首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Neural stem cells/progenitors that give rise to neurons and glia have been identified in different regions of the brain, including the embryonic retina and ciliary epithelium of the adult eye. Here, we first demonstrate the characterization of neural stem/progenitors in postnatal iris pigment epithelial (IPE) cells. Pure isolated IPE cells could form spheres that contained cells expressing retinal progenitor markers in non-adherent culture. The spheres grew by cell proliferation, as indicated by bromodeoxyuridine incorporation. When attached to laminin, the spheres forming IPE derived cells were able to exhibit neural phenotypes, including retinal-specific neurons. When co-cultured with embryonic retinal cells, or grafted into embryonic retina in vivo, the IPE cells could also display the phenotypes of photoreceptor neurons and Muller glia. Our results suggest that the IPE derived cells have retinal stem/progenitor properties and neurogenic potential without gene transfer, thereby providing a novel potential source for both basic stem cell biology and therapeutic applications for retinal diseases.  相似文献   

2.
Identification of neural progenitors in the adult mammalian eye   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
We have shown that the embryonic mammalian retina contains neural progenitors which display stem cell properties in vitro. Here we report the characterization of neural progenitors isolated from the adult mammalian eye. These quiescent cells, located in the pigmented ciliary bodies, proliferate in the presence of FGF2 and express the neuroectodermal marker nestin. The proliferating cells give rise to neural spheres and are multipotential; they express cell type-specific markers corresponding to neurons and glia. In addition, neural progenitors can generate secondary neural spheres, thus displaying potential to self-renew. The ciliary body-derived neural progenitors display retina-specific properties; the undifferentiated cells express Chx10, a retinal progenitor marker, and upon differentiation express markers corresponding to specific retinal cell types. Therefore, the pigmented ciliary body in the adult mammalian eye harbors neural progenitors that display stem cell properties and have the capacity to give rise to retinal neurons in vitro.  相似文献   

3.
The identification of neural stem cells with retinal potential in the ciliary epithelium (CE) of the adult mammals is of considerable interest because of their potential for replacing or rescuing degenerating retinal neurons in disease or injury. The evaluation of such a potential requires characterization of these cells with regard to their phenotypic properties, potential, and regulatory mechanisms. Here, we demonstrate that rat CE stem cells/progenitors in neurosphere culture display astrocytic nature in terms of expressing glial intermediate neurofilament protein, GFAP. The GFAP-expressing CE stem cells/progenitors form neurospheres in proliferating conditions and generate neurons when shifted to differentiating conditions. These cells express components of the canonical Wnt pathway and its activation promotes their proliferation. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the activation of the canonical Wnt pathway influences neuronal differentiation of CE stem cells/progenitors in a context dependent manner. Our observations suggest that CE stem cells/progenitors share phenotypic properties and regulatory mechanism(s) with neural stem cells elsewhere in the adult CNS.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Neural stem cells are present in specific regions of the adult central nervous system (CNS). Recent evidence suggests that the ciliary epithelium (CE), a CNS derivative, in the adult mammalian eye, harbors a quiescent population of neural stem cells. Here, we report the identification of c-Kit signaling as one of the regulators of adult CE neural stem cells in vitro. c-Kit receptors are expressed in proliferating adult CE neural stem cells and colocalized with neural progenitor markers. Perturbation of c-Kit signaling influences the self-renewal and differentiation of CE neural stem cells, thus demonstrating the role of c-Kit signaling in the maintenance of these cells. In addition, we observed an influence of c-Kit-mediated signaling on the expression of Notch1, another critical regulator of neural stem cells. Our observations suggest that, given the importance of preservation of a stem cell pool for generating different cell types at different times, multiple signaling pathways act in concert for the maintenance of neural stem cells.  相似文献   

