Abstract

SummaryCholesterol, one of the major cell membrane components, stabilizes membrane fluidity and regulates signal transduction. Beside its canonical roles, cholesterol has been reported to directly activate signaling pathways such as hedgehog (Hh). We recently found that astrocytes, one of the glial cells, respond to Hh pathway stimulation by Ca signaling. These notions led us to test if extracellularly applied cholesterol triggers Ca signaling in astrocytes. Here, we found that cholesterol application induces robust Ca oscillation only in astrocytes with different properties from the Hh-induced Ca response. The Ca oscillation has a long delay which corresponds to the onset of cholesterol accumulation in the plasma membrane. Blockade of the Ca oscillation resulted in enhancement of astrocytic cell death and disturbance of lipid droplet formation, implying a possibility that the cholesterol-induced Ca oscillation plays important roles in astrocytic survival and cholesterol handling under pathological conditions of cholesterol load such as demyelination.

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