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Expression Analysis of the Hippo Cascade Indicates a Role in Pituitary Stem Cell Development

Front. Physiol.

2016 Mar 14

Lodge EJ, Russell JP, Patist AL, Francis-West P, Andoniadou CL.
PMID: - | DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2016.00114

The pituitary gland is a primary endocrine organ that controls major physiological processes. Abnormal development or homeostatic disruptions can lead to human disorders such as hypopituitarism or tumours. Multiple signalling pathways, including WNT, BMP, FGF and SHH regulate pituitary development but the role of the Hippo-YAP1/TAZ cascade is currently unknown. In multiple tissues, the Hippo kinase cascade underlies neoplasias; it influences organ size through the regulation of proliferation and apoptosis, and has roles in determining stem cell potential. We have used a sensitive mRNA in situ hybridisation method (RNAscope) to determine the expression patterns of the Hippo pathway components during mouse pituitary development. We have also carried out immunolocalisation studies to determine when YAP1 and TAZ, the transcriptional effectors of the Hippo pathway, are active. We find that YAP1/TAZ are active in the stem/progenitor cell population throughout development and at postnatal stages, consistent with their role in promoting the stem cell state. Our results demonstrate for the first time the collective expression of major components of the Hippo pathway during normal embryonic and postnatal development of the pituitary gland.

Single-cell dissection of the obesity-exercise axis in adipose-muscle tissues implies a critical role for mesenchymal stem cells

Cell metabolism

2022 Oct 04

Yang, J;Vamvini, M;Nigro, P;Ho, LL;Galani, K;Alvarez, M;Tanigawa, Y;Renfro, A;Carbone, NP;Laakso, M;Agudelo, LZ;Pajukanta, P;Hirshman, MF;Middelbeek, RJW;Grove, K;Goodyear, LJ;Kellis, M;
PMID: 36198295 | DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2022.09.004

Exercise training is critical for the prevention and treatment of obesity, but its underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood given the challenge of profiling heterogeneous effects across multiple tissues and cell types. Here, we address this challenge and opposing effects of exercise and high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity at single-cell resolution in subcutaneous and visceral white adipose tissue and skeletal muscle in mice with diet and exercise training interventions. We identify a prominent role of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in obesity and exercise-induced tissue adaptation. Among the pathways regulated by exercise and HFD in MSCs across the three tissues, extracellular matrix remodeling and circadian rhythm are the most prominent. Inferred cell-cell interactions implicate within- and multi-tissue crosstalk centered around MSCs. Overall, our work reveals the intricacies and diversity of multi-tissue molecular responses to exercise and obesity and uncovers a previously underappreciated role of MSCs in tissue-specific and multi-tissue beneficial effects of exercise.
The Thrombin Receptor Restricts Subventricular Zone Neural Stem Cell Expansion and Differentiation

Sci Rep.

2018 Jun 19

Choi Cl, Yoon H, Drucker KL, Langley MR, Kleppe L, Scarisbrick IA.
PMID: 29921916 | DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-27613-9

Thrombin is frequently increased in the CNS after injury yet little is known regarding its effects on neural stem cells. Here we show that the subventricular zone (SVZ) of adult mice lacking the high affinity receptor for thrombin, proteinase activated receptor 1 (PAR1), show increased numbers of Sox2+ and Ki-67+ self-renewing neural stem cells (NSCs) and Olig2+ oligodendrocyte progenitors. SVZ NSCs derived from PAR1-knockout mice, or treated with a PAR1 small molecule inhibitor (SCH79797), exhibited enhanced capacity for self-renewal in vitro, including increases in neurosphere formation and BrdU incorporation. PAR1-knockout SVZ monolayer cultures contained more Nestin, NG2+ and Olig2+ cells indicative of enhancements in expansion and differentiation towards the oligodendrocyte lineage. Cultures of NSCs lacking PAR1 also expressed higher levels of myelin basic protein, proteolipid protein and glial fibrillary acidic protein upon differentiation. Complementing these findings, the corpus callosum and anterior commissure of adult PAR1-knockout mice contained greater numbers of Olig2+ progenitors and CC1+ mature oligodendrocytes. Together these findings highlight PAR1 inhibition as a means to expand adult SVZ NSCs and to promote an increased number of mature myelinating oligodendrocytes in vivo that may be of particular benefit in the context of neural injury where PAR1 agonists such as thrombin are deregulated.

