Abstract

AbstractMyelinating organ cultures of rat cerebellum were maintained in vitro for up to 130 days. Extensive myelination took place between 7 DIV (days in vitro) and 28 DIV. Centrifugation of a crude culture myelin fraction on a discontinuous gradient yielded three layers termed light myelin, heavy myelin and membrane fraction, which exhibited an ultrastructure virtually identical to that of comparable layers prepared from surviving littermates. However, culture myelin layers showed a gross deficiency of galactolipids with a relative increase in phospholipids. The 2,3′‐cyclic nucleoside‐monophosphate phosphodiesterase (CNP) activity was decreased in the culture myelin layers, but not to an extent comparable to the cerebroside deficiency. A form of “slow myelin maturation” takes place in vitro with both myelin cerebrosides and sulphatides increasing in cultures older than 60 DIV. The results indicate that CNS myelination comprises at least two phases, and that the second phase involving galactolipid enrichment of myelin can, under experimental conditions, be partly uncoupled from the first phase without affecting the morphology or ultrastructure of the sheaths.

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