive MsCentral Nervous SystemMultiple SclerosisMedicine
The demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis (MS) has an early inflammatory phase followed by an incurable progressive phase with subdued inflammation and poorly understood neurodegenerative mechanism. In this study, we identified various parallelisms between progressive MS and the dysmyelinating mouse model Shiverer and then genetically deleted a major neuron-specific mitochondrial anchoring protein Syntaphilin (SNPH) from the mouse. Prevailing evidence suggests that deletion of SNPH is harmful in demyelination. Surprisingly, SNPH deletion produces striking benefits in the Shiverer by prolonging survival, reducing cerebellar damage, suppressing oxidative stress, and improving mitochondrial health. In contrast, SNPH deletion does not benefit clinical symptoms in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a model for early-phase MS. We propose that deleting mitochondrial anchoring is a novel, specific treatment for progressive MS.
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