6.
LeX/SSEA1/CD15 is an extracellular matrix-associated carbohydrate expressed by ES cells and by adult neural and bone marrow stem cells. It is important for cell adhesion, compaction and FGF2 responses of early embryonic stem cells; however, its function at later stages is not clear. We now show that LeX is expressed by primary mouse neural progenitor cells, including neural stem cells, neuroblasts and glioblasts, but not by their more differentiated products. LeX distinguishes highly proliferative cells even in the primitive neuroepithelium, demonstrating heterogeneity in cell potential before radial glia arise. At later stages, LeX expressing progenitors are frequently radial in morphology. Surface LeX expression can be used to enrich neural stem and progenitor cells from different CNS regions throughout development by FACS. We found that LeX expression is particularly strong in neural regions with prolonged neurogenesis, e.g., the olfactory epithelium, hippocampus, basal forebrain and cerebellum. These regions also express high levels of the growth factors FGF8 and/or Wnt-1. We show here that LeX-containing molecules in the developing nervous system bind Wnt-1. Our findings suggest that LeX, which is present on the surface of principle neural progenitors and secreted into their extracellular niche, may bind and present growth factors important for their proliferation and self-renewal.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Cell differentiation lineage in the prostate   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Prostatic epithelium consists mainly of luminal and basal cells, which are presumed to differentiate from common progenitor/stem cells. We hypothesize that progenitor/stem cells are highly concentrated in the embryonic urogenital sinus epithelium from which prostatic epithelial buds develop. We further hypothesize that these epithelial progenitor/stem cells are also present within the basal compartment of adult prostatic epithelium and that the spectrum of differentiation markers of embryonic and adult progenitor/stem cells will be similar. The present study demonstrates that the majority of cells in embryonic urogenital sinus epithelium and developing prostatic epithelium (rat, mouse, and human) co-expressed luminal cytokeratins 8 and 18 (CK8, CK18), the basal cell cytokeratins (CK14, CK5), p63, and the so-called transitional or intermediate cell markers, cytokeratin 19 (CK19) and glutathione-S-transferase-pi (GSTpi). The majority of luminal cells in adult rodent and human prostates only expressed luminal markers (CK8, CK18), while the basal epithelial cell compartment contained several distinct subpopulations. In the adult prostate, the predominant basal epithelial subpopulation expressed the classical basal cell markers (CK5, CK14, p63) as well as CK19 and GSTpi. However, a small fraction of adult prostatic basal epithelial cells co-expressed the full spectrum of basal and luminal epithelial cell markers (CK5, CK14, CK8, CK18, CK19, p63, GSTpi). This adult prostatic basal epithelial cell subpopulation, thus, exhibited a cell differentiation marker profile similar to that expressed in embryonic urogenital sinus epithelium. These rare adult prostatic basal epithelial cells are proposed to be the progenitor/stem cell population. Thus, we propose that at all stages (embryonic to adult) prostatic epithelial progenitor/stem cells maintain a differentiation marker profile similar to that of the original embryonic progenitor of the prostate, namely urogenital sinus epithelium. Adult progenitor/stem cells co-express both luminal cell, basal cell, and intermediate cell markers. These progenitor/stem cells differentiate into mature luminal cells by maintaining CK8 and CK18, and losing all other makers. Progenitor/stem cells also give rise to mature basal cells by maintaining CK5, CK14, p63, CK19, and GSTpi and losing K8 and K18. Thus, adult prostate basal and luminal cells are proposed to be derived from a common pleuripotent progenitor/stem cell in the basal compartment that maintains its embryonic profile of differentiation markers from embryonic to adult stages.  相似文献   

