Background
OPC functions
Cellular physiology of OPCs: proliferation and differentiation to myelinating oligodendrocytes
Fig. 1 The process of oligodendrocyte progenitor cell (OPC) myelination varies during different stages. a During development, OPCs generated from neural stem cells rapidly form myelin sheaths, and a fraction of OPCs will be reserved in the stem cell pool. b In adulthood, upon demyelination, OPCs residing in the stem cell pool are swiftly recruited to the site of injury along the vasculature, where they proliferate and differentiate to initiate remyelination |
Cellular physiology of OPCs: interaction with other cells in the CNS
Cellular physiology of OPCs: immunomodulatory function
Cellular physiology of OPCs: phagocytosis
Cellular physiology of OPCs: contribution to BBB formation and repair
AD pathology and harsh microenvironment
Alterations in OPC-related events under pathological circumstances of AD
Fig. 2 AD pathology and alterations in OPC-related events under pathological circumstances of AD. Under AD pathological conditions, alterations in mitochondrial structure and function result in an overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to oxidative damage of subcellular structures and fragmentation of mitochondria. The oxidative damage and mitochondrial fragmentation further induce inflammatory responses, involving changes in microglial and astrocyte phenotypes. Pro-inflammatory DAM type microglia and DAA type astrocytes release pro-inflammatory cytokines, exacerbating mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress, culminating in a vicious cycle termed “mitochondrial dysfunction-oxidative stress-inflammation response.” Consequently, these changes exacerbate the AD pathology. Within unfavorable cerebral microenvironment, OPC myelination-related events are adversely affected to varying degrees |
Changes in OPC migration and proliferation
Table 1 Changes of OPC proliferation in AD mice |
| Animal models | Age/months | Sex | Proliferation | Brain area | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| APP/PS1 mice | 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, and 18 | Male, Female | - | Cortex | [152] |
| APP/PS1 mice | 6, 8 | N/A | ↑ | Cortical gray matter and white matter | [153] |
| APP/PS1 mice | 2 | N/A | ↑ | Hippocampus | [154] |
| APP/PS1 mice | 6 | Male | ↑ | Temporal cortices | [155] |
| APP/PS1 mice | 12, 15 | N/A | ↑ | Cortex | [88] |
| 3×Tg-AD mice | 24 | Male | ↓ | Hippocampus | [17] |
“↑” represents an increase, “↓” represents a decrease, and “-” represents no observed changes |
Impaired OPC differentiation in AD
OPC-mediated demyelination and remyelination in AD
Fig. 3 Myelin dysfunction drives Aβ deposition. Myelin dysfunction and demyelination injury are also upstream risk factors contributing to formation of Aβ plaques in AD. Mechanistically, myelin dysfunction may exacerbate the accumulation of the Aβ-producing machinery within axonal swellings and cause the increased cleavage of cortical amyloid precursor protein. In addition, the microglia originally responsible for Aβ clearance are increasingly drawn to demyelination sites, reducing Aβ clearance |
OPC senescence
Adaptive myelination in AD
Current therapeutic approaches targeting OPCs in AD
Table 2 Current therapeutic approaches targeting OPCs in AD mice |
| Therapeutic approach | Species | Target | Description | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Senolytic | APP/PS1 transgenic mice | Senescent OPCs | Utilizes compounds that can selectively clear senescent OPC | [18] |
| Rejuvenation | Hemizygous hAPP-J20 mice | Senescent OPCs | Mitigates OPC aging by overexpressing anti-aging gene KLOTHO | [209] |
| Promotion of cell differentiation | 3×Tg-AD mice | OPC differentiation-related pathways | Promotes OPC differentiation with RXR agonist | [216] |
| APP/PS1 transgenic mice | Promotes OPC differentiation with mTOR inhibitor | [15] |
Senolytic and rejuvenation strategies
Strategies targeting OPC differentiation-associated signaling pathways
Fig. 4 Strategies targeting OPC differentiation-associated signaling pathways in AD. Strategies targeting OPC differentiation-associated signaling pathways include the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling agonist and retinoid X receptor (RXR) signaling agonist. a Streamline illustration. b Detailed molecular pathway diagrams: The mTOR inhibitor promotes OPC differentiation by downregulating p-mTOR and promoting autophagy-related genes. Elevated autophagy enhances OPC differentiation and myelination. RXR activation promotes Aβ clearance, inhibits Aβ generation, and modulates neuronal function. In addition, the interaction between RXR, ABCA1, and ApoE plays a crucial role in modulating cholesterol transport genes. The enhanced cholesterol transport gene expressions promote OPC differentiation |