RNA velocity of single cells

Nature.

2018 Aug 08

La Manno G, Soldatov R, Zeisel A, Braun E, Hochgerner H, Petukhov V, Lidschreiber K, Kastriti ME, Lönnerberg P, Furlan A, Fan J, Borm LE, Liu Z, van Bruggen D, Guo J, He X, Barker R, Sundström E, Castelo-Branco G, Cramer P, Adameyko I, Linnarsson S, Kharc
PMID: 30089906 | DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0414-6

RNA abundance is a powerful indicator of the state of individual cells. Single-cell RNA sequencing can reveal RNA abundance with high quantitative accuracy, sensitivity and throughput1. However, this approach captures only a static snapshot at a point in time, posing a challenge for the analysis of time-resolved phenomena such as embryogenesis or tissue regeneration. Here we show that RNA velocity-the time derivative of the gene expression state-can be directly estimated by distinguishing between unspliced and spliced mRNAs in common single-cell RNA sequencing protocols. RNA velocity is a high-dimensional vector that predicts the future state of individual cells on a timescale of hours. We validate its accuracy in the neural crest lineage, demonstrate its use on multiple published datasets and technical platforms, reveal the branching lineage tree of the developing mouse hippocampus, and examine the kinetics of transcription in human embryonic brain. We expect RNA velocity to greatly aid the analysis of developmental lineages and cellular dynamics, particularly in humans.

A human forebrain organoid model of fragile X syndrome exhibits altered neurogenesis and highlights new treatment strategies

Nature neuroscience

2021 Aug 19

Kang, Y;Zhou, Y;Li, Y;Han, Y;Xu, J;Niu, W;Li, Z;Liu, S;Feng, H;Huang, W;Duan, R;Xu, T;Raj, N;Zhang, F;Dou, J;Xu, C;Wu, H;Bassell, GJ;Warren, ST;Allen, EG;Jin, P;Wen, Z;
PMID: 34413513 | DOI: 10.1038/s41593-021-00913-6

Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is caused by the loss of fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP), an RNA-binding protein that can regulate the translation of specific mRNAs. In this study, we developed an FXS human forebrain organoid model and observed that the loss of FMRP led to dysregulated neurogenesis, neuronal maturation and neuronal excitability. Bulk and single-cell gene expression analyses of FXS forebrain organoids revealed that the loss of FMRP altered gene expression in a cell-type-specific manner. The developmental deficits in FXS forebrain organoids could be rescued by inhibiting the phosphoinositide 3-kinase pathway but not the metabotropic glutamate pathway disrupted in the FXS mouse model. We identified a large number of human-specific mRNAs bound by FMRP. One of these human-specific FMRP targets, CHD2, contributed to the altered gene expression in FXS organoids. Collectively, our study revealed molecular, cellular and electrophysiological abnormalities associated with the loss of FMRP during human brain development.
Plasticity within the niche ensures the maintenance of a Sox2+ stem cell population in the mouse incisor

Development.

2017 Nov 27

Sanz-Navarro M, Seidel K, Sun Z, Bertonnier-Brouty L, Amendt BA, Klein OD, Michon F.
PMID: 29180573 | DOI: 10.1242/dev.155929

In mice, the incisors grow throughout the animal's life, and this continuous renewal is driven by dental epithelial and mesenchymal stem cells. Sox2 is a principal marker of the epithelial stem cells that reside in the mouse incisor stem cell niche, called the labial cervical loop, but relatively little is known about the role of the Sox2+ stem cell population. In this study, we show that conditional deletion of Sox2 in the embryonic incisor epithelium leads to growth defects and impairment of ameloblast lineage commitment. Deletion of Sox2 specifically in Sox2+ cells during incisor renewal revealed cellular plasticity that leads to the relatively rapid restoration of a Sox2-expressing cell population. Furthermore, we show that Lgr5-expressing cells are a subpopulation of dental Sox2+ cells that also arise from Sox2+ cells during tooth formation. Finally, we show that the embryonic and adult Sox2+ populations are regulated by distinct signaling pathways, which is reflected in their distinct transcriptomic signatures. Together, our findings demonstrate the heterogeneity of the Sox2+ population and reinforce its importance for incisor homeostasis.

