Development of Astrocytes in the Lamina Cribrosa Sclerae of the Mouse Optic Nerve, with Special Reference to Myelin Formation.

  • DING Lei
    Department of Molecular Neuroanatomy, Hokkaido University School of Medicine
  • YAMADA Keiko
    Department of Anatomy and Embryology Hokkaido University School of Medicine
  • TAKAYAMA Chitoshi
    Department of Molecular Neuroanatomy, Hokkaido University School of Medicine
  • INOUE Yoshiro
    Department of Molecular Neuroanatomy, Hokkaido University School of Medicine

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In the mouse optic nerve, the optic nerve fiber layer in the retina, the optic papilla and the lamina cribrosa sclerae (LCS) just after penetrating the eyeball failed to generate myelin, whereas the optic nerve proper in the orbit was occupied by myelinated nerve fibers. The present study investigated development of the architecture of LCS, where the axons develop from unmyelinated to myelinated type, to elucidate how the initial part of axons was unmyelinated. At the LCS of the adult optic nerve, well developed astrocytes densely formed a cytoplasmic mesh-like frame through which unmyelinated fibers passed. The astrocytes here contained numerous and densely packed intermediate glial filaments and cell organelles. This framework formed by astrocytes appeared to be completed between 7 and 14 postnatal days before oligodendrocyte progenitors, migrated from the chiasm side, reached the proximal end of LCS, and began myelin formation. Thus the failure in myelin formation at the intraocular part and LCS possibly depended upon unsuccessful migration of oligodendrocytes beyond LCS constructed by specialized astrocytes, although other inhibitory factors for myelin formation, such as adhesion molecules distributed around LCS, may be unsolved.

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