Abstract

Cuprizone is a copper-chelating mitochondrial toxin that causes oligodendrocyte apoptosis and demyelination preferentially in the corpus callosum (CC) and the superior cerebellar peduncles, but not in the spinal cord (SC) of C57BL/6 mice. Here we aimed to determine the activities of copper-containing enzymes in correlation with the distribution of demyelination during exposure to cuprizone. The study revealed mitochondrial complex IV and superoxide dismutase activity alterations in both the pathology-affected CC and the non-affected SC. This observation raises the possibility that regionally different subcellular molecular interactions lead to the selective oligodendrocyte loss induced by the nonselective mitochondrial toxin, cuprizone.

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