Expression of Embryonic Stem Cell Markers in Microcystic Lymphatic Malformation

Lymphat Res Biol

2019 Mar 22

Eady EK, Brasch HD, de Jongh J, Marsh RW, Tan ST and Itinteang T
PMID: 30901291 | DOI: 10.1089/lrb.2018.0046

AIM: To investigate the expression of embryonic stem cell (ESC) markers in microcystic lymphatic malformation (mLM). METHODS AND RESULTS: Cervicofacial mLM tissue samples from nine patients underwent 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (DAB) immunohistochemical (IHC) staining for ESC markers octamer-binding protein 4 (OCT4), homeobox protein NANOG, sex determining region Y-box 2 (SOX2), Krupple-like factor (KLF4), and proto-oncogene c-MYC. Transcriptional activation of these ESC markers was investigated using real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) and colorimetric in situ hybridization (CISH) on four and five of these mLM tissue samples, respectively. Immunofluorescence (IF) IHC staining was performed on three of these mLM tissue samples to investigate localization of these ESC markers. DAB and IF IHC staining demonstrated the expression of OCT4, SOX2, NANOG, KLF4, and c-MYC on the endothelium of lesional vessels with abundant expression of c-MYC and SOX2, which was also present on the cells within the stroma, in all nine mLM tissue samples. RT-qPCR and CISH confirmed transcriptional activation of all these ESC markers investigated. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest the presence of a primitive population on the endothelium of lesional vessels and the surrounding stroma in mLM. The abundant expression of the progenitor-associated markers SOX2 and c-MYC suggests that the majority are of progenitor phenotype with a small number of ESC-like cells.
Onset of differentiation is post-transcriptionally controlled in adult neural stem cells

Nature

2019 Jan 30

Baser A, Skabkin M, Kleber S, Dang Y, Gülcüler Balta GS, Kalamakis G, Göpferich M, Ibañez DC, Schefzik R, Lopez AS, Bobadilla EL, Schultz C, Fischer B, Martin-Villalba A.
PMID: 30700908 | DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-0888-x

Whether post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression controls differentiation of stem cells for tissue renewal remains unknown. Quiescent stem cells exhibit a low level of protein synthesis1, which is key to maintaining the pool of fully functional stem cells, not only in the brain but also in the bone marrow and hair follicles2-6. Neurons also maintain a subset of messenger RNAs in a translationally silent state, which react 'on demand' to intracellular and extracellular signals. This uncoupling of general availability of mRNA from translation into protein facilitates immediate responses to environmental changes and avoids excess production of proteins, which is the most energy-consuming process within the cell. However, when post-transcriptional regulation is acquired and how protein synthesis changes along the different steps of maturation are not known. Here we show that protein synthesis undergoes highly dynamic changes when stem cells differentiate to neurons in vivo. Examination of individual transcripts using RiboTag mouse models reveals that whereas stem cells translate abundant transcripts with little discrimination, translation becomes increasingly regulated with the onset of differentiation. The generation of neurogenic progeny involves translational repression of a subset of mRNAs, including mRNAs that encode the stem cell identity factors SOX2 and PAX6, and components of the translation machinery, which are enriched in a pyrimidine-rich motif. The decrease of mTORC1 activity as stem cells exit the cell cycle selectively blocks translation of these transcripts. Our results reveal a control mechanism by which the cell cycle is coupled to post-transcriptional repression of key stem cell identity factors, thereby promoting exit from stemness.