9.
Although brain development abnormalities and brain cancer predisposition have been reported in some Fanconi patients, the possible role of Fanconi DNA repair pathway during neurogenesis is unclear. We thus addressed the role of fanca and fancg, which are involved in the activation of Fanconi pathway, in neural stem and progenitor cells during brain development and adult neurogenesis. Fanca(-/-) and fancg(-/-) mice presented with microcephalies and a decreased neuronal production in developing cortex and adult brain. Apoptosis of embryonic neural progenitors, but not that of postmitotic neurons, was increased in the neocortex of fanca(-/-) and fancg(-/-) mice and was correlated with chromosomal instability. In adult Fanconi mice, we showed a reduced proliferation of neural progenitor cells related to apoptosis and accentuated neural stem cells exhaustion with ageing. In addition, embryonic and adult Fanconi neural stem cells showed a reduced capacity to self-renew in vitro. Our study demonstrates a critical role for Fanconi pathway in neural stem and progenitor cells during developmental and adult neurogenesis.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Stem cells in the central nervous system were usually considered as relevant for evaluation only in embryonic time. Recent advances in molecular cloning and immunological identification of the different cell types prove the presence of neurogenesis of the new neurons in adult mammals brains. New neurons are born in two areas of the mammal and human brain--sybventricular zone and subgranular zone of dentate gyrus. New born granular neurons of dentate gyrus have a great importance for memory and learning. New neurons originate from precursors which in culture and in situ could also transform into astrocytes and oligodendrocytes, thus fulfill criteria of neural stem cells. In culture, mitotic activity of these stem sells depends on fibroblast growth factor 2 and epidermal growth factor. Depletion of cultural medium of these factors and addition of serum, other growth factors (Platelet-derived growth factor and ciliary neurotrophic factor) leads to generation of neurons and astrocytes. Isolation and clonal analysis of stem cells is based on immunological markers such as nestin, beta-tubulin III, some types of membrane glicoproteids. Identification and visualization of stem cells in brain revealed two populations of cells which have properties of stem cells. In embryonic time, radial glia cells could give origin to neurons, in mature brain cells expressing glial fibrillar acidic protein typical marker of astrocytes fulfill criteria for stem cells. Neural stem cells could transform not only into mature neurons and glial cells but also into blood cells, thus revealing broad spectrum of progenitors from different embryonic tissues. Further progress in this field of neurobiology could give prosperity in the cell therapy of many brain diseases.  相似文献   

12.
Neural crest progenitors and stem cells   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In the vertebrate embryo, multiple cell types originate from a common structure, the neural crest (NC), which forms at the dorsal tips of the neural epithelium. The NC gives rise to migratory cells that colonise a wide range of embryonic tissues and later differentiate into neurones and glial cells of the peripheral nervous system (PNS), pigment cells (melanocytes) in the skin and endocrine cells in the adrenal and thyroid glands. In the head and the neck, the NC also yields mesenchymal cells that form craniofacial cartilages, bones, dermis, adipose tissue, and vascular smooth muscle cells. The NC is therefore a model system to study cell diversification during embryogenesis and phenotype maintenance in the adult. By analysing the developmental potentials of quail NC cells in clonal cultures, we have shown that the migratory NC is a collection of heterogeneous progenitors, including various types of intermediate precursors and highly multipotent cells, some of which being endowed of self-renewal capacity. We also have identified common progenitors for mesenchymal derivatives and neural/melanocytic cells in the cephalic NC. These results are consistent with a hierarchical model of lineage segregation wherein environmental cytokines control the fate of progenitors and stem cells. One of these cytokines, the endothelin3 peptide, promotes the survival, proliferation, and self-renewal capacity of common progenitors for glial cells and melanocytes. At post-migratory stages, when they have already differentiated, NC-derived cells exhibit phenotypic plasticity. Epidermal pigment cells and Schwann cells from peripheral nerves in single-cell culture are able to reverse into multipotent NC-like progenitors endowed with self-renewal. Therefore, stem cell properties are expressed by a variety of NC progenitors and can be re-acquired by differentiated cells of NC origin, suggesting potential function for repair.  相似文献   

