Regulation of lipid synthesis in myelin modulates neural activity and is required for motor learning

Author:

Kato Daisuke12,Aoyama Yuki1,Nishida Kazuki3,Takahashi Yutaka4,Sakamoto Takumi4,Takeda Ikuko12,Tatematsu Tsuyako1,Go Shiori5,Saito Yutaro1,Kunishima Shiho1,Cheng Jinlei1,Hou Lingnan1,Tachibana Yoshihisa3,Sugio Shouta1,Kondo Reon1,Eto Fumihiro46,Sato Shumpei4,Moorhouse Andrew J.7ORCID,Yao Ikuko46,Kadomatsu Kenji5,Setou Mitsutoshi4,Wake Hiroaki128910ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anatomy and Molecular Cell Biology Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine Nagoya Japan

2. Division of Multicellular Circuit Dynamics National Institute for Physiological Sciences, National Institutes of Natural Sciences Okazaki Japan

3. Division of System Neuroscience Kobe University Graduate School of Medicine Kobe Japan

4. Department of Cellular and Molecular Anatomy Hamamatsu University School of Medicine Hamamatsu Japan

5. Institute for Glyco‐core Research Nagoya University Nagoya Japan

6. Department of Biomedical Chemistry, School of Science and Technology Kwansei Gakuin University Sanda Japan

7. School of Medical Sciences UNSW Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

8. Center of Optical Scattering Image Science Kobe University Kobe Japan

9. Department of Physiological Sciences Graduate University for Advanced Studies, SOKENDAI Hayama Japan

10. Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology Japan Science and Technology Agency Saitama Japan

Abstract

AbstractBrain function relies on both rapid electrical communication in neural circuitry and appropriate patterns or synchrony of neural activity. Rapid communication between neurons is facilitated by wrapping nerve axons with insulation by a myelin sheath composed largely of different lipids. Recent evidence has indicated that the extent of myelination of nerve axons can adapt based on neural activity levels and this adaptive myelination is associated with improved learning of motor tasks, suggesting such plasticity may enhance effective learning. In this study, we examined whether another aspect of myelin plasticity—changes in myelin lipid synthesis and composition—may also be associated with motor learning. We combined a motor learning task in mice with in vivo two‐photon imaging of neural activity in the primary motor cortex (M1) to distinguish early and late stages of learning and then probed levels of some key myelin lipids using mass spectrometry analysis. Sphingomyelin levels were elevated in the early stage of motor learning while galactosylceramide levels were elevated in the middle and late stages of motor learning, and these changes were correlated across individual mice with both learning performance and neural activity changes. Targeted inhibition of oligodendrocyte‐specific galactosyltransferase expression, the enzyme that synthesizes myelin galactosylceramide, impaired motor learning. Our results suggest regulation of myelin lipid composition could be a novel facet of myelin adaptations associated with learning.

Funder

Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology

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