Neuron-oligodendrocyte potassium shuttling at nodes of Ranvier protects against inflammatory demyelination

  • Hannah Kapell (Shared first author)
  • Luca Fazio (Shared first author)
  • Julia Dyckow (Shared first author)
  • Sophia Schwarz
  • Andrés Cruz-Herranz
  • Christina Mayer
  • Joaquin Campos
  • Elisa D Este
  • Wiebke Möbius
  • Christian Cordano
  • Anne-Katrin Pröbstel
  • Marjan Gharagozloo
  • Amel Zulji
  • Venu Narayanan Naik
  • Anna-Katharina Delank
  • Manuela Cerina
  • Thomas Müntefering
  • Celia Lerma-Martin
  • Jana K Sonner
  • Jung H Sin
  • Paul Disse
  • Nicole Rychlik
  • Khalida Sabeur
  • Manideep Chavali
  • Rajneesh Srivastava
  • Matthias Heidenreich
  • Kathryn C Fitzgerald
  • Guiscard Seebohm
  • Christine Stadelmann
  • Bernhard Hemmer
  • Michael Platten
  • Thomas J Jentsch
  • Maren Engelhardt
  • Thomas Budde
  • Klaus-Armin Nave
  • Peter A Calabresi
  • Manuel A Friese
  • Ari J Green
  • Claudio Acuna
  • David H Rowitch
  • Sven G Meuth
  • Lucas Schirmer

Abstract

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a progressive inflammatory demyelinating disease of the CNS. Increasing evidence suggests that vulnerable neurons in MS exhibit fatal metabolic exhaustion over time, a phenomenon hypothesized to be caused by chronic hyperexcitability. Axonal Kv7 (outward-rectifying) and oligodendroglial Kir4.1 (inward-rectifying) potassium channels have important roles in regulating neuronal excitability at and around the nodes of Ranvier. Here, we studied the spatial and functional relationship between neuronal Kv7 and oligodendroglial Kir4.1 channels and assessed the transcriptional and functional signatures of cortical and retinal projection neurons under physiological and inflammatory demyelinating conditions. We found that both channels became dysregulated in MS and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), with Kir4.1 channels being chronically downregulated and Kv7 channel subunits being transiently upregulated during inflammatory demyelination. Further, we observed that pharmacological Kv7 channel opening with retigabine reduced neuronal hyperexcitability in human and EAE neurons, improved clinical EAE signs, and rescued neuronal pathology in oligodendrocyte-Kir4.1-deficient (OL-Kir4.1-deficient) mice. In summary, our findings indicate that neuron-OL compensatory interactions promoted resilience through Kv7 and Kir4.1 channels and identify pharmacological activation of nodal Kv7 channels as a neuroprotective strategy against inflammatory demyelination.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere164223
ISSN0021-9738
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 03.04.2023
PubMed 36719741