Mou, TM;Lane, MV;Ireland, DDC;Verthelyi, D;Tonelli, LH;Clark, SM;
PMID: 35995342 | DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2022.105840
An early inflammatory insult is the most recognized risk factor associated with neurodevelopmental psychiatric disorders, even more so than genetic variants. Notably, complement component 4 (C4), a molecule involved in inflammatory responses, has been strongly associated with schizophrenia (SZ) and its role in other neurodevelopmental disorders, such as autism (ASD), is an area of active investigation. However, while C4 in SZ has been implicated in the context of synaptic pruning, little is known about its neuroinflammatory role. The subventricular zone (SVZ) is a region heavily involved in neurodevelopment and neuroimmune interactions through the lifespan; thus, it is a region wherein C4 may play a vital role in disease pathology. Using in situ hybridization with radioactive riboprobes and RNAscope, we identified robust astrocytic expression of C4 in the SVZ and in the septum pellucidum. C4 was also expressed in ependyma, neurons, and Ki67+ progenitor cells. Examination of mRNA levels showed elevated C4 in both ASD and SZ, with higher expression in SZ compared to controls. Targeted transcriptomic analysis of inflammatory pathways revealed a strong association of complement system genes with SZ, and to a lesser extent, ASD, as well as generalized immune dysregulation without a strong association with known infectious pathways. Analysis of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) showed that ASD DEGs were enriched in adaptive immune system functions such as Th cell differentiation, while SZ DEGs were enriched in innate immune system functions, including NF-κB and toll like receptor signaling. Moreover, the number of Ki67+ cells was significantly higher in ASD compared to SZ and controls. Taken together, these results support a role for C4 into inflammatory-neuroimmune dysregulation observed in SZ and ASD pathology.
Ribeiro, M;Ayupe, AC;Beckedorff, FC;Levay, K;Rodriguez, S;Tsoulfas, P;Lee, JK;Nascimento-Dos-Santos, G;Park, KK;
PMID: 35738417 | DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2022.114147
Following injury in the central nervous system, a population of astrocytes occupy the lesion site, form glial bridges and facilitate axon regeneration. These astrocytes originate primarily from resident astrocytes or NG2+ oligodendrocyte progenitor cells. However, the extent to which these cell types give rise to the lesion-filling astrocytes, and whether the astrocytes derived from different cell types contribute similarly to optic nerve regeneration remain unclear. Here we examine the distribution of astrocytes and NG2+ cells in an optic nerve crush model. We show that optic nerve astrocytes partially fill the injury site over time after a crush injury. Viral mediated expression of a growth-promoting factor, ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), in retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) promotes axon regeneration without altering the lesion size or the degree of lesion-filling GFAP+ cells. Strikingly, using inducible NG2CreER driver mice, we found that CNTF overexpression in RGCs increases the occupancy of NG2+ cell-derived astrocytes in the optic nerve lesion. An EdU pulse-chase experiment shows that the increase in NG2 cell-derived astrocytes is not due to an increase in cell proliferation. Lastly, we performed RNA-sequencing on the injured optic nerve and reveal that CNTF overexpression in RGCs results in significant changes in the expression of distinct genes, including those that encode chemokines, growth factor receptors, and immune cell modulators. Even though CNTF-induced axon regeneration has long been recognized, this is the first evidence of this procedure affecting glial cell fate at the optic nerve crush site. We discuss possible implication of these results for axon regeneration.
Guyer, RA;Stavely, R;Robertson, K;Bhave, S;Mueller, JL;Picard, NM;Hotta, R;Kaltschmidt, JA;Goldstein, AM;
PMID: 36857184 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2023.112194
The enteric nervous system (ENS) consists of glial cells (EGCs) and neurons derived from neural crest precursors. EGCs retain capacity for large-scale neurogenesis in culture, and in vivo lineage tracing has identified neurons derived from glial cells in response to inflammation. We thus hypothesize that EGCs possess a chromatin structure poised for neurogenesis. We use single-cell multiome sequencing to simultaneously assess transcription and chromatin accessibility in EGCs undergoing spontaneous neurogenesis in culture, as well as small intestine myenteric plexus EGCs. Cultured EGCs maintain open chromatin at genomic loci accessible in neurons, and neurogenesis from EGCs involves dynamic chromatin rearrangements with a net decrease in accessible chromatin. A subset of in vivo EGCs, highly enriched within the myenteric ganglia and that persist into adulthood, have a gene expression program and chromatin state consistent with neurogenic potential. These results clarify the mechanisms underlying EGC potential for neuronal fate transition.
