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1 ocyte glycoprotein (MOG that is a protein in myelin sheath).
2 in (MOG), the membrane proteins found in the myelin sheath.
3 d is critical for the genesis of the central myelin sheath.
4 t of axons and subsequent elaboration of the myelin sheath.
5 facilitated by the oligodendrocyte-produced myelin sheath.
6 glial cell size to generate a multilamellar myelin sheath.
7 NF155), and apposes the inner mesaxon of the myelin sheath.
8 etabolite diffusion across the layers of the myelin sheath.
9 rrents can be short-circuited underneath the myelin sheath.
10 ents for the formation and maturation of the myelin sheath.
11 RNA and translocates from the nucleus to the myelin sheath.
12 adherin alone, but without any defect to the myelin sheath.
13 monolayers important to the adhesion of the myelin sheath.
14 between the paranodal terminal loops of the myelin sheath.
15 role in the formation and maintenance of the myelin sheath.
16 ar sheets of insulating plasma membrane--the myelin sheath.
17 free-radical-induced oxidative damage to the myelin sheath.
18 sion of the multiple, spiraling wraps of the myelin sheath.
19 odel membrane system that closely mimics the myelin sheath.
20 tween the axon and the terminal loops of the myelin sheath.
21 ts by TPPP is critical for elongation of the myelin sheath.
22 (MS) is caused by immune-mediated damage of myelin sheath.
23 hinery required for the proper growth of the myelin sheath.
24 lowed by local translation at the developing myelin sheath.
25 that could result in radial fractures of the myelin sheath.
26 tion and maintenance of the peripheral nerve myelin sheath.
27 ructural and functional role in the neuronal myelin sheath.
28 the peripheral nervous system that form the myelin sheath.
29 etween adjacent cytoplasmic membranes of the myelin sheath.
30 he initiation and properties of Schwann cell myelin sheaths.
31 n of dominant-negative Fbxw7 produced longer myelin sheaths.
32 brane around axons to generate multilamellar myelin sheaths.
33 ng to mature cells capable of generating new myelin sheaths.
34 f surviving oligodendrocytes to generate new myelin sheaths.
35 axons or, having achieved this, fail to form myelin sheaths.
36 ligodendrocytes and specifically phagocytose myelin sheaths.
37 localised to both developing and mature CNS myelin sheaths.
38 roduction of myelin proteins to generate new myelin sheaths.
39 med oligodendrocytes frequently generate new myelin sheaths.
40 e in service or intercalating among existing myelin sheaths.
41 nating oligodendrocytes and their contiguous myelin sheaths.
42 millimeters and were organized with compact myelin sheaths.
43 mmon objective of investing nerve axons with myelin sheaths.
44 osis lesions relevant to the regeneration of myelin sheaths.
45 generation of their axons and alterations in myelin sheaths.
46 at beta1 integrins regulate the outgrowth of myelin sheaths.
47 f proteins that are responsible for building myelin sheaths.
48 characterized by distinctive, focally folded myelin sheaths.
49 communication mechanisms as synapses to form myelin sheaths.
50 alterations in the structure of many of the myelin sheaths.
51 urons or indirectly by abnormal formation of myelin sheaths.
52 urvatures are also found in vivo in diseased myelin sheaths.
53 al impulse propagation is facilitated by the myelin sheath, a compact membrane surrounding the axon.
