Overexpression of basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors enhances neuronal differentiation of fetal human neural progenitor cells in various ways. Serre, A; Snyder, EY; Mallet, J; Buchet, D Stem cells and development
21
539-53
2011
Abstract anzeigen
In a perspective of regenerative medicine, multipotent human neural progenitor cells (hNPCs) offer a therapeutic advantage over pluripotent stem cells in that they are already invariantly "neurally committed" and lack tumorigenicity. However, some of their intrinsic properties, such as slow differentiation and uncontrolled multipotency, remain among the obstacles to their routine use for transplantation. Although rodent NPCs have been genetically modified in vitro to overcome some of these limitations, the translation of this strategy to human cells remains in its early stages. In the present study, we compare the actions of 4 basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors on the proliferation, specification, and terminal differentiation of hNPCs isolated from the fetal dorsal telencephalon. Consistent with their proneural activity, Ngn1, Ngn2, Ngn3, and Mash1 prompted rapid commitment of the cells. The Ngns induced a decrease in proliferation, whereas Mash1 maintained committed progenitors in a proliferative state. As opposed to Ngn1 and Ngn3, which had no effect on glial differentiation, Ngn2 induced an increase in astrocytes in addition to neurons, whereas Mash1 led to both neuronal and oligodendroglial specification. GABAergic, cholinergic, and motor neuron differentiations were considerably increased by overexpression of Ngn2 and, to a lesser extent, of Ngn3 and Mash1. Thus, we provide evidence that hNPCs can be efficiently, rapidly, and safely expanded in vitro as well as rapidly differentiated toward mature neural (typically neuronal) lineages by the overexpression of select proneural genes. | Immunocytochemistry | Human | 21561385
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Localization of type-2 angiotensin II receptor in adrenal gland. Harada, K; Matsuoka, H; Fujimoto, N; Endo, Y; Hasegawa, Y; Matsuo, A; Kikuchi, Y; Matsumoto, T; Inoue, M The journal of histochemistry and cytochemistry : official journal of the Histochemistry Society
58
585-93
2009
Abstract anzeigen
The localization of the type-2 angiotensin II receptor (AT2) in the adrenal glands of rats, guinea pigs, bovines, and humans was examined at the mRNA and protein levels. PCR products for AT2 were detected in the adrenal cortices and adrenal medullae of all the mammals examined with an RT-PCR technique. Three different anti-AT2 antibodies (Abs), whose specificity was confirmed in our hands, recognized a 50-kDa protein in the adrenal glands of the four mammals, and this recognition was abolished by the preabsorption of an Ab with an antigen. Immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry revealed that the 50-kDa protein was expressed consistently and variably in the adrenal cortices and medullae of various mammals, respectively. We conclude that the 50-kDa AT2 is consistently expressed in the adrenal cortex in a wide variety of mammals. Volltextartikel | | | 20231739
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Molecular mechanisms supporting a paracrine role of GABA in rat adrenal medullary cells. Matsuoka, H; Harada, K; Endo, Y; Warashina, A; Doi, Y; Nakamura, J; Inoue, M The Journal of physiology
586
4825-42
2008
Abstract anzeigen
GABA is known to produce membrane depolarization and secretion in adrenal medullary (AM) cells in various species. However, whether the GABAergic system is intrinsic or extrinsic or both in the adrenal medulla and the role that GABA plays are controversial. Therefore, these issues were addressed by combining a biochemical and functional analysis. Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), a GABA synthesizing enzyme, and vesicular GABA transporter (VGAT) were expressed in rat AM cells at the mRNA and protein levels, and the adrenal medulla had no nerve fibre-like structures immunoreactive to an anti-GAD Ab. The double staining for VGAT and chromogranin A indicates that GABA was stored in chromaffin granules. The alpha1, alpha3, beta2/3, gamma2 and delta subunits of GABA(A) receptors were identified in AM cells at the mRNA and protein levels. Pharmacological properties of GABA-induced Cl(-) currents, immunoprecipitation experiments and immunocytochemistry indicated the expression of not only gamma2-, but also delta-containing GABA(A) receptors, which have higher affinities for GABA and neurosteroids. Expression of GATs, which are involved in the clearance of GABA at GABAergic synapses, were conspicuously suppressed in the adrenal medulla, compared with expression levels of GABA(A) receptors. Increases in Ca(2+) signal in AM cells evoked trans-synaptically by nerve stimulation were suppressed during the response to GABA, and this suppression was attributed to the shunt effect of the GABA-induced increase in conductance. Overall Ca(2+) responses to electrical stimulation and GABA in AM cells were larger or smaller than those to electrical stimulation alone, depending on the frequency of stimulation. The results indicate that GABA functions as a paracrine in rat AM cells and this function may be supported by the suppression of GAT expression and the expression of not only gamma2-, but also delta-GABA(A) receptors. | Immunocytochemistry | | 18755746
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Marked dissociation between high noradrenaline versus low noradrenaline transporter levels in human nucleus accumbens. Junchao Tong, Oleh Hornykiewicz, Yoshiaki Furukawa, Stephen J Kish Journal of neurochemistry
102
1691-702
2007
Abstract anzeigen
We recently identified a noradrenaline-rich caudomedial subdivision of the human nucleus accumbens (NACS), implying a special function for noradrenaline in this basal forebrain area involved in motivation and reward. To establish whether the NACS, as would be expected, contains similarly high levels of other noradrenergic markers, we measured dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DBH) and noradrenaline transporter in the accumbens and, for comparison, in 23 other brain regions in autopsied human brains by immunoblotting. Although the caudomedial NACS had high DBH levels similar to those in other noradrenaline-rich areas, the noradrenaline transporter concentration was low (only 11% of that in hypothalamus). Within the accumbens, transporter concentration in the caudal portion was only slightly (by 30%) higher than that in the rostral subdivisions despite sharply increasing rostrocaudal gradients of noradrenaline (15-fold) and DBH. In contrast, the rostrocaudal gradient in the accumbens for the serotonin transporter and serotonin were similar (2-fold increase). The caudomedial NACS thus appears to represent the only instance in human brain having a striking mismatch in high levels of a monoamine neurotransmitter versus low levels of its uptake transporter. This suggests that noradrenaline signalling is much less spatially and temporally restricted in the caudomedial accumbens than in other noradrenaline-rich brain areas. | | | 17484728
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