Inhibition of the cGAS-STING pathway ameliorates the premature senescence hallmarks of Ataxia-Telangiectasia brain organoids
Aguado, J;Chaggar, HK;Gómez-Inclán, C;Shaker, MR;Leeson, HC;Mackay-Sim, A;Wolvetang, EJ;
PMID: 34459078 | DOI: 10.1111/acel.13468
Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is a genetic disorder caused by the lack of functional ATM kinase. A-T is characterized by chronic inflammation, neurodegeneration and premature ageing features that are associated with increased genome instability, nuclear shape alterations, micronuclei accumulation, neuronal defects and premature entry into cellular senescence. The causal relationship between the detrimental inflammatory signature and the neurological deficiencies of A-T remains elusive. Here, we utilize human pluripotent stem cell-derived cortical brain organoids to study A-T neuropathology. Mechanistically, we show that the cGAS-STING pathway is required for the recognition of micronuclei and induction of a senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) in A-T olfactory neurosphere-derived cells and brain organoids. We further demonstrate that cGAS and STING inhibition effectively suppresses self-DNA-triggered SASP expression in A-T brain organoids, inhibits astrocyte senescence and neurodegeneration, and ameliorates A-T brain organoid neuropathology. Our study thus reveals that increased cGAS and STING activity is an important contributor to chronic inflammation and premature senescence in the central nervous system of A-T and constitutes a novel therapeutic target for treating neuropathology in A-T patients.
Unveiling Complexity and Multipotentiality of Early Heart Fields
Zhang, Q;Carlin, D;Zhu, F;Cattaneo, P;Ideker, T;Evans, SM;Bloomekatz, J;Chi, NC;
PMID: 34162224 | DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.121.318943
Rationale: Extraembryonic tissues, including the yolk sac and placenta, and the heart within the embryo, work to provide crucial nutrients to the embryo. The association of congenital heart defects (CHDs) with extraembryonic tissue defects further supports the potential developmental relationship between the heart and extraembryonic tissues. Although the development of early cardiac lineages has been well-studied, the developmental relationship between cardiac lineages, including epicardium, and extraembryonic mesoderm remains to be defined. Objective: To explore the developmental relationships between cardiac and extraembryonic lineages. Methods and Results: Through high-resolution single cell and genetic lineage/clonal analyses, we show an unsuspected clonal relationship between extraembryonic mesoderm and cardiac lineages. Single-cell transcriptomics and trajectory analyses uncovered two mesodermal progenitor sources contributing to left ventricle cardiomyocytes, one embryonic and the other with an extraembryonic gene expression signature. Additional lineage-tracing studies revealed that the extraembryonic-related progenitors reside at the embryonic-extraembryonic interface in gastrulating embryos, and produce distinct cell types forming the pericardium, septum transversum, epicardium, dorsolateral regions of the left ventricle and atrioventricular canal myocardium, and extraembryonic mesoderm. Clonal analyses demonstrated that these progenitors are multipotent, giving rise to not only cardiomyocytes and serosal mesothelial cell types but also, remarkably, extraembryonic mesoderm. Conclusions: Overall, our results reveal the location of previously unknown multipotent cardiovascular progenitors at the embryonic-extraembryonic interface, and define the earliest embryonic origins of serosal mesothelial lineages, including the epicardium, which contributes fibroblasts and vascular support cells to the heart. The shared lineage relationship between embryonic cardiovascular lineages and extraembryonic mesoderm revealed by our studies underscores an underappreciated blurring of boundaries between embryonic and extraembryonic mesoderm. Our findings suggest unexpected underpinnings of the association between congenital heart disease and placental insufficiency anomalies, and the potential utility of extraembryonic cells for generating cardiovascular cell types for heart repair.