Neural network learning defines glioblastoma features to be of neural crest perivascular or radial glia lineages

Science advances

2022 Jun 10

Hu, Y;Jiang, Y;Behnan, J;Ribeiro, MM;Kalantzi, C;Zhang, MD;Lou, D;Häring, M;Sharma, N;Okawa, S;Del Sol, A;Adameyko, I;Svensson, M;Persson, O;Ernfors, P;
PMID: 35675414 | DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abm6340

Glioblastoma is believed to originate from nervous system cells; however, a putative origin from vessel-associated progenitor cells has not been considered. We deeply single-cell RNA-sequenced glioblastoma progenitor cells of 18 patients and integrated 710 bulk tumors and 73,495 glioma single cells of 100 patients to determine the relation of glioblastoma cells to normal brain cell types. A novel neural network-based projection of the developmental trajectory of normal brain cells uncovered two principal cell-lineage features of glioblastoma, neural crest perivascular and radial glia, carrying defining methylation patterns and survival differences. Consistently, introducing tumorigenic alterations in naïve human brain perivascular cells resulted in brain tumors. Thus, our results suggest that glioblastoma can arise from the brains' vasculature, and patients with such glioblastoma have a significantly poorer outcome.
Myeloid cell interferon secretion restricts Zika flavivirus infection of developing and malignant human neural progenitor cells

Neuron

2022 Sep 26

Bulstrode, H;Girdler, GC;Gracia, T;Aivazidis, A;Moutsopoulos, I;Young, AMH;Hancock, J;He, X;Ridley, K;Xu, Z;Stockley, JH;Finlay, J;Hallou, C;Fajardo, T;Fountain, DM;van Dongen, S;Joannides, A;Morris, R;Mair, R;Watts, C;Santarius, T;Price, SJ;Hutchinson, PJA;Hodson, EJ;Pollard, SM;Mohorianu, I;Barker, RA;Sweeney, TR;Bayraktar, O;Gergely, F;Rowitch, DH;
PMID: 36174572 | DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.09.002

Zika virus (ZIKV) can infect human developing brain (HDB) progenitors resulting in epidemic microcephaly, whereas analogous cellular tropism offers treatment potential for the adult brain cancer, glioblastoma (GBM). We compared productive ZIKV infection in HDB and GBM primary tissue explants that both contain SOX2+ neural progenitors. Strikingly, although the HDB proved uniformly vulnerable to ZIKV infection, GBM was more refractory, and this correlated with an innate immune expression signature. Indeed, GBM-derived CD11b+ microglia/macrophages were necessary and sufficient to protect progenitors against ZIKV infection in a non-cell autonomous manner. Using SOX2+ GBM cell lines, we found that CD11b+-conditioned medium containing type 1 interferon beta (IFNβ) promoted progenitor resistance to ZIKV, whereas inhibition of JAK1/2 signaling restored productive infection. Additionally, CD11b+ conditioned medium, and IFNβ treatment rendered HDB progenitor lines and explants refractory to ZIKV. These findings provide insight into neuroprotection for HDB progenitors as well as enhanced GBM oncolytic therapies.
Robust Colonic Epithelial Regeneration and Amelioration of Colitis via FZD-Specific Activation of Wnt Signaling

Cellular and molecular gastroenterology and hepatology

2022 May 13

Xie, L;Fletcher, RB;Bhatia, D;Shah, D;Phipps, J;Deshmukh, S;Zhang, H;Ye, J;Lee, S;Le, L;Newman, M;Chen, H;Sura, A;Gupta, S;Sanman, LE;Yang, F;Meng, W;Baribault, H;Vanhove, GF;Yeh, WC;Li, Y;Lu, C;
PMID: 35569814 | DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2022.05.003

