Vieira M et al. (AUG 2014)
Neurobiology of Disease 68 26--36
Ischemic insults induce necroptotic cell death in hippocampal neurons through the up-regulation of endogenous RIP3
Global cerebral ischemia induces selective acute neuronal injury of the CA1 region of the hippocampus. The type of cell death that ensues may include different programmed cell death mechanisms namely apoptosis and necroptosis,a recently described type of programmed necrosis. We investigated whether necroptosis contributes to hippocampal neuronal death following oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD),an in vitro model of global ischemia. We observed that OGD induced a death receptor (DR)-dependent component of necroptotic cell death in primary cultures of hippocampal neurons. Additionally,we found that this ischemic challenge upregulated the receptor-interacting protein kinase 3 (RIP3) mRNA and protein levels,with a concomitant increase of the RIP1 protein. Together,these two related proteins form the necrosome,the complex responsible for induction of necroptotic cell death. Interestingly,we found that caspase-8 mRNA,a known negative regulator of necroptosis,was transiently decreased following OGD. Importantly,we observed that the OGD-induced increase in the RIP3 protein was paralleled in an in vivo model of transient global cerebral ischemia,specifically in the CA1 area of the hippocampus. Moreover,we show that the induction of endogenous RIP3 protein levels influenced neuronal toxicity since we found that RIP3 knock-down (KD) abrogated the component of OGD-induced necrotic neuronal death while RIP3 overexpression exacerbated neuronal death following OGD. Overexpression of RIP1 also had deleterious effects following the OGD challenge. Taken together,our results highlight that cerebral ischemia activates transcriptional changes that lead to an increase in the endogenous RIP3 protein level which might contribute to the formation of the necrosome complex and to the subsequent component of necroptotic neuronal death that follows ischemic injury.
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Platholi J et al. (JUL 2014)
PLoS ONE 9 7 e102978
Isoflurane Reversibly Destabilizes Hippocampal Dendritic Spines by an Actin-Dependent Mechanism
General anesthetics produce a reversible coma-like state through modulation of excitatory and inhibitory synaptic transmission. Recent evidence suggests that anesthetic exposure can also lead to sustained cognitive dysfunction. However,the subcellular effects of anesthetics on the structure of established synapses are not known. We investigated effects of the widely used volatile anesthetic isoflurane on the structural stability of hippocampal dendritic spines,a postsynaptic structure critical to excitatory synaptic transmission in learning and memory. Exposure to clinical concentrations of isoflurane induced rapid and non-uniform shrinkage and loss of dendritic spines in mature cultured rat hippocampal neurons. Spine shrinkage was associated with a reduction in spine F-actin concentration. Spine loss was prevented by either jasplakinolide or cytochalasin D,drugs that prevent F-actin disassembly. Isoflurane-induced spine shrinkage and loss were reversible upon isoflurane elimination. Thus,isoflurane destabilizes spine F-actin,resulting in changes to dendritic spine morphology and number. These findings support an actin-based mechanism for isoflurane-induced alterations of synaptic structure in the hippocampus. These reversible alterations in dendritic spine structure have important implications for acute anesthetic effects on excitatory synaptic transmission and synaptic stability in the hippocampus,a locus for anesthetic-induced amnesia,and have important implications for anesthetic effects on synaptic plasticity.
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Hotta R et al. (APR 2016)
Neurogastroenterology and motility : the official journal of the European Gastrointestinal Motility Society 28 4 498--512
Isogenic enteric neural progenitor cells can replace missing neurons and glia in mice with Hirschsprung disease.
BACKGROUND Transplanting autologous patient-derived enteric neuronal stem/progenitor cells (ENSCs) is an innovative approach to replacing missing enteric neurons in patients with Hirschsprung disease (HSCR). Using autologous cells eliminates immunologic and ethical concerns raised by other cell sources. However,whether postnatal aganglionic bowel is permissive for transplanted ENSCs and whether ENSCs from HSCR patients can be successfully isolated,cultured,and transplanted in vivo remains unknown. METHODS ENSCs isolated from the ganglionic intestine of Ednrb(-/-) mice (HSCR-ENSCs) were characterized immunohistochemically and evaluated for their capacity to proliferate and differentiate in vitro. Fluorescently labeled ENSCs were co-cultured ex vivo with aganglionic Ednrb(-/-) colon. For in vivo transplantation,HSCR-ENSCs were labeled with lentivirus expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP) and implanted into aganglionic embryonic chick gut in ovo and postnatal aganglionic Ednrb(-/-) rectum in vivo. KEY RESULTS HSCR-ENSCs maintain normal capacity self-renewal and neuronal differentiation. Moreover,the Ednrb(-/-) aganglionic environment is permissive to engraftment by wild-type ENSCs ex vivo and supports migratrion and neuroglial differentiation of these cells following transplantation in vivo. Lentiviral GFP-labeled HSCR-ENSCs populated embryonic chick hindgut and postnatal colon of Ednrb(-/-) HSCR,with cells populating the intermuscular layer and forming enteric neurons and glia. CONCLUSIONS & INFERENCES ENSCs can be isolated and cultured from mice with HSCR,and transplanted into the aganglionic bowel of HSCR littermates to generate enteric neuronal networks. These results in an isogenic model establish the potential of using autologous-derived stem cells to treat HSCR and other intestinal neuropathies.
