Glia | 2021

Functional cooperation of the hedgehog and androgen signaling pathways during developmental and repairing myelination

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Hedgehog morphogens control fundamental cellular processes during tissue development and regeneration. In the central nervous system (CNS), Hedgehog signaling has been implicated in oligodendrocyte and myelin production, where it functions in a concerted manner with other pathways. Since androgen receptor (AR) plays a key role in establishing the sexual phenotype of myelin during development and is required for spontaneous myelin regeneration in the adult CNS, we hypothesized the existence of a possible coordination between Hedgehog and androgen signals in oligodendrocyte and myelin production. Here, we report complementary activities of both pathways during early postnatal oligodendrogenesis further revealing that persistent Hedgehog signaling activation impedes myelin production. The data also uncover prominent pro‐myelinating activity of testosterone and involvement of AR in the control of neural stem cell commitment toward the oligodendroglial lineage. In the context of CNS demyelination, we provide evidence for the functional cooperation of the pathways leading to acceleration of myelin regeneration that might be related to their respective role on microglial and astroglial responses, higher preservation of axonal integrity, lower neuroinflammation, and functional improvement of animals in an immune model of CNS demyelination. Strong decreases of deleterious cytokines in the CNS (GM‐CSF, TNF‐α, IL‐17A) and spleen (IL‐2, IFN‐γ) stand as unique features of the combined drugs while the potent therapeutic activity of testosterone on peripheral immune cells contributes to increase tolerogenic CD11c+ dendritic cells, reduce the clonal expansion of conventional CD4+ T cells and increase CD4+Foxp3+ regulatory T cells. Altogether, these data might open promising perspectives for demyelinating diseases.

Volume 69
Pages 1369 - 1392
DOI 10.1002/glia.23967
Language English
Journal Glia

Full Text