Mitochondrially targeted vitamin E succinate efficiently kills breast tumour-initiating cells in a complex II-dependent manner.
BACKGROUND Accumulating evidence suggests that breast cancer involves tumour-initiating cells (TICs),which play a role in initiation,metastasis,therapeutic resistance and relapse of the disease. Emerging drugs that target TICs are becoming a focus of contemporary research. Mitocans,a group of compounds that induce apoptosis of cancer cells by destabilising their mitochondria,are showing their potential in killing TICs. In this project,we investigated mitochondrially targeted vitamin E succinate (MitoVES),a recently developed mitocan,for its in vitro and in vivo efficacy against TICs. METHODS The mammosphere model of breast TICs was established by culturing murine NeuTL and human MCF7 cells as spheres. This model was verified by stem cell marker expression,tumour initiation capacity and chemotherapeutic resistance. Cell susceptibility to MitoVES was assessed and the cell death pathway investigated. In vivo efficacy was studied by grafting NeuTL TICs to form syngeneic tumours. RESULTS Mammospheres derived from NeuTL and MCF7 breast cancer cells were enriched in the level of stemness,and the sphere cells featured altered mitochondrial function. Sphere cultures were resistant to several established anti-cancer agents while they were susceptible to MitoVES. Killing of mammospheres was suppressed when the mitochondrial complex II,the molecular target of MitoVES,was knocked down. Importantly,MitoVES inhibited progression of syngeneic HER2(high) tumours derived from breast TICs by inducing apoptosis in tumour cells. CONCLUSIONS These results demonstrate that using mammospheres,a plausible model for studying TICs,drugs that target mitochondria efficiently kill breast tumour-initiating cells.
View Publication
Oikawa T et al. (OCT 2015)
Nature communications 6 8070
Model of fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinomas reveals striking enrichment in cancer stem cells.
The aetiology of human fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinomas (hFL-HCCs),cancers occurring increasingly in children to young adults,is poorly understood. We present a transplantable tumour line,maintained in immune-compromised mice,and validate it as a bona fide model of hFL-HCCs by multiple methods. RNA-seq analysis confirms the presence of a fusion transcript (DNAJB1-PRKACA) characteristic of hFL-HCC tumours. The hFL-HCC tumour line is highly enriched for cancer stem cells as indicated by limited dilution tumourigenicity assays,spheroid formation and flow cytometry. Immunohistochemistry on the hFL-HCC model,with parallel studies on 27 primary hFL-HCC tumours,provides robust evidence for expression of endodermal stem cell traits. Transcriptomic analyses of the tumour line and of multiple,normal hepatic lineage stages reveal a gene signature for hFL-HCCs closely resembling that of biliary tree stem cells--newly discovered precursors for liver and pancreas. This model offers unprecedented opportunities to investigate mechanisms underlying hFL-HCCs pathogenesis and potential therapies.
View Publication
Almeida S et al. (SEP 2013)
Acta Neuropathologica 126 3 385--399
Modeling key pathological features of frontotemporal dementia with C9ORF72 repeat expansion in iPSC-derived human neurons
The recently identified GGGGCC repeat expansion in the noncoding region of C9ORF72 is the most common pathogenic mutation in patients with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We generated a human neuronal model and investigated the pathological phenotypes of human neurons containing GGGGCC repeat expansions. Skin biopsies were obtained from two subjects who had textgreater1,000 GGGGCC repeats in C9ORF72 and their respective fibroblasts were used to generate multiple induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines. After extensive characterization,two iPSC lines from each subject were selected,differentiated into postmitotic neurons,and compared with control neurons to identify disease-relevant phenotypes. Expanded GGGGCC repeats exhibit instability during reprogramming and neuronal differentiation of iPSCs. RNA foci containing GGGGCC repeats were present in some iPSCs,iPSC-derived human neurons and primary fibroblasts. The percentage of cells with foci and the number of foci per cell appeared to be determined not simply by repeat length but also by other factors. These RNA foci do not seem to sequester several major RNA-binding proteins. Moreover,repeat-associated non-ATG (RAN) translation products were detected in human neurons with GGGGCC repeat expansions and these neurons showed significantly elevated p62 levels and increased sensitivity to cellular stress induced by autophagy inhibitors. Our findings demonstrate that key neuropathological features of FTD/ALS with GGGGCC repeat expansions can be recapitulated in iPSC-derived human neurons and also suggest that compromised autophagy function may represent a novel underlying pathogenic mechanism.
View Publication
Lemonnier T et al. (SEP 2011)
Human Molecular Genetics 20 18 3653--3666
Modeling neuronal defects associated with a lysosomal disorder using patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells.
By providing access to affected neurons,human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSc) offer a unique opportunity to model human neurodegenerative diseases. We generated human iPSc from the skin fibroblasts of children with mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIB. In this fatal lysosomal storage disease,defective α-N-acetylglucosaminidase interrupts the degradation of heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycans and induces cell disorders predominating in the central nervous system,causing relentless progression toward severe mental retardation. Partially digested proteoglycans,which affect fibroblast growth factor signaling,accumulated in patient cells. They impaired isolation of emerging iPSc unless exogenous supply of the missing enzyme cleared storage and restored cell proliferation. After several passages,patient iPSc starved of an exogenous enzyme continued to proliferate in the presence of fibroblast growth factor despite HS accumulation. Survival and neural differentiation of patient iPSc were comparable with unaffected controls. Whereas cell pathology was modest in floating neurosphere cultures,undifferentiated patient iPSc and their neuronal progeny expressed cell disorders consisting of storage vesicles and severe disorganization of Golgi ribbons associated with modified expression of the Golgi matrix protein GM130. Gene expression profiling in neural stem cells pointed to alterations of extracellular matrix constituents and cell-matrix interactions,whereas genes associated with lysosome or Golgi apparatus functions were downregulated. Taken together,these results suggest defective responses of patient undifferentiated stem cells and neurons to environmental cues,which possibly affect Golgi organization,cell migration and neuritogenesis. This could have potential consequences on post-natal neurological development,once HS proteoglycan accumulation becomes prominent in the affected child brain.
