Konorov SO et al. (AUG 2011)
Analytical chemistry 83 16 6254--6258
Absolute quantification of intracellular glycogen content in human embryonic stem cells with Raman microspectroscopy
We present a method to perform absolute quantification of glycogen in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) in situ based on the use of Raman microspectroscopy. The proposed quantification method was validated by comparison to a commonly used commercial glycogen assay kit. With Raman microspectroscopy,we could obtain the glycogen content of hESCs faster and apparently more accurately than with the kit. In addition,glycogen distributions across a colony could be obtained. Raman spectroscopy can provide reliable estimates of the in situ glycogen content in hESCs,and this approach should also be extensible to their other biochemical constituents as well as to other cell types.
View Publication
Neuronal store-operated calcium entry pathway as a novel therapeutic target for Huntington's disease treatment.
Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by a polyglutamine expansion within Huntingtin (Htt) protein. In the phenotypic screen we identified a class of quinazoline-derived compounds that delayed a progression of a motor phenotype in transgenic Drosophila HD flies. We found that the store-operated calcium (Ca(2+)) entry (SOC) pathway activity is enhanced in neuronal cells expressing mutant Htt and that the identified compounds inhibit SOC pathway in HD neurons. The same compounds exerted neuroprotective effects in glutamate-toxicity assays with YAC128 medium spiny neurons primary cultures. We demonstrated a key role of TRPC1 channels in supporting SOC pathway in HD neurons. We concluded that the TRPC1-mediated neuronal SOC pathway constitutes a novel target for HD treatment and that the identified compounds represent a novel class of therapeutic agents for treatment of HD and possibly other neurodegenerative disorders.
View Publication
文献
Linta L et al. (APR 2012)
Stem cells and development 21 6 965--976
Rat Embryonic Fibroblasts Improve Reprogramming of Human Keratinocytes into Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells
Patient-specific human induced pluripotent stem (hiPS) cells not only provide a promising tool for cellular disease models in general,but also open up the opportunity to establish cell-type-specific systems for personalized medicine. One of the crucial prerequisites for these strategies,however,is a fast and efficient reprogramming strategy from easy accessible somatic cell populations. Keratinocytes from plucked human hair had been introduced as a superior cell source for reprogramming purposes compared with the widely used skin fibroblasts. The starting cell population is,however,limited and thereby further optimization in terms of time,efficiency,and quality is inevitable. Here we show that rat embryonic fibroblasts (REFs) should replace mouse embryonic fibroblasts as feeder cells in the reprogramming process. REFs enable a significantly more efficient reprogramming procedure as shown by colony number and total amount of SSEA4-positive cells. We successfully produced keratinocyte-derived hiPS (k-hiPS) cells from various donors. The arising k-hiPS cells display the hallmarks of pluripotency such as expression of stem cell markers and differentiation into all 3 germ layers. The increased reprogramming efficiency using REFs as a feeder layer occurred independent of the proliferation rate in the parental keratinocytes and acts,at least in part,in a non-cell autonomous way by secreting factors known to facilitate pluripotency such as Tgfb1,Inhba and Grem1. Hence,we provide an easy to use and highly efficient reprogramming system that could be very useful for a broad application to generate human iPS cells.
View Publication
文献
Varum S et al. (JUN 2011)
PLoS ONE 6 6 e20914
Energy metabolism in human pluripotent stem cells and their differentiated counterparts.
BACKGROUND: Human pluripotent stem cells have the ability to generate all cell types present in the adult organism,therefore harboring great potential for the in vitro study of differentiation and for the development of cell-based therapies. Nonetheless their use may prove challenging as incomplete differentiation of these cells might lead to tumoregenicity. Interestingly,many cancer types have been reported to display metabolic modifications with features that might be similar to stem cells. Understanding the metabolic properties of human pluripotent stem cells when compared to their differentiated counterparts can thus be of crucial importance. Furthermore recent data has stressed distinct features of different human pluripotent cells lines,namely when comparing embryo-derived human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells (IPSCs) reprogrammed from somatic cells.backslashnbackslashnMETHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We compared the energy metabolism of hESCs,IPSCs,and their somatic counterparts. Focusing on mitochondria,we tracked organelle localization and morphology. Furthermore we performed gene expression analysis of several pathways related to the glucose metabolism,including glycolysis,the pentose phosphate pathway and the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. In addition we determined oxygen consumption rates (OCR) using a metabolic extracellular flux analyzer,as well as total intracellular ATP levels by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Finally we explored the expression of key proteins involved in the regulation of glucose metabolism.backslashnbackslashnCONCLUSIONS/FINDINGS: Our results demonstrate that,although the metabolic signature of IPSCs is not identical to that of hESCs,nonetheless they cluster with hESCs rather than with their somatic counterparts. ATP levels,lactate production and OCR revealed that human pluripotent cells rely mostly on glycolysis to meet their energy demands. Furthermore,our work points to some of the strategies which human pluripotent stem cells may use to maintain high glycolytic rates,such as high levels of hexokinase II and inactive pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH).
