Abstract

Repeated stress induces systemic elevations in glucocorticoid levels. Stress is also associated with alterations in central nervous system astrocytes and oligodendrocytes that involve connexins and myelin proteins. Corticosteroid elevation seems a major factor in stress-induced neuropathology. Changes in astrocyte connexins and myelin components may be important mediators for the neurological effects of corticosteroid elevations. Two primary cell culture models, myelination culture from rat embryonic spinal cord (SC) or cerebral cortex (CC) consisting of neurons and glial cells (oligodendrocytes, microglia and astrocytes), and mixed astrocyte-and-oligodendrocyte culture prepared from postnatal rat CC, were used in this study. Cell cultures were treated with either vehicle, corticosterone (CORT) with or without glucocorticoid receptor antagonist mifepristone, or dexamethasone (DEX) during the period of in vitro myelination. Immunoreactivity of astrocyte connexin 43 (Cx43) and oligodendrocyte myelin basic protein (MBP), or the myelination index (co-localization of MBP and phosphorylated neurofilament) was determined by double immunofluorescent labeling. Oligodendrocyte morphology was evaluated by Sholl analysis. Prolonged exposure to CORT or DEX induced dose-dependent reduction of the myelination index, and of immunostaining for MBP and Cx43 in SC and CC myelination cultures, which was prevented by mifepristone. In glial cultures single CORT or DEX exposure caused shrinkage and simplification of/' MBP- or CNPase-positive oligodendrocyte processes. The results support that concurrent effects of glucocorticoids on myelination and astrocyte Cx43 immunoreactivity are mediated by glucocorticoid receptors and may partially account for the involvement of CNS glia in the pathological effects of prolonged stress.

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