Searched for: Department/Unit:Cell Biology
Titration of GLI3 repressor activity by sonic hedgehog signaling is critical for maintaining multiple adult neural stem cell and astrocyte functions
Petrova, Ralitsa; Garcia, A Denise R; Joyner, Alexandra L
Sonic hedgehog (SHH), a key regulator of embryonic neurogenesis, signals directly to neural stem cells (NSCs) in the subventricular zone (SVZ) and to astrocytes in the adult mouse forebrain. The specific mechanism by which the GLI2 and GLI3 transcriptional activators (GLI2(A) and GLI3(A)) and repressors (GLI2(R) and GLI3(R)) carry out SHH signaling has not been addressed. We found that the majority of slow-cycling NSCs express Gli2 and Gli3, whereas Gli1 is restricted ventrally and all three genes are downregulated when NSCs transition into proliferating progenitors. Surprisingly, whereas conditional ablation of Smo in postnatal glial fibrillary acidic protein-expressing cells results in cell-autonomous loss of NSCs and a progressive reduction in SVZ proliferation, without an increase in glial cell production, removal of Gli2 or Gli3 does not alter adult SVZ neurogenesis. Significantly, removing Gli3 in Smo conditional mutants largely rescues neurogenesis and, conversely, expression of a constitutive GLI3(R) in the absence of normal Gli2 and Gli3 abrogates neurogenesis. Thus unattenuated GLI3(R) is a primary inhibitor of adult SVZ NSC function. Ablation of Gli2 and Gli3 revealed a minor role for GLI2(R) and little requirement for GLI(A) function in stimulating SVZ neurogenesis. Moreover, we found that similar rules of GLI activity apply to SHH signaling in regulating SVZ-derived olfactory bulb interneurons and maintaining cortical astrocyte function. Namely, fewer superficial olfactory bulb interneurons are generated in the absence of Gli2 and Gli3, whereas astrocyte partial gliosis results from an increase in GLI3(R). Thus precise titration of GLI(R) levels by SHH is critical to multiple functions of adult NSCs and astrocytes.
PMCID:3812512
PMID: 24174682
ISSN: 0270-6474
CID: 967362
Telomere shortening and DNA damage of embryonic stem cells induced by cigarette smoke
Huang, Junjiu; Okuka, Maja; Lu, Weisi; Tsibris, John C M; McLean, Mark P; Keefe, David L; Liu, Lin
Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) provide a valuable in vitro model for testing toxicity of chemicals and environmental contaminants including cigarette smoke. Mouse ESCs were acutely or chronically exposed to smoke components, cigarette smoke condensate (CSC), or cadmium, an abundant component of CSC, and then evaluated for their self-renewal, apoptosis, DNA damage and telomere function. Acute exposure of ESCs to high dose of CSC or cadmium increased DNA damage and apoptosis. Yet, ESCs exhibited a remarkable capacity to recover following absence of exposure. Chronic exposure of ESCs to low dose of CSC or cadmium resulted in shorter telomeres and DNA damage. Together, acute exposure of ESCs to CSC or cadmium causes immediate cell death and reduces pluripotency, while chronic exposure of ESCs to CSC or cadmium leads to DNA damage and telomere shortening. Notably, a sub-proportion of ESCs during passages is selected to resist to smoke-induced oxidative damage to telomeres.
PMID: 22824788
ISSN: 0890-6238
CID: 956522
Ovarian aging: breaking up is hard to fix [Comment]
Johnson, Joshua; Keefe, David L
Accumulation of double-stranded DNA breaks and inhibition of DNA repair contributes to reproductive aging by diminishing ovarian reserves in mice and women.
PMID: 23408052
ISSN: 1946-6234
CID: 956532
Cartilage oligomeric matrix protein enhances osteogenesis by directly binding and activating bone morphogenetic protein-2
Ishida, Kazunari; Acharya, Chitrangada; Christiansen, Blaine A; Yik, Jasper H N; DiCesare, Paul E; Haudenschild, Dominik R
Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) are effective for bone regeneration, and are used clinically. However, supraphysiological doses are required, which limits their use. Cartilage oligomeric matrix protein is an extracellular matrix protein, which we have previously shown can bind to growth factors of the TGFs family, suggesting that COMP may also bind to BMP-2. Rather than being a passive component of the matrix, COMP may serve as an "instructive matrix" component capable of increasing local growth factor concentration, slowing the diffusion of growth factors, and promoting their biological activity. The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether COMP binds to BMP-2, and whether it promotes the biological activity of BMP-2 with respect to osteogenesis. We found that COMP binds BMP-2, and characterized the biochemical nature of the binding interaction. COMP binding enhanced BMP-2-induced intracellular signaling through Smad proteins, increased the levels of BMP receptors, and up-regulated the luciferase activity from a BMP-2-responsive reporter construct. COMP binding enhanced BMP-2-dependent osteogenesis in vitro, in the C2C12 cell line and in primary human bone mesenchymal stem cells, as measured by alkaline phosphatase activity, matrix mineralization, and gene expression. Finally, we found that COMP enhanced BMP-2-dependent ectopic bone formation in a rat model assessed histologically, by alkaline phosphatase activity, gene expression, and micro-CT. In summary, this study demonstrates that COMP enhances the osteogenic activity of BMP-2, both in-vitro and in-vivo.