55 lls, and loss of CFTR caused ultrastructural myelin sheath abnormalities similar to those in known ne
56 ating axons and of nerve fibers with altered myelin sheaths all correlate with increasing cognitive i
58 We performed in vivo two-photon imaging of myelin sheaths along single axons of excitatory callosal
59 However, remyelination-the regeneration of myelin sheaths-also depends upon an immune response, and
60 hat interact with axons but fail to assemble myelin sheaths; an oligodendrocyte phenotype described p
61 the lipid composition found in the cytosolic myelin sheath and bovine MBP (bMBP) leads to an atherona
62 y action potential conduction depends on the myelin sheath and clustered Na(+) channels at nodes of R
63 KO)] mice exhibited loss of integrity of the myelin sheath and defective nerve conduction as indicate
64 lin protein 22 (PMP22) is a key component of myelin sheath and has been found mutated and aggregated
65 ous system leading to the destruction of the myelin sheath and resulting in metachromatic leukodystro
67 association between the leading edge of the myelin sheath and the axonal membrane to demarcate the n
69 egeneration: the Schwann cells degrade their myelin sheaths and dedifferentiate, reverting to a pheno
70 ce, and electron microscopy revealed thinner myelin sheaths and increased myelin periodicity in BACHD
71 ease of the CNS resulting in degeneration of myelin sheaths and loss of oligodendrocytes, which means
72 gpr126 mutant Schwann cells elaborate mature myelin sheaths and maintain krox20 expression for months
74 udinal structures forming cylindrical axons (myelin sheaths and neurofilaments) can be locally invisi
75 revented BCCAO-induced damage to hippocampal myelin sheaths and oligodendrocytes, enhanced expression
76 model structural damage is initiated at the myelin sheaths and only later spreads to the oligodendro
77 can regulate the formation and remodeling of myelin sheaths and perhaps additional functions of oligo
80 onfirm the persistence and longevity of thin myelin sheaths and the importance of remyelination to th
81 tly, affecting the integrity of the axon and myelin sheaths and thus preventing proper remyelination.
82 in pieces were gradually released from aging myelin sheaths and were subsequently cleared by microgli
84 n the frequency of structural alterations in myelin sheaths, and an increase in the frequency of occu
85 rase promoter, exhibited thicker PNS and CNS myelin sheaths, and PNS myelin abnormalities, such as to
87 oles of dominant constituents in cytoplasmic myelin sheaths, and shed new light on mechanisms disrupt
88 e high lipid content of axonal membranes and myelin sheaths, and that elevated serum levels of lipid
90 internodal length, and the thickness of the myelin sheath are powerful structural factors that contr
93 Similarly to neurons and synapses, excess myelin sheaths are produced and selectively eliminated,
98 erosis, are characterized by the loss of the myelin sheath around neurons, owing to inflammation and
99 s (SCs), thereby forming and maintaining the myelin sheath around peripheral axons (Grove et al., 201
101 cells that can both form and stably maintain myelin sheaths around axons and also rapidly dedifferent
102 from multipotent neural crest cells and form myelin sheaths around axons that allow rapid transmissio
104 nd is sufficient for the generation of thick myelin sheaths around remyelinated axons in the adult mo
105 nd significant reduction in the thickness of myelin sheaths around small-diameter axons was observed
106 showed that the grafted OPCs formed central myelin sheaths around the axons in the injured spinal co
107 GRPs formed morphologically normal-appearing myelin sheaths around the axons in the ventrolateral fun
109 accurately characterized by (i) modeling the myelin sheath as a hollow cylinder composed of material
110 iffusion tensor imaging, and by newly formed myelin sheaths, as determined by electron microscopy.
114 PLP-null specimens, in contrast, many of the myelin sheaths became almost completely decompacted.
115 that in midlife, the structural integrity of myelin sheaths begins breaking down, with an acceleratin
116 mation of the axon insulating and supporting myelin sheath by differentiating oligodendrocytes (OLGs)
117 the ER and reduces the level of P0wt in the myelin sheath by half-a level previously shown to cause
118 s demonstrate that accurate placement of the myelin sheath by oligodendrocytes requires the coordinat
121 on of proteolipid protein, a highly abundant myelin sheath component that was previously linked to an
122 transmission electron microscopy, a healthy myelin sheath comprises compacted membrane layers spiral
124 13 years that we propose results in the same myelin sheath deficiencies as seen in remyelination; tha
127 in zebrafish, that oligodendrocytes make new myelin sheaths during a period of just 5 hr, with regula
128 n the pinniped optic nerve, those with thick myelin sheaths (elephant seal: 9%, sea lion: 7%) and thi
129 s (elephant seal: 9%, sea lion: 7%) and thin myelin sheaths (elephant seal: 91%, sea lion: 93%).