View Publication
Francis KR et al. (APR 2016)
Nature medicine 22 4 388--396
Modeling Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome with induced pluripotent stem cells reveals a causal role for Wnt/$$-catenin defects in neuronal cholesterol synthesis phenotypes.
Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS) is a malformation disorder caused by mutations in DHCR7,which impair the reduction of 7-dehydrocholesterol (7DHC) to cholesterol. SLOS results in cognitive impairment,behavioral abnormalities and nervous system defects,though neither affected cell types nor impaired signaling pathways are fully understood. Whether 7DHC accumulation or cholesterol loss is primarily responsible for disease pathogenesis is also unclear. Using induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from subjects with SLOS,we identified cellular defects that lead to precocious neuronal specification within SLOS derived neural progenitors. We also demonstrated that 7DHC accumulation,not cholesterol deficiency,is critical for SLOS-associated defects. We further identified downregulation of Wnt/$$-catenin signaling as a key initiator of aberrant SLOS iPSC differentiation through the direct inhibitory effects of 7DHC on the formation of an active Wnt receptor complex. Activation of canonical Wnt signaling prevented the neural phenotypes observed in SLOS iPSCs,suggesting that Wnt signaling may be a promising therapeutic target for SLOS.
View Publication
Cheng A et al. (AUG 2010)
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 30 32 10752--62
Monoamine oxidases regulate telencephalic neural progenitors in late embryonic and early postnatal development.
Monoamine neurotransmitters play major roles in regulating a range of brain functions in adults and increasing evidence suggests roles for monoamines in brain development. Here we show that mice lacking the monoamine metabolic enzymes MAO A and MAO B (MAO AB-deficient mice) exhibit diminished proliferation of neural stem cells (NSC) in the developing telencephalon beginning in late gestation [embryonic day (E) 17.5],a deficit that persists in neonatal and adult mice. These mice showed significantly increased monoamine levels and anxiety-like behaviors as adults. Assessments of markers of intermediate progenitor cells (IPC) and mitosis showed that NSC in the subventricular zone (SVZ),but not in the ventricular zone,are reduced in MAO AB-deficient mice. A developmental time course of monoamines in frontal cortical tissues revealed increased serotonin levels as early as E14.5,and a further large increase was found between E17.5 and postnatal day 2. Administration of an inhibitor of serotonin synthesis (parachlorophenylalanine) between E14.5 and E19.5 restored the IPC numbers and SVZ thickness,suggesting the role of serotonin in the suppression of IPC proliferation. Studies of neurosphere cultures prepared from the telencephalon at different embryonic and postnatal ages showed that serotonin stimulates proliferation in wild-type,but not in MAO AB-deficient,NSC. Together,these results suggest that a MAO-dependent long-lasting alteration in the proliferation capacity of NSC occurs late in embryonic development and is mediated by serotonin. Our findings reveal novel roles for MAOs and serotonin in the regulation of IPC proliferation in the developing brain.
View Publication
Lee K et al. (JAN 2013)
Neuron 77 1 99--114
Mossy Fiber-CA3 Synapses Mediate Homeostatic Plasticity in Mature Hippocampal Neurons
Network activity homeostatically alters synaptic efficacy to constrain neuronal output. However,it is unclear how such compensatory adaptations coexist with synaptic information storage,especially in established networks. Here,we report that in mature hippocampal neurons in vitro,network activity preferentially regulated excitatory synapses within the proximal dendrites of CA3 neurons. These homeostatic synapses exhibited morphological,functional,and molecular signatures of the specialized contacts between mossy fibers of dentate granule cells and thorny excrescences (TEs) of CA3 pyramidal neurons. In vivo TEs were also selectively and bidirectionally altered by chronic activity changes. TE formation required presynaptic synaptoporin and was suppressed by the activity-inducible kinase,Plk2. These results implicate the mossy fiber-TE synapse as an independently tunable gain control locus that permits efficacious homeostatic adjustment of mossy fiber-CA3 synapses,while preserving synaptic weights that may encode information elsewhere within the mature hippocampal circuit.
View Publication
Perez-Campo FM et al. (JUN 2014)
STEM CELLS 32 6 1591--1601
MOZ-Mediated Repression of p16 INK 4 a Is Critical for the Self-Renewal of Neural and Hematopoietic Stem Cells
Although inhibition of p16(INK4a) expression is critical to preserve the proliferative capacity of stem cells,the molecular mechanisms responsible for silencing p16(INK4a) expression remain poorly characterized. Here,we show that the histone acetyltransferase (HAT) monocytic leukemia zinc finger protein (MOZ) controls the proliferation of both hematopoietic and neural stem cells by modulating the transcriptional repression of p16(INK4a) . In the absence of the HAT activity of MOZ,expression of p16(INK4a) is upregulated in progenitor and stem cells,inducing an early entrance into replicative senescence. Genetic deletion of p16(INK4a) reverses the proliferative defect in both Moz(HAT) (-) (/) (-) hematopoietic and neural progenitors. Our results suggest a critical requirement for MOZ HAT activity to silence p16(INK4a) expression and to protect stem cells from early entrance into replicative senescence.
View Publication