13.
14.
15.
Permanent functional deficit in patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) is in part due to severe neural cell death. Therefore, cell replacement using stem cells and neural progenitors that give rise to neurons and glia is thought to be a potent strategy to promote tissue repair after SCI. Many studies have shown that stem cells and neural progenitors can be isolated from embryonic, postnatal and adult spinal cords. Recently, we isolated neural progenitors from newborn rat spinal cords. In general, the neural progenitors grew as spheres in culture, and showed immunoreactivity to a neural progenitor cellular marker, nestin. They were found to proliferate and differentiate into glial fibrillary acidic protein-positive astroglia and multiple neuronal populations, including GABAergic and cholinergic neurons. Neurotrophin 3 and neurotrophin 4 enhanced the differentiation of neural progenitors into neurons. Furthermore, the neural progenitors that were transplanted into contusive spinal cords were found to survive and have migrated in the spinal cord rostrally and caudally over 8 mm to the lesion center 7 days after injury. Thus, the neural progenitors isolated from newborn rat spinal cords in combination with neurotrophic factors may provide a tool for cell therapy in SCI patients.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Cellular composition of the peripheral region of the eye in amphibians and mammals as well as embryonic fissure in amphibians was studied. Different distributions of proliferating cells in retinal pigment epithelium have been revealed in adult amphibians (newt, axolotl, and Xenopus). Single cells incorporated [3H]thymidine in the newt and Xenopus; 0.4% cells, in the axolotl. An embryonic fissure was observed in the eye of the axolotl. Pigment epithelial cells in the embryonic palpebral region actively proliferated: about 20% cells incorporated [3H]thymidine. Proliferating cells were also localized in the ciliary marginal zone of the retina in all studied amphibians, particularly, in the axolotl. In newborn hamsters, [3H]thymidine-labeled cells have been revealed in the pigment epithelium as well as in the outer pigmented and inner unpigmented layers of the ciliary body. Proliferative activity of the peripheral regions of the eye is due to eye growth in adult amphibians and newborn hamsters. After retinectomy, the retina is regenerated from the cells of the growth ciliary marginal zone in all amphibians, pigment epithelial cells in the newt, and pigment epithelial cells of the embryonic fissure in the axolotl. Heterogeneous composition of the pigment epithelium in the newt and axolotl reflects high transdifferentiation potential of these regions. Structural comparison of the peripheral region of the eye in amphibians and mammals demonstrate that the ciliary body of mammals containing stem cells is homologous to the ciliary marginal zone of amphibians containing multipotent cells.  相似文献   

18.
Knockout studies have shown that the polycomb gene Bmi-1 is important for postnatal, but not embryonic, neural stem cell (NSC) self-renewal and have identified the cell-cycle inhibitors p16/p19 as molecular targets. Here, using lentiviral-delivered shRNAs in vitro and in vivo, we determined that Bmi-1 is also important for NSC self-renewal in the embryo. We found that neural progenitors depend increasingly on Bmi-1 for proliferation as development proceeds from embryonic through adult stages. Acute shRNA-mediated Bmi-1 reduction causes defects in embryonic and adult NSC proliferation and self-renewal that, unexpectedly, are mediated by a different cell-cycle inhibitor, p21. Gene array analyses revealed developmental differences in Bmi-1-controlled expression of genes in the p21-Rb cell cycle regulatory pathway. Our data therefore implicate p21 as an important Bmi-1 target in NSCs, potentially with stage-related differences. Understanding stage-related mechanisms underlying NSC self-renewal has important implications for development of stem cell-based therapies.  相似文献   

19.
The adult mouse retinal stem cell (RSC) is a rare quiescent cell found within the ciliary epithelium (CE) of the mammalian eye1,2,3. The CE is made up of non-pigmented inner and pigmented outer cell layers, and the clonal RSC colonies that arise from a single pigmented cell from the CE are made up of both pigmented and non-pigmented cells which can be differentiated to form all the cell types of the neural retina and the RPE. There is some controversy about whether all the cells within the spheres all contain at least some pigment4; however the cells are still capable of forming the different cell types found within the neural retina1-3. In some species, such as amphibians and fish, their eyes are capable of regeneration after injury5, however; the mammalian eye shows no such regenerative properties. We seek to identify the stem cell in vivo and to understand the mechanisms that keep the mammalian retinal stem cells quiescent6-8, even after injury as well as using them as a potential source of cells to help repair physical or genetic models of eye injury through transplantation9-12. Here we describe how to isolate the ciliary epithelial cells from the mouse eye and grow them in culture in order to form the clonal retinal stem cell spheres. Since there are no known markers of the stem cell in vivo, these spheres are the only known way to prospectively identify the stem cell population within the ciliary epithelium of the eye.  相似文献   

20.
The dentate gyrus has an important role in learning and memory, and adult neurogenesis in the subgranular zone of the dentate gyrus may play a role in the acquisition of new memories. The homeobox gene Prox1 is expressed in the dentate gyrus during embryonic development and adult neurogenesis. Here we show that Prox1 is necessary for the maturation of granule cells in the dentate gyrus during development and for the maintenance of intermediate progenitors during adult neurogenesis. We also demonstrate that Prox1-expressing intermediate progenitors are required for adult neural stem cell self-maintenance in the subgranular zone; thus, we have identified a previously unknown non-cell autonomous regulatory feedback mechanism that controls adult neurogenesis in this region of the mammalian brain. Finally, we show that the ectopic expression of Prox1 induces premature differentiation of neural stem cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号