130 developing oligodendrocytes in vivo and that myelin sheath elongation is promoted by a high frequency
131 bule growth from Golgi outposts and controls myelin sheath elongation, linking microtubule cytoarchit
132 m of cytoplasmic channels within the growing myelin sheath enables membrane trafficking to the leadin
134 the optic nerve, smaller-caliber axons lack myelin sheaths entirely, whereas many large- and interme
136 ssembly of septin filaments scaffolds mature myelin sheaths, facilitating rapid nerve conduction in t
138 al for ensuring the timely generation of new myelin sheaths following demyelinating injury in the adu
140 of the Ahr gene in mouse impairs optic nerve myelin sheath formation and results in oculomotor defici
141 that stimulating neuronal activity increased myelin sheath formation by individual oligodendrocytes.
142 macrophage activation in the retina promotes myelin sheath formation by oligodendrocytes generated fr
144 the individual oligodendrocyte, during which myelin sheath formation occurs and the number of sheaths
146 dramatically decreased MBP and P0 levels and myelin sheath formation without affecting expression of
151 The new data show that NMDARs exist on the myelin sheath formed by oligodendrocytes, that an uncomp
152 r B and PKC epsilon, regulates the number of myelin sheaths formed by individual oligodendrocytes in
153 hypothalamus (HY), and counted the number of myelin sheath forming oligodendrocytes (OLs) in CTX, CP,
157 hannel protein complexes located beneath the myelin sheath from Na(+) channels located at nodes of Ra
160 ct targets for myelination and regulation of myelin sheath growth are essential for central nervous s
162 of oligodendrocyte Neurofascin, also impairs myelin sheath growth, likely reflecting its association
164 In addition, loss and/or dysfunction of the myelin sheath has been associated with a variety of neur
167 d in pathogenic autoimmune cells that attack myelin sheath in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelit
169 uction of oligodendrocytes and the damage of myelin sheath in MHV-infected CNS and suggests that olig
171 of myelin proteins correlated with a thicker myelin sheath in optic nerves; comparison of quantified
172 , which are responsible for the formation of myelin sheath in the central nervous system, with the hu
180 demonstrated vacuolation and swelling of the myelin sheaths in the spinal cord of Lbr(+/-):Dhcr14(Del
181 rve-impulse conduction is greatly speeded by myelin sheaths in vertebrates, oligochaete annelids, pen
184 icroarrays composed of lipids present in the myelin sheath, including ganglioside, sulfatide, cerebro
187 The restriction of P0 immunoreactivity to myelin sheaths indicates that the protein is subject to
196 ed disruption in the integrity of internodal myelin sheaths is well described and includes splitting
197 elin basic protein (MBP), a component of the myelin sheath, is mediated by both bone marrow (BM)-deri
199 ss and malfunction of Schwann cells or their myelin sheaths lead to peripheral neuropathies such as C
200 s system, and malformation or destruction of myelin sheaths leads to motor and sensory disabilities.
202 servation that axon diameters correlate with myelin sheath length, as well as reports that PNS axonal
203 ly a century ago, many studies have observed myelin sheath-length diversity between CNS regions.
204 ces in myelin sheath lengths is unknown; are myelin sheath lengths determined solely by axons or do i
205 What accounts for regional differences in myelin sheath lengths is unknown; are myelin sheath leng
206 ed CNS myelination by reducing the number of myelin sheaths made by individual oligodendrocytes durin
208 provide two lines of evidence here that thin myelin sheaths may persist indefinitely in long-lived an
209 local synthesis of the major protein in the myelin sheath, myelin basic protein, through Fyn kinase-
211 rocyte glycoprotein, an antigen in the outer myelin sheath of central nervous system neurons, are pre
216 ve disease multiple sclerosis (MS), only the myelin sheaths of the CNS are lost, while Schwann cell m
217 on diameter to the diameter of the axon plus myelin sheath) of myelinated axons in regions subject to
218 ase, multiple sclerosis, the regeneration of myelin sheaths often fails due to a default of the resid
219 E(-/-) OLs also display defects when forming myelin sheath on neuronal axons during neonatal developm
220 e model for characterizing the effect of the myelin sheath on the evolution of the NMR signal is an e
223 0 axon segments per cell, then spiral around myelin sheaths, penetrating from outer to inner layers.