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Azari H et al. (JAN 2011)
Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE 56 e3633
Isolation and expansion of human glioblastoma multiforme tumor cells using the neurosphere assay.
Stem-like cells have been isolated in tumors such as breast,lung,colon,prostate and brain. A critical issue in all these tumors,especially in glioblastoma mutliforme (GBM),is to identify and isolate tumor initiating cell population(s) to investigate their role in tumor formation,progression,and recurrence. Understanding tumor initiating cell populations will provide clues to finding effective therapeutic approaches for these tumors. The neurosphere assay (NSA) due to its simplicity and reproducibility has been used as the method of choice for isolation and propagation of many of this tumor cells. This protocol demonstrates the neurosphere culture method to isolate and expand stem-like cells in surgically resected human GBM tumor tissue. The procedures include an initial chemical digestion and mechanical dissociation of tumor tissue,and subsequently plating the resulting single cell suspension in NSA culture. After 7-10 days,primary neurospheres of 150-200 μm in diameter can be observed and are ready for further passaging and expansion.
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Yasuda T et al. (MAY 2013)
The Journal of Physiology 591 10 2579--2591
K v 3.1 channels stimulate adult neural precursor cell proliferation and neuronal differentiation
Adult neural stem/precursor cells (NPCs) play a pivotal role in neuronal plasticity throughout life. Among ion channels identified in adult NPCs,voltage-gated delayed rectifier K(+) (KDR) channels are dominantly expressed. However,the KDR channel subtype and its physiological role are still undefined. We used real-time quantitative RT-PCR and gene knockdown techniques to identify a major functional KDR channel subtype in adult NPCs. Dominant mRNA expression of Kv3.1,a high voltage-gated KDR channel,was quantitatively confirmed. Kv3.1 gene knockdown with specific small interfering RNAs (siRNA) for Kv3.1 significantly inhibited Kv3.1 mRNA expression by 63.9% (P < 0.001) and KDR channel currents by 52.2% (P < 0.001). This indicates that Kv3.1 is the subtype responsible for producing KDR channel outward currents. Resting membrane properties,such as resting membrane potential,of NPCs were not affected by Kv3.1 expression. Kv3.1 knockdown with 300 nm siRNA inhibited NPC growth (increase in cell numbers) by 52.9% (P < 0.01). This inhibition was attributed to decreased cell proliferation,not increased cell apoptosis. We also established a convenient in vitro imaging assay system to evaluate NPC differentiation using NPCs from doublecortin-green fluorescent protein transgenic mice. Kv3.1 knockdown also significantly reduced neuronal differentiation by 31.4% (P < 0.01). We have demonstrated that Kv3.1 is a dominant functional KDR channel subtype expressed in adult NPCs and plays key roles in NPC proliferation and neuronal lineage commitment during differentiation.
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Yasuda T et al. (FEB 2008)
Molecular and cellular neurosciences 37 2 284--97
K(ir) and K(v) channels regulate electrical properties and proliferation of adult neural precursor cells.
The functional significance of the electrophysiological properties of neural precursor cells (NPCs) was investigated using dissociated neurosphere-derived NPCs from the forebrain subventricular zone (SVZ) of adult mice. NPCs exhibited hyperpolarized resting membrane potentials,which were depolarized by the K(+) channel inhibitor,Ba(2+). Pharmacological analysis revealed two distinct K(+) channel families: Ba(2+)-sensitive K(ir) channels and tetraethylammonium (TEA)-sensitive K(v) (primarily K(DR)) channels. Ba(2+) promoted mitogen-stimulated NPC proliferation,which was mimicked by high extracellular K(+),whereas TEA inhibited proliferation. Based on gene and protein levels in vitro,we identified K(ir)4.1,K(ir)5.1 and K(v)3.1 channels as the functional K(+) channel candidates. Expression of these K(+) channels was immunohistochemically found in NPCs of the adult mouse SVZ,but was negligible in neuroblasts. It therefore appears that expression of K(ir) and K(v) (K(DR)) channels in NPCs and related changes in the resting membrane potential could contribute to NPC proliferation and neuronal lineage commitment in the neurogenic microenvironment.
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Link AS et al. (AUG 2016)
Molecular neurobiology 53 6 4210--4225
Kdm6b and Pmepa1 as Targets of Bioelectrically and Behaviorally Induced Activin A Signaling.