PMID: 23528838
ISSN: 1873-2763
CID: 957742
N-cadherin relocalizes from the periphery to the center of the synapse after transient synaptic stimulation in hippocampal neurons
Yam, Patricia T; Pincus, Zachary; Gupta, Gagan D; Bashkurov, Mikhail; Charron, Frederic; Pelletier, Laurence; Colman, David R
N-cadherin is a cell adhesion molecule which is enriched at synapses. Binding of N-cadherin molecules to each other across the synaptic cleft has been postulated to stabilize adhesion between the presynaptic bouton and the postsynaptic terminal. N-cadherin is also required for activity-induced changes at synapses, including hippocampal long term potentiation and activity-induced spine expansion and stabilization. We hypothesized that these activity-dependent changes might involve changes in N-cadherin localization within synapses. To determine whether synaptic activity changes the localization of N-cadherin, we used structured illumination microscopy, a super-resolution approach which overcomes the conventional resolution limits of light microscopy, to visualize the localization of N-cadherin within synapses of hippocampal neurons. We found that synaptic N-cadherin exhibits a spectrum of localization patterns, ranging from puncta at the periphery of the synapse adjacent to the active zone to an even distribution along the synaptic cleft. Furthermore, the N-cadherin localization pattern within synapses changes during KCl depolarization and after transient synaptic stimulation. During KCl depolarization, N-cadherin relocalizes away from the central region of the synaptic cleft to the periphery of the synapse. In contrast, after transient synaptic stimulation with KCl followed by a period of rest in normal media, fewer synapses have N-cadherin present as puncta at the periphery and more synapses have N-cadherin present more centrally and uniformly along the synapse compared to unstimulated cells. This indicates that transient synaptic stimulation modulates N-cadherin localization within the synapse. These results bring new information to the structural organization and activity-induced changes occurring at synapses, and suggest that N-cadherin relocalization may contribute to activity dependent changes at synapses.
PMCID:3815108
PMID: 24223993
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 950662
Septin 7: actin cross-organization is required for axonal association of Schwann cells
Roth, Alejandro D; Liazoghli, Dalinda; Perez De Arce, Felipe; Colman, David R
Myelin sheaths present two distinct domains: compacted myelin spirals and flanking non-compacted cytoplasmic channels, where lipid and protein segregation is established by unknown mechanisms. Septins, a conserved family of membrane and cytoskeletal interacting GTPases, form intracellular diffusion barriers during cell division and neurite extension and are expressed in myelinating cells. Septins, particularly septin 7 (Sept7), the central constituent of septin polymers, are associated with the cytoplasmic channels of myelinating cells. Here we show that Schwann cells deprived of Sept7 fail to wrap around axons from dorsal root ganglion neurons and exhibit disorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. Likewise, Sept7 distribution is dependent on microfilament but not microtubule organization.
PMID: 24346071
ISSN: 0716-9760
CID: 950672
Efficacy of B cell depletion therapy for murine joint arthritis flare is associated with increased lymphatic flow
Li, Jie; Ju, Yawen; Bouta, Echoe M; Xing, Lianping; Wood, Ronald W; Kuzin, Igor; Bottaro, Andrea; Ritchlin, Christopher T; Schwarz, Edward M
OBJECTIVE: B cell depletion therapy ameliorates rheumatoid arthritis by mechanisms that are incompletely understood. Arthritis flare in tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-transgenic mice is associated with efferent lymph node (LN) "collapse," triggered by B cell translocation into lymphatic spaces and decreased lymphatic drainage. The aim of this study was to examine whether the efficacy of B cell depletion therapy is associated with restoration of lymphatic drainage due to removal of obstructing nodal B cells. METHODS: We used contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging, indocyanine green near-infrared imaging, and intravital immunofluorescence imaging to longitudinally assess synovitis, lymphatic flow, and cell migration in lymphatic vessels in TNF-transgenic mice. We conducted tests to determine whether the efficacy of B cell depletion therapy is associated with restoration of lymphatic draining and cell egress from arthritic joints. RESULTS: Unlike active lymphatics to normal and prearthritic knees, afferent lymphatic vessels to collapsed LNs in inflamed knees do not pulse. Intravital immunofluorescence imaging demonstrated that CD11b+ monocyte/macrophages in lymphatic vessels afferent to expanding LNs travel at high velocity (mean+/-SD 186+/-37 mum/second), while these cells are stationary in lymphatic vessels afferent to collapsed popliteal LNs. B cell depletion therapy for arthritis flares in TNF-transgenic mice significantly decreased knee synovium volume (by 50% from the baseline level) and significantly increased lymphatic clearance compared with placebo (P<0.05). This increased lymphatic drainage restored macrophage egress from inflamed joints without recovery of the lymphatic pulse. CONCLUSION: These results support a novel mechanism in which B cell depletion therapy for joint arthritis flares lessens inflammation by increasing lymphatic drainage and subsequent migration of cells and cytokines from the synovial space.
