Reversible inhibition of oligodendrocyte progenitor differentiation by a monoclonal antibody against surface galactolipids.

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RESUMO

We have hypothesized that oligodendrocyte (OL) surface glycolipids, specifically galactocerebroside and sulfatide, play a role in the regulation of OL development by acting as sensors/transmitters of environment information. In support of this hypothesis we report here a reversible inhibition of OL progenitor cell differentiation by a monoclonal antibody [Ranscht mAb (R-mAb); Ranscht, B., Clapshaw, P. A. & Seifert, W. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 79, 2709-2713] that reacts with these glycolipids. When isolated OL progenitors or mixed primary cultures are grown in the presence of the antibody, myelinogenic development is blocked in a dose-dependent manner at concentrations as low as 2 micrograms of IgG per ml. The inhibited cells express the OL progenitor markers O4 and vimentin but are negative for galactosylcerebroside, sulfatide, 2',3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphohydrolase, myelin basic protein, and myelin basic protein RNA expression. In contrast, the levels of total cellular protein and the expression of astrocytic glial fibrillary acidic protein in mixed cultures are not affected. Antibody-blocked cells have a distinctive morphology in which long, sparsely branched processes emanate from round cell bodies. Upon removing the perturbing antibody, the cells rapidly resume differentiation. Reverted mixed primary cultures, in which OL progenitors of several sequential developmental stages are present at the time of plating, differentiate more rapidly than control cultures, suggesting that the antibody-induced block results in a synchronization of developmental progression along the OL lineage by accumulating cells at the inhibition point. However, the normal temporal sequence of marker expression is maintained. Control studies with several other antibodies recognizing OL cell surface antigens, including HNK-1, neural cellular adhesion molecule (N-CAM), 1A9, anticholesterol, and O1, did not inhibit development. Since the inhibition occurs in highly enriched populations of OL progenitors, the inhibition does not involve cell-cell interactions between OLs and other cell types but concerns interactions of OLs with themselves, soluble factors, or OL extracellular matrix molecules and adhesion factors that provide essential environmental signals required for normal myelinogenic development.

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