The Cellular and Molecular Response of Oligodendroglia to Physical Exercise following Demyelination

Date
2018-05-03
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Abstract
While the efficacy of exercise in the management of cardiovascular, lipid, glycemic, and other systemic disorders has been well documented and long studied, the beneficial effect of exercise on the central nervous system (CNS) has only recently gained substantial support from the literature. Exercise has been shown to initiate pleiotropic mechanisms that increase the functional acuity of many aspects of the CNS, protect against future pathology, and possibly reverse existing disability. While there has been significant study of the effect of exercise on the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative disorders and on general CNS well-being, there has been only limited study of exercise in demyelinating disorders, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), particularly with regard to whether exercise promotes reparative processes. In this thesis I investigate the effect of exercise on the regeneration of myelin in the lysolecithin model of focal demyelination. I show that exercise enhances oligodendrogenesis and the formation of myelin, substantially accelerating the remyelination process. I show that the activation of a transcriptional coactivation, peroxisome-proliferator activated receptor gamma coactivation 1 alpha (PGC1a), is enhanced by exercise and required for the acceleration of myelin thickening. I then show that exercise works in combination with clemastine, resulting in functionally complete remyelination of lysolecithin lesions. Moreover, the combination treatment preserves axons. Thus, exercise should have considerable clinical utility in disorders where demyelination is present. Finally, I detail a novel technique for visualizing oligodendrocytes in three-dimensions.
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Keywords
Demyelination, Remyelination, exercise
Citation
Jensen, S. K. (2018). The Cellular and Molecular Response of Oligodendroglia to Physical Exercise following Demyelination (Doctoral thesis, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada). Retrieved from https://prism.ucalgary.ca. doi:10.11575/PRISM/31894