This project takes a multidisciplinary approach to the problem of myelin repair. The work completed to date includes a potent combination of in vivo and in vitro assays, incorporating molecular biology, histology, transgenics, light microscopy and EM, rehabilitation, and behavioural testing. This innovative project has created and optimized techniques with extensive application across regenerative medicine research, including 3-D cell culture, chemogenetics, and 3D imaging. The power of this project is in its broad applicability: the benefits of myelin repair extend well beyond Multiple Sclerosis (MS), to spinal cord injury (SCI), and to brain injury and disease. From my own experience as a person living with a mobility impairment, I know that even small improvements in axonal conduction can result in return of function and dramatic improvements in quality of life. By characterizing the causes for altered sheath geometry in remyelination, I will inform strategies to discover and deliver regenerative therapies in the brain.