224 (MBP) and its interaction with lipids of the myelin sheath plays an important part in the pathology o
225 r fails leaving remyelinated axons with thin myelin sheaths potentially compromising function and lea
227 is well described and includes splitting of myelin sheaths, redundant myelin, and fluctuations in bi
234 ferentiation, oligodendrocyte generation and myelin sheath remodeling in the forelimb motor cortex.
235 ly, with age the internodes of many of these myelin sheaths show structural changes, the most common
236 axin (Prx), a PDZ domain protein involved in myelin sheath stabilization, is also a component of adha
237 rs, together with age-related alterations in myelin sheath structure, may result in the inefficient a
239 S results from destruction of the protective myelin sheath surrounding axons, which prevents the tran
241 om damage or dysregulation of the insulating myelin sheath surrounding spinal motor axons, causing pa
244 imaging of the mouse spinal cord to resolve myelin sheaths surrounding individual fluorescently-labe
245 expressing reticulospinal neurons have fewer myelin sheaths than controls and that their myelin sheat
246 mouse spinal cord inherently produce longer myelin sheaths than those from the cortex(2), and single
248 In peripheral nerves, Schwann cells form the myelin sheath that insulates axons and allows rapid prop
253 ol homeostasis, a major lipid constituent of myelin sheaths that are formed by oligodendrocytes.
254 disorder that results in the degradation of myelin sheaths that insulate axons in the central nervou
255 in the central nervous system (CNS) produce myelin sheaths that insulate axons to ensure fast propag
257 hed axonal segments even in the absence of a myelin sheath; these clusters persist after oligodendroc
258 sticity - affecting oligodendrocytes and the myelin sheaths they produce - that plays a crucial role
261 ocytes that contributes to the regulation of myelin sheath thickness and that uncouples the initiatio
263 in-1 by BACE1 is speculated to cause reduced myelin sheath thickness in both the central nervous syst
265 We characterized oligodendrocyte numbers and myelin sheath thickness in mice with conditional inactiv
267 ce1 regulates the process of myelination and myelin sheath thickness in the central and peripheral ne
277 working together to drive the growth of the myelin sheath, thus increasing myelin thickness.SIGNIFIC
279 e paranodal junction (PNJ) that attaches the myelin sheath to the axon, are present in the shk centra
280 y-driven adaptations to both axons and their myelin sheaths to fully understand how myelinated axon p
281 icity stems from oligodendroglia, which form myelin sheaths to regulate the conduction of nerve impul
282 olled, at least in part, by the adherence of myelin sheaths to the axolemma in the adjacent region of
283 quisitely tailor the thickness of individual myelin sheaths to the diameter of their target axons to
284 hy characterized by focal thickenings of the myelin sheath (tomacula), progressive demyelination, axo
285 tral myelin, characterized by thin or absent myelin sheaths, vacuolation, enlarged periaxonal collars
287 the cell that synthesizes and maintains the myelin sheath, we analyzed JHMV pathogenesis in transgen
288 To determine whether microglia also prune myelin sheaths, we used zebrafish to visualize and manip
290 oligodendrocytes that were actively forming myelin sheaths were identified in 30 of 42 remyelinated
292 ls defective or incapable of forming compact myelin sheathes when they differentiated to myelinating
293 ing, mixed microtubule polarity, and shorter myelin sheaths when cultured on 3-dimensional (3D) micro
295 In peripheral nerves, Schwann cells form the myelin sheath, which allows the efficient propagation of
296 to aberrant targeting and destruction of the myelin sheath, which manifests as the clinical syndrome
297 ligodendrocytes initially over-produce short myelin sheaths, which are either retracted or stabilized
298 In the central nervous system (CNS), the myelin sheaths, which protect axons and allow the fast p
299 ese oligodendrocytes also generate their new myelin sheaths within the same period, despite having va