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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dynamic Proteome Changes in Cuprizone-Induced Demyelination and Remyelination in the Mouse Brain.

Journal:
Journal of proteome research
Year:
2025
Authors:
Gu, Rong-Fang et al.
Affiliation:
Chemical Biology and Proteomics · United States

Abstract

This study aimed to gain insights into the dynamic proteome changes and underlying molecular mechanisms of de/remyelination in a cuprizone model, a widely used preclinical model of multiple sclerosis (MS). Longitudinal sampling of control or cuprizone-treated mouse brains was executed at 6 time points over 6 weeks. Data analysis included 8489 quantified proteins. Differential proteomic and GO analyses revealed that 5.9% of the quantified proteome was altered, including reported and novel de/remyelination-relevant protein changes and underlying pathways. We found that oligodendrocyte proteins (Fa2h and Ugt8) were significantly changed during demyelination, suggesting that dysregulated sphingolipid metabolism in MS may stem from oligodendrocyte pathology. Importantly, we showed that the cholesterol biosynthesis pathway was the most enriched biological process in a subset of significantly changed proteins, where myelination was highly enriched. We further validated the changes in the cholesterol biosynthesis pathway through targeted GC-MS analysis of intermediate sterols, supporting the critical role of cholesterol biosynthesis in de/remyelination. Unexpectedly, changes of myelin-associated proteins, Mbp and Plp1, were minimal, while Ermn showed significant reduction tracking with demyelination, indicating that some myelin protein changes are more sensitive to demyelination. Together with a list of significantly altered proteins, the results of this study could benefit future remyelination research.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40305778/