Neural Induction Course
Learn how to generate neural progenitor cells (NPCs) from human pluripotent stem cells using the STEMdiff™ Neural Induction System.
Chua SJ et al. (FEB 2009)
Biochemical and biophysical research communications 379 2 217--21
Neural progenitors, neurons and oligodendrocytes from human umbilical cord blood cells in a serum-free, feeder-free cell culture.
We have previously demonstrated that lineage negative cells (Lin(neg)) from umbilical cord blood (UCB) develop into multipotent cells capable of differentiation into bone,muscle,endothelial and neural cells. The objective of this study was to determine the optimal conditions required for Lin(neg) UCB cells to differentiate into neuronal cells and oligodendrocytes. We demonstrate that early neural stage markers (nestin,neurofilament,A2B5 and Sox2) are expressed in Lin(neg) cells cultured in FGF4,SCF,Flt3-ligand reprogramming culture media followed by the early macroglial cell marker O4. Early stage oligodendrocyte markers CNPase,GalC,Olig2 and the late-stage marker MOSP are observed,as is the Schwann cell marker PMP22. In summary,Lin(neg) UCB cells,when appropriately cultured,are able to exhibit characteristics of neuronal and macroglial cells that can specifically differentiate into oligodendrocytes and Schwann cells and express proteins associated with myelin production after in vitro differentiation.
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Fernando P et al. (OCT 2005)
FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 19 12 1671--3
Neural stem cell differentiation is dependent upon endogenous caspase 3 activity.
Caspase proteases have become the focal point for the development and application of anti-apoptotic therapies in a variety of central nervous system diseases. However,this approach is based on the premise that caspase function is limited to invoking cell death signals. Here,we show that caspase-3 activity is elevated in nonapoptotic differentiating neuronal cell populations. Moreover,peptide inhibition of protease activity effectively inhibits the differentiation process in a cultured neurosphere model. These results implicate caspase-3 activation as a conserved feature of neuronal differentiation and suggest that targeted inhibition of this protease in neural cell populations may have unintended consequences.
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Neural Stem Cells
Overview of the types of NSCs and their potential use as therapeutic agents for disease
Azari H et al. (JAN 2011)
Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE 49
Neural-colony forming cell assay: an assay to discriminate bona fide neural stem cells from neural progenitor cells.
The neurosphere assay (NSA) is one of the most frequently used methods to isolate,expand and also calculate the frequency of neural stem cells (NSCs). Furthermore,this serum-free culture system has also been employed to expand stem cells and determine their frequency from a variety of tumors and normal tissues. It has been shown recently that a one-to-one relationship does not exist between neurosphere formation and NSCs. This suggests that the NSA as currently applied,overestimates the frequency of NSCs in a mixed population of neural precursor cells isolated from both the embryonic and adult mammalian brain. This video practically demonstrates a novel collagen based semi- solid assay,the neural-colony forming cell assay (N-CFCA),which has the ability to discriminate stem from progenitor cells based on their long-term proliferative potential,and thus provides a method to enumerate NSC frequency. In the N-CFCA,colonies ≥2 mm in diameter are derived from cells that meet all the functional criteria of a NSC,while colonies textless 2mm are derived from progenitors. The N-CFCA procedure can be used for cells prepared from different sources including primary and cultured adult or embryonic mouse CNS cells. Here we use cells prepared from passage one neurospheres generated from embryonic day 14 mice brain to perform N-CFCA. The cultures are replenished with proliferation medium every seven days for three weeks to allow the plated cells to exhibit their full proliferative potential and then the frequency of neural progenitor and bona fide neural stem cells is calculated respectively by counting the number of colonies that are textless 2mm and the ones that are ≥2mm in reference to the number of cells that were initially plated.
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Jeerage KM et al. (OCT 2012)
Neurotoxicology 33 5 1170--9
Neurite outgrowth and differentiation of rat cortex progenitor cells are sensitive to lithium chloride at non-cytotoxic exposures.
Neuron-specific in vitro screening strategies have the potential to accelerate the evaluation of chemicals for neurotoxicity. We examined neurite outgrowth as a measure of neuronal response with a commercially available rat cortex progenitor cell model,where cells were exposed to a chemical during a period of cell differentiation. In control cultures,the fraction of beta-III-tubulin positive neurons and their neurite length increased significantly with time,indicating differentiation of the progenitor cells. Expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein,an astrocyte marker,also increased significantly with time. By seeding progenitor cells at varying densities,we demonstrated that neurite length was influenced by cell-cell spacing. After ten days,cultures seeded at densities of 1000 cells/mm(2) or lower had significantly shorter neurites than cultures seeded at densities of 1250 cells/mm(2) or higher. Progenitor cells were exposed to lithium,a neuroactive chemical with diverse modes of action. Cultures exposed to 30 mmol/L or 10 mmol/L lithium chloride (LiCl) had significantly lower metabolic activity than control cultures,as reported by adenosine triphosphate content,and no neurons were observed after ten days of exposure. Cultures exposed to 3 mmol/L,1 mmol/L,or 0.3 mmol/L LiCl,which encompass lithium's therapeutic range,had metabolic activity similar to control cultures. These cultures exhibited concentration-dependent decreases in neurite outgrowth after ten days of LiCl exposure. Neurite outgrowth results were relatively robust,regardless of the evaluation methodology. This work demonstrates that measurement of neurite outgrowth in differentiating progenitor cell cultures can be a sensitive endpoint for neuronal response under non-cytotoxic exposure conditions.
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