View Publication
文献
Dixon JE et al. (SEP 2011)
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy 19 9 1695--703
Directed differentiation of human embryonic stem cells to interrogate the cardiac gene regulatory network.
The limited ability of the heart to regenerate has prompted development of new systems to produce cardiomyocytes for therapeutics. While differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) into cardiomyocytes has been well documented,the process remains inefficient and/or expensive,and progress would be facilitated by better understanding the early genetic events that cause cardiac specification. By maintaining a transgenic cardiac-specific MYH6-monomeric red fluorescent protein (mRFP) reporter hESC line in conditions that promote pluripotency,we tested the ability of combinations of 15 genes to induce cardiac specification. Screening identified GATA4 plus TBX5 as the minimum requirement to activate the cardiac gene regulatory network and produce mRFP(+) cells,while a combination of GATA4,TBX5,NKX2.5,and BAF60c (GTNB) was necessary to generate beating cardiomyocytes positive for cTnI and α-actinin. Including the chemotherapeutic agent,Ara-C,from day 10 of induced differentiation enriched for cTnI/α-actinin double positive cells to 45%. Transient expression of GTNB for 5-7 days was necessary to activate the cardiogenesis through progenitor intermediates in a manner consistent with normal heart development. This system provides a route to test the effect of different factors on human cardiac differentiation and will be useful in understanding the network failures that underlie disease phenotypes.
View Publication
Retinoblastoma-binding proteins 4 and 9 are important for human pluripotent stem cell maintenance.
OBJECTIVE: The molecular mechanisms that maintain human pluripotent stem (PS) cells are not completely understood. Here we sought to identify new candidate PS cell regulators to facilitate future improvements in their generation,expansion,and differentiation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We used bioinformatic analyses of multiple serial-analysis-of-gene-expression libraries (generated from human PS cells and their differentiated derivatives),together with small interfering RNA (siRNA) screening to identify candidate pluripotency regulators. Validation of candidate regulators involved promoter analyses,Affymetrix profiling,real-time PCR,and immunoprecipitation. RESULTS: Promoter analysis of genes differentially expressed across multiple serial-analysis-of-gene-expression libraries identified E2F motifs in the promoters of many PS cell-specific genes (e.g.,POU5F1,NANOG,SOX2,FOXD3). siRNA analyses identified two retinoblastoma binding proteins (RBBP4,RBBP9) as required for maintenance of multiple human PS cell types. Both RBBPs were bound to RB in human PS cells,and E2F motifs were present in the promoters of genes whose expression was altered by decreasing RBBP4 and RBBP9 expression. Affymetrix and real-time PCR studies of siRNA-treated human PS cells showed that reduced RBBP4 or RBBP9 expression concomitantly decreased expression of POU5F1,NANOG,SOX2,and/or FOXD3 plus certain cell cycle genes (e.g.,CCNA2,CCNB1),while increasing expression of genes involved in organogenesis (particularly neurogenesis). CONCLUSIONS: These results reveal new candidate positive regulators of human PS cells,providing evidence of their ability to regulate expression of pluripotency,cell cycle,and differentiation genes in human PS cells. These data provide valuable new leads for further elucidating mechanisms of human pluripotency.
View Publication
文献
Kumar A et al. (JAN 2011)
PloS one 6 6 e20701
Evidence that aberrant expression of tissue transglutaminase promotes stem cell characteristics in mammary epithelial cells.
Cancer stem cells (CSCs) or tumor initiating cells (TICs) make up only a small fraction of total tumor cell population,but recent evidence suggests that they are responsible for tumor initiation and the maintenance of tumor growth. Whether CSCs/TICs originate from normal stem cells or result from the dedifferentiation of terminally differentiated cells remains unknown. Here we provide evidence that sustained expression of the proinflammatory protein tissue transglutaminase (TG2) confers stem cell like properties in non-transformed and transformed mammary epithelial cells. Sustained expression of TG2 was associated with increase in CD44(high)/CD24(low/-) subpopulation,increased ability of cells to form mammospheres,and acquisition of self-renewal ability. Mammospheres derived from TG2-transfected mammary epithelial cells (MCF10A) differentiated into complex secondary structures when grown in Matrigel cultures. Cells in these secondary structures differentiated into Muc1-positive (luminal marker) and integrin α6-positive (basal marker) cells in response to prolactin treatment. Highly aggressive MDA-231 and drug-resistant MCF-7/RT breast cancer cells,which express high basal levels of TG2,shared many traits with TG2-transfected MCF10A stem cells but unlike MCF10A-derived stem cells they failed to form the secondary structures and to differentiate into Muc1-positive luminal cells when grown in Matrigel culture. Downregulation of TG2 attenuated stem cell properties in both non-transformed and transformed mammary epithelial cells. Taken together,these results suggested a new function for TG2 and revealed a novel mechanism responsible for promoting the stem cell characteristics in adult mammary epithelial cells.
View Publication
文献
Bogomazova AN et al. (JUN 2011)
Aging 3 6 584--596
Error-prone nonhomologous end joining repair operates in human pluripotent stem cells during late G2.
