In the central nervous system (CNS), insulative myelin sheaths are generated from the differentiated plasma membranes of oligodendrocytes (oligodendroglial cells) and surround neuronal axons to achieve saltatory conduction. Despite the functional involvement of myelin sheaths in the CNS, the molecular mechanism by which oligodendroglial cells themselves undergo differentiation of plasma membranes remains unclear. It also remains to be explored whether their signaling mechanisms can be applied to treating diseases of the oligodendroglial cells. Here, we describe that Rab7B of Rab7 subfamily small GTPases negatively regulates oligodendroglial cell morphological differentiation using FBD-102b cells, which are model cells undergoing differentiation of oligodendroglial precursors. Knockdown of Rab7B or Rab7A by the respective specific siRNAs in cells positively or negatively regulated morphological differentiation, respectively. Consistently, these changes were supported by changes on differentiation- and myelination-related structural protein and protein kinase markers. We also found that knockdown of Rab7B has the ability to recover inhibition of morphological differentiation following tunicamycin-induced endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, which mimics one of the major molecular pathological causes of hereditary hypomyelinating disorders in oligodendroglial cells, such as Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD). These results suggest that the respective molecules among very close Rab7 homologues exhibit differential roles in morphological differentiation and that knocking down Rab7B can recover defective differentiating phenotypes under ER stress, thereby adding Rab7B to the list of molecular therapeutic cues taking advantage of signaling mechanisms for oligodendroglial diseases like PMD.