Schwann cells contribute to demyelinating diabetic neuropathy and nerve terminal structures in white adipose tissue

雪旺细胞参与糖尿病脱髓鞘性神经病变和白色脂肪组织中的神经末梢结构形成

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作者:Jake W Willows ,Gilian Gunsch ,Emma Paradie ,Magdalena Blaszkiewicz ,Jeffrey R Tonniges ,Maria F Pino ,Steven R Smith ,Lauren M Sparks ,Kristy L Townsend

Abstract

Peripheral neuropathy, which can include axonal degeneration and/or demyelination, impacts adipose tissues with obesity, diabetes, and aging. However, the presence of demyelinating neuropathy had not yet been explored in adipose. Both demyelinating neuropathies and axonopathies implicate Schwann cells (SCs), a glial support cell that myelinates axons and contributes to nerve regeneration after injury. We performed a comprehensive assessment of SCs and myelination patterns of subcutaneous white adipose tissue (scWAT) nerves, and changes across altered energy balance states. We found that mouse scWAT contains both myelinated and unmyelinated nerves and is populated by SCs, including SCs that were associated with synaptic vesicle-containing nerve terminals. BTBR ob/ob mice, a model of diabetic peripheral neuropathy, exhibited small fiber demyelinating neuropathy and alterations in SC marker gene expression in adipose that were similar to obese human adipose. These data indicate that adipose SCs regulate the plasticity of tissue nerves and become dysregulated in diabetes.

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