Paper
Document
Download
Flag content
1

Marked regional glial heterogeneity in the human white matter of the central nervous system

1
TipTip
Save
Document
Download
Flag content

Abstract

ABSTRACT The myelinated white matter tracts of the central nervous system (CNS) are essential for fast transmission of electrical impulses and are commonly affected in neurodegenerative diseases. However, these often uniquely human diseases differentially affect white matter regions, at various ages and between males and females, and we hypothesised that this is secondary to physiological variation in white matter glia with region, age and sex. Using single nucleus RNA sequencing of healthy human post-mortem samples, we find marked glial heterogeneity with tissue region (primary motor cortex, cerebellum, cervical spinal cord), with tissue-specific cell populations of oligodendrocyte precursor cells and astrocytes, and a spinal cord-enriched oligodendrocyte type that appears human-specific. Spinal cord microglia but not astrocytes show a more activated phenotype compared to brain. These regional effects, with additional differentially expressed genes with age and sex in all glial lineages, help explain pathological patterns of disease – essential knowledge for therapeutic strategies.

Paper PDF

This paper's license is marked as closed access or non-commercial and cannot be viewed on ResearchHub. Visit the paper's external site.