Current management of inflammatory bowel disease leaves a clear unmet need to treat the severe epithelial damage. Modulation of Wnt signaling might present an opportunity to achieve histological remission and mucosal healing when treating IBD. Exogenous R-spondin, which amplifies Wnt signals by maintaining cell surface expression of Frizzled (Fzd) and low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein receptors, not only helps repair intestine epithelial damage, but also induces hyperplasia of normal epithelium. Wnt signaling may also be modulated with the recently developed Wnt mimetics, recombinant antibody-based molecules mimicking endogenous Wnts.We first compared the epithelial healing effects of RSPO2 and a Wnt mimetic with broad Fzd specificity in an acute dextran sulfate sodium mouse colitis model. Guided by Fzd expression patterns in the colon epithelium, we also examined the effects of Wnt mimetics with subfamily Fzd specificities.In the DSS model, Wnt mimetics repaired damaged colon epithelium and reduced disease activity and inflammation and had no apparent effect on uninjured tissue. We further identified that the FZD5/8 and LRP6 receptor-specific Wnt mimetic, SZN-1326-p, was associated with the robust repair effect. Through a range of approaches including single-cell transcriptome analyses, we demonstrated that SZN-1326-p directly impacted epithelial cells, driving transient expansion of stem and progenitor cells, promoting differentiation of epithelial cells, histologically restoring the damaged epithelium, and secondarily to epithelial repair, reducing inflammation.It is feasible to design Wnt mimetics such as SZN-1326-p that impact damaged intestine epithelium specifically and restore its physiological functions, an approach that holds promise for treating epithelial damage in inflammatory bowel disease.
Dynamic and adaptive cancer stem cell population admixture in colorectal neoplasia

Cell stem cell

2022 Aug 04

Vasquez, EG;Nasreddin, N;Valbuena, GN;Mulholland, EJ;Belnoue-Davis, HL;Eggington, HR;Schenck, RO;Wouters, VM;Wirapati, P;Gilroy, K;Lannagan, TRM;Flanagan, DJ;Najumudeen, AK;Omwenga, S;McCorry, AMB;Easton, A;Koelzer, VH;East, JE;Morton, D;Trusolino, L;Maughan, T;Campbell, AD;Loughrey, MB;Dunne, PD;Tsantoulis, P;Huels, DJ;Tejpar, S;Sansom, OJ;Leedham, SJ;
PMID: 35931031 | DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2022.07.008

Intestinal homeostasis is underpinned by LGR5+ve crypt-base columnar stem cells (CBCs), but following injury, dedifferentiation results in the emergence of LGR5-ve regenerative stem cell populations (RSCs), characterized by fetal transcriptional profiles. Neoplasia hijacks regenerative signaling, so we assessed the distribution of CBCs and RSCs in mouse and human intestinal tumors. Using combined molecular-morphological analysis, we demonstrate variable expression of stem cell markers across a range of lesions. The degree of CBC-RSC admixture was associated with both epithelial mutation and microenvironmental signaling disruption and could be mapped across disease molecular subtypes. The CBC-RSC equilibrium was adaptive, with a dynamic response to acute selective pressure, and adaptability was associated with chemoresistance. We propose a fitness landscape model where individual tumors have equilibrated stem cell population distributions along a CBC-RSC phenotypic axis. Cellular plasticity is represented by position shift along this axis and is influenced by cell-intrinsic, extrinsic, and therapeutic selective pressures.

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Description
sense
Example: Hs-LAG3-sense
Standard probes for RNA detection are in antisense. Sense probe is reverse complent to the corresponding antisense probe.
Intron#
Example: Mm-Htt-intron2
Probe targets the indicated intron in the target gene, commonly used for pre-mRNA detection
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Example: Hs-CD3-pool (Hs-CD3D, Hs-CD3E, Hs-CD3G)
A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts
No-XSp
Example: Hs-PDGFB-No-XMm
Does not cross detect with the species (Sp)
XSp
Example: Rn-Pde9a-XMm
designed to cross detect with the species (Sp)
O#
Example: Mm-Islr-O1
Alternative design targeting different regions of the same transcript or isoforms
CDS
Example: Hs-SLC31A-CDS
Probe targets the protein-coding sequence only
EnEmProbe targets exons n and m
En-EmProbe targets region from exon n to exon m
Retired Nomenclature
tvn
Example: Hs-LEPR-tv1
Designed to target transcript variant n
ORF
Example: Hs-ACVRL1-ORF
Probe targets open reading frame
UTR
Example: Hs-HTT-UTR-C3
Probe targets the untranslated region (non-protein-coding region) only
5UTR
Example: Hs-GNRHR-5UTR
Probe targets the 5' untranslated region only
3UTR
Example: Rn-Npy1r-3UTR
Probe targets the 3' untranslated region only
Pan
Example: Pool
A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts

Enabling research, drug development (CDx) and diagnostics

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