The transforming growth factor-$\$(TGF-$\$) family member activin A exerts multiple neurotrophic and protective effects in the brain. Activin also modulates cognitive functions and affective behavior and is a presumed target of antidepressant therapy. Despite its important role in the injured and intact brain,the mechanisms underlying activin effects in the CNS are still largely unknown. Our goal was to identify the first target genes of activin signaling in the hippocampus in vivo. Electroconvulsive seizures,a rodent model of electroconvulsive therapy in humans,were applied to C57BL/6J mice to elicit a strong increase in activin A signaling. Chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments with hippocampal lysates subsequently revealed that binding of SMAD2/3,the intracellular effectors of activin signaling,was significantly enriched at the Pmepa1 gene,which encodes a negative feedback regulator of TGF-$\$ in cancer cells,and at the Kdm6b gene,which encodes an epigenetic regulator promoting transcriptional plasticity. Underlining the significance of these findings,activin treatment also induced PMEPA1 and KDM6B expression in human forebrain neurons generated from embryonic stem cells suggesting interspecies conservation of activin effects in mammalian neurons. Importantly,physiological stimuli such as provided by environmental enrichment proved already sufficient to engender a rapid and significant induction of activin signaling concomitant with an upregulation of Pmepa1 and Kdm6b expression. Taken together,our study identified the first target genes of activin signaling in the brain. With the induction of Kdm6b expression,activin is likely to gain impact on a presumed epigenetic regulator of activity-dependent neuronal plasticity.
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Ma S et al. (JAN 2017)
Molecular and Cellular Biology MCB.00492--16
L2hgdh deficiency accumulates L-2-hydroxyglutarate with progressive leukoencephalopathy and neurodegeneration
L-2-hydroxyglutarate aciduria (L-2-HGA) is an autosomal recessive neurometabolic disorder caused by a mutation in the L-2-hydroxyglutarate dehydrogenase ( L2HGDH ) gene. In this study,we generated L2hgdh knockout (KO) mice and observed a robust increase of 2-hydroxyglutarate (L-2-HG) levels in multiple tissues. The highest levels of L-2-HG were observed in the brain and testis with a corresponding increase in histone methylation in these tissues. L2hgdh KO mice exhibit white matter abnormalities,extensive gliosis,microglia-mediated neuroinflammation,and an expansion of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs). Moreover,L2hgdh deficiency leads to impaired adult hippocampal neurogenesis and late-onset neurodegeneration in mouse brains. Our data provide in vivo evidence that L2hgdh mutation leads to L-2-HG accumulation,leukoencephalopathy,and neurodegeneration in mice,thus offering new insights into the pathophysiology of L-2-HGA in humans.
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D'Aiuto L et al. (OCT 2014)
Organogenesis 10 4 365--377
Large-scale generation of human iPSC-derived neural stem cells/early neural progenitor cells and their neuronal differentiation.
Induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-based technologies offer an unprecedented opportunity to perform high-throughput screening of novel drugs for neurological and neurodegenerative diseases. Such screenings require a robust and scalable method for generating large numbers of mature,differentiated neuronal cells. Currently available methods based on differentiation of embryoid bodies (EBs) or directed differentiation of adherent culture systems are either expensive or are not scalable. We developed a protocol for large-scale generation of neuronal stem cells (NSCs)/early neural progenitor cells (eNPCs) and their differentiation into neurons. Our scalable protocol allows robust and cost-effective generation of NSCs/eNPCs from iPSCs. Following culture in neurobasal medium supplemented with B27 and BDNF,NSCs/eNPCs differentiate predominantly into vesicular glutamate transporter 1 (VGLUT1) positive neurons. Targeted mass spectrometry analysis demonstrates that iPSC-derived neurons express ligand-gated channels and other synaptic proteins and whole-cell patch-clamp experiments indicate that these channels are functional. The robust and cost-effective differentiation protocol described here for large-scale generation of NSCs/eNPCs and their differentiation into neurons paves the way for automated high-throughput screening of drugs for neurological and neurodegenerative diseases.
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Walker TL et al. (MAY 2008)
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 28 20 5240--7
Latent stem and progenitor cells in the hippocampus are activated by neural excitation.
The regulated production of neurons in the hippocampus throughout life underpins important brain functions such as learning and memory. Surprisingly,however,studies have so far failed to identify a resident hippocampal stem cell capable of providing the renewable source of these neurons. Here,we report that depolarizing levels of KCl produce a threefold increase in the number of neurospheres generated from the adult mouse hippocampus. Most interestingly,however,depolarizing levels of KCl led to the emergence of a small subpopulation of precursors (approximately eight per hippocampus) with the capacity to generate very large neurospheres (textgreater 250 microm in diameter). Many of these contained cells that displayed the cardinal properties of stem cells: multipotentiality and self-renewal. In contrast,the same conditions led to the opposite effect in the other main neurogenic region of the brain,the subventricular zone,in which neurosphere numbers decreased by approximately 40% in response to depolarizing levels of KCl. Most importantly,we also show that the latent hippocampal progenitor population can be activated in vivo in response to prolonged neural activity found in status epilepticus. This work provides the first direct evidence of a latent precursor and stem cell population in the adult hippocampus,which is able to be activated by neural activity. Because the latent population is also demonstrated to reside in the aged animal,defining the precise mechanisms that underlie its activation may provide a means to combat the cognitive deficits associated with a decline in neurogenesis.
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