PMCID:3535508
PMID: 23002006
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 945542
Troponin T3 expression in skeletal and smooth muscle is required for growth and postnatal survival: characterization of Tnnt3(tm2a(KOMP)Wtsi) mice
Ju, Yawen; Li, Jie; Xie, Chao; Ritchlin, Christopher T; Xing, Lianping; Hilton, Matthew J; Schwarz, Edward M
The troponin complex, which consists of three regulatory proteins (troponin C, troponin I, and troponin T), is known to regulate muscle contraction in skeletal and cardiac muscle, but its role in smooth muscle remains controversial. Troponin T3 (TnnT3) is a fast skeletal muscle troponin believed to be expressed only in skeletal muscle cells. To determine the in vivo function and tissue-specific expression of Tnnt3, we obtained the heterozygous Tnnt3+/flox/lacZ mice from Knockout Mouse Project (KOMP) Repository. Tnnt3(lacZ/+) mice are smaller than their WT littermates throughout development but do not display any gross phenotypes. Tnnt3(lacZ/lacZ) embryos are smaller than heterozygotes and die shortly after birth. Histology revealed hemorrhagic tissue in Tnnt3(lacZ/lacZ) liver and kidney, which was not present in Tnnt3(lacZ/+) or WT, but no other gross tissue abnormalities. X-gal staining for Tnnt3 promoter-driven lacZ transgene expression revealed positive staining in skeletal muscle and diaphragm and smooth muscle cells located in the aorta, bladder, and bronchus. Collectively, these findings suggest that troponins are expressed in smooth muscle and are required for normal growth and breathing for postnatal survival. Moreover, future studies with this mouse model can explore TnnT3 function in adult muscle function using the conditional-inducible gene deletion approach
PMCID:3787964
PMID: 23775847
ISSN: 1526-954x
CID: 945572
Genome-wide chromatin interactions of the Nanog locus in pluripotency, differentiation, and reprogramming
Apostolou, Effie; Ferrari, Francesco; Walsh, Ryan M; Bar-Nur, Ori; Stadtfeld, Matthias; Cheloufi, Sihem; Stuart, Hannah T; Polo, Jose M; Ohsumi, Toshiro K; Borowsky, Mark L; Kharchenko, Peter V; Park, Peter J; Hochedlinger, Konrad
The chromatin state of pluripotency genes has been studied extensively in embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and differentiated cells, but their potential interactions with other parts of the genome remain largely unexplored. Here, we identified a genome-wide, pluripotency-specific interaction network around the Nanog promoter by adapting circular chromosome conformation capture sequencing. This network was rearranged during differentiation and restored in induced pluripotent stem cells. A large fraction of Nanog-interacting loci were bound by Mediator or cohesin in pluripotent cells. Depletion of these proteins from ESCs resulted in a disruption of contacts and the acquisition of a differentiation-specific interaction pattern prior to obvious transcriptional and phenotypic changes. Similarly, the establishment of Nanog interactions during reprogramming often preceded transcriptional upregulation of associated genes, suggesting a causative link. Our results document a complex, pluripotency-specific chromatin "interactome" for Nanog and suggest a functional role for long-range genomic interactions in the maintenance and induction of pluripotency.
PMCID:3725985
PMID: 23665121
ISSN: 1875-9777
CID: 942602
Homologous recombination DNA repair genes play a critical role in reprogramming to a pluripotent state
Gonzalez, Federico; Georgieva, Daniela; Vanoli, Fabio; Shi, Zhong-Dong; Stadtfeld, Matthias; Ludwig, Thomas; Jasin, Maria; Huangfu, Danwei
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) hold great promise for personalized regenerative medicine. However, recent studies show that iPSC lines carry genetic abnormalities, suggesting that reprogramming may be mutagenic. Here, we show that the ectopic expression of reprogramming factors increases the level of phosphorylated histone H2AX, one of the earliest cellular responses to DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Additional mechanistic studies uncover a direct role of the homologous recombination (HR) pathway, a pathway essential for error-free repair of DNA DSBs, in reprogramming. This role is independent of the use of integrative or nonintegrative methods in introducing reprogramming factors, despite the latter being considered a safer approach that circumvents genetic modifications. Finally, deletion of the tumor suppressor p53 rescues the reprogramming phenotype in HR-deficient cells primarily through the restoration of reprogramming-dependent defects in cell proliferation and apoptosis. These mechanistic insights have important implications for the design of safer approaches to creating iPSCs.
PMCID:4315363
PMID: 23478019
ISSN: 2211-1247
CID: 942592