Genome stability of human embryonic stem cells (hESC) is an important issue because even minor genetic alterations can negatively impact cell functionality and safety. The incorrect repair of DNA double-stranded breaks (DSBs) is the ultimate cause of the formation of chromosomal aberrations. Using G2 radiosensitivity assay,we analyzed chromosomal aberrations in pluripotent stem cells and somatic cells. The chromatid exchange aberration rates in hESCs increased manifold 2 hours after irradiation as compared with their differentiated derivatives,but the frequency of radiation-induced chromatid breaks was similar. The rate of radiation-induced chromatid exchanges in hESCs and differentiated cells exhibited a quadratic dose response,revealing two-hit mechanism of exchange formation suggesting that a non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) repair may contribute to their formation. Inhibition of DNA-PK,a key NHEJ component,by NU7026 resulted in a significant decrease in radiation-induced chromatid exchanges in hESCs but not in somatic cells. In contrast,NU7026 treatment increased the frequency of radiation-induced breaks to a similar extent in pluripotent and somatic cells. Thus,DNA-PK dependent NHEJ efficiently participates in the elimination of radiation-induced chromatid breaks during the late G2 in both cell types and DNA-PK activity leads to a high level of misrejoining specifically in pluripotent cells.
View Publication
文献
Ramachandra CJA et al. (SEP 2011)
Nucleic Acids Research 39 16 e107
Efficient recombinase-mediated cassette exchange at the AAVS1 locus in human embryonic stem cells using baculoviral vectors
Insertion of a transgene into a defined genomic locus in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) is crucial in preventing random integration-induced insertional mutagenesis,and can possibly enable persistent transgene expression during hESC expansion and in their differentiated progenies. Here,we employed homologous recombination in hESCs to introduce heterospecific loxP sites into the AAVS1 locus,a site with an open chromatin structure that allows averting transgene silencing phenomena. We then performed Cre recombinase mediated cassette exchange using baculoviral vectors to insert a transgene into the modified AAVS1 locus. Targeting efficiency in the master hESC line with the loxP-docking sites was up to 100%. Expression of the inserted transgene lasted for at least 20 passages during hESC expansion and was retained in differentiated cells derived from the genetically modified hESCs. Thus,this study demonstrates the feasibility of genetic manipulation at the AAVS1 locus with homologous recombination and using viral transduction in hESCs to facilitate recombinase-mediated cassette exchange. The method developed will be useful for repeated gene targeting at a defined locus of the hESC genome.
View Publication
文献
Mitne-Neto M et al. (SEP 2011)
Human Molecular Genetics 20 18 3642--52
Downregulation of VAPB expression in motor neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cells of ALS8 patients.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an incurable neuromuscular disease that leads to a profound loss of life quality and premature death. Around 10% of the cases are inherited and ALS8 is an autosomal dominant form of familial ALS caused by mutations in the vamp-associated protein B/C (VAPB) gene. The VAPB protein is involved in many cellular processes and it likely contributes to the pathogenesis of other forms of ALS besides ALS8. A number of successful drug tests in ALS animal models could not be translated to humans underscoring the need for novel approaches. The induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) technology brings new hope,since it can be used to model and investigate diseases in vitro. Here we present an additional tool to study ALS based on ALS8-iPSC. Fibroblasts from ALS8 patients and their non-carrier siblings were successfully reprogrammed to a pluripotent state and differentiated into motor neurons. We show for the first time that VAPB protein levels are reduced in ALS8-derived motor neurons but,in contrast to over-expression systems,cytoplasmic aggregates could not be identified. Our results suggest that optimal levels of VAPB may play a central role in the pathogenesis of ALS8,in agreement with the observed reduction of VAPB in sporadic ALS.
View Publication
文献
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
文献
Kim E-K et al. (APR 2012)
Journal of cellular physiology 227 4 1680--7
Human mesenchymal stem cell differentiation to the osteogenic or adipogenic lineage is regulated by AMP-activated protein kinase.
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is an energy-sensing kinase that has recently been shown to regulate the differentiation of preadipocytes and osteoblasts. However,the role of AMPK in stem cell differentiation is largely unknown. Using in vitro culture models,the present study demonstrates that AMPK is a critical regulatory factor for osteogenic differentiation. We observed that expression and phosphorylation of AMPK were increased during osteogenesis in human adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells (hAMSC). To elucidate the role of AMPK in osteogenic differentiation,we investigated the effect of AMPK inhibition or knockdown on mineralization of hAMSC. Compound C,an AMPK inhibitor,reduced mineralized matrix deposition and suppressed the expression of osteoblast-specific genes,including alkaline phosphatase (ALP),runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2),and osteocalcin (OCN). Knockdown of AMPK by shRNA-lentivirus infection also reduced osteogenesis. In addition,inhibition or knockdown of AMPK during osteogenesis inhibited ERK phosphorylation,which is required for osteogenesis. Interestingly,inhibition of AMPK induced adipogenic differentiation of hAMSC,even in osteogenic induction medium (OIM). These results provide a potential mechanism involving AMPK activation in osteogenic differentiation of hAMSC and suggest that commitment of hAMSC to osteogenic or adipogenic lineage is governed by activation or inhibition of AMPK,respectively.
View Publication