Teng CS, Ting MC, Farmer DT, Brockop M, Maxson RE, Crump JG.
PMID: 30375332 | DOI: 10.7554/eLife.37024
Cranial sutures separate the skull bones and house stem cells for bone growth and repair. In Saethre-Chotzen syndrome, mutations in TCF12 or TWIST1 ablate a specific suture, the coronal. This suture forms at a neural-crest/mesoderm interface in mammals and a mesoderm/mesoderm interface in zebrafish. Despite this difference, we show that combinatorial loss of TCF12 and TWIST1 homologs in zebrafish also results in specific loss of the coronal suture. Sequential bone staining reveals an initial, directional acceleration of bone production in the mutant skull, with subsequent localized stalling of bone growth prefiguring coronal suture loss. Mouse genetics further reveal requirements for Twist1 and Tcf12 in both the frontal and parietal bones for suture patency, and to maintain putative progenitors in the coronal region. These findings reveal conservation of coronal suture formation despite evolutionary shifts in embryonic origins, and suggest that the coronal suture might be especially susceptible to imbalances in progenitor maintenance and osteoblast differentiation.
von Schimmelmann M, Feinberg PA, Sullivan JM, Ku SM, Badimon A, Duff MK, Wang Z, Lachmann A, Dewell S, Ma'ayan A, Han MH, Tarakhovsky A, Schaefer A.
PMID: 27526204 | DOI: 10.1038/nn.4360
Normal brain function depends on the interaction between highly specialized neurons that operate within anatomically and functionally distinct brain regions. Neuronal specification is driven by transcriptional programs that are established during early neuronal development and remain in place in the adult brain. The fidelity of neuronal specification depends on the robustness of the transcriptional program that supports the neuron type-specific gene expression patterns. Here we show that polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2), which supports neuron specification during differentiation, contributes to the suppression of a transcriptional program that is detrimental to adult neuron function and survival. We show that PRC2 deficiency in striatal neurons leads to the de-repression of selected, predominantly bivalent PRC2 target genes that are dominated by self-regulating transcription factors normally suppressed in these neurons. The transcriptional changes in PRC2-deficient neurons lead to progressive and fatal neurodegeneration in mice. Our results point to a key role of PRC2 in protecting neurons against degeneration.
Angelozzi, M;Pellegrino da Silva, R;Gonzalez, MV;Lefebvre, V;
PMID: 35830813 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111045
The mammalian skull vault is essential to shape the head and protect the brain, but the cellular and molecular events underlying its development remain incompletely understood. Single-cell transcriptomic profiling from early to late mouse embryonic stages provides a detailed atlas of cranial lineages. It distinguishes various populations of progenitors and reveals a high expression of SOXC genes (encoding the SOX4, SOX11, and SOX12 transcription factors) early in development in actively proliferating and myofibroblast-like osteodermal progenitors. SOXC inactivation in these cells causes severe skull and skin underdevelopment due to the limited expansion of cell populations before and upon lineage commitment. SOXC genes enhance the expression of gene signatures conferring dynamic cellular and molecular properties, including actin cytoskeleton assembly, chromatin remodeling, and signaling pathway induction and responsiveness. These findings shed light onto craniogenic mechanisms and SOXC functions and suggest that similar mechanisms could decisively control many developmental, adult, pathological, and regenerative processes.
Eroglu, E;Yen, CYT;Tsoi, YL;Witman, N;Elewa, A;Joven Araus, A;Wang, H;Szattler, T;Umeano, CH;Sohlmér, J;Goedel, A;Simon, A;Chien, KR;
PMID: 35550612 | DOI: 10.1038/s41556-022-00902-2
The contribution of the epicardium, the outermost layer of the heart, to cardiac regeneration has remained controversial due to a lack of suitable analytical tools. By combining genetic marker-independent lineage-tracing strategies with transcriptional profiling and loss-of-function methods, we report here that the epicardium of the highly regenerative salamander species Pleurodeles waltl has an intrinsic capacity to differentiate into cardiomyocytes. Following cryoinjury, CLDN6+ epicardium-derived cells appear at the lesion site, organize into honeycomb-like structures connected via focal tight junctions and undergo transcriptional reprogramming that results in concomitant differentiation into de novo cardiomyocytes. Ablation of CLDN6+ differentiation intermediates as well as disruption of their tight junctions impairs cardiac regeneration. Salamanders constitute the evolutionarily closest species to mammals with an extensive ability to regenerate heart muscle and our results highlight the epicardium and tight junctions as key targets in efforts to promote cardiac regeneration.
Br J Cancer. 2015 May 19.
Galván JA, Zlobec I, Wartenberg M, Lugli A, Gloor B, Perren A, Karamitopoulou E.
PMID: 25992874 | DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127768.
Background: There is evidence that tumour–stroma interactions have a major role in the neoplastic progression of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Tumour budding is thought to reflect the process of epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT); however, the relationship between tumour buds and EMT remains unclear. Here we characterize the tumour-budding- and stromal cells in PDAC at protein and mRNA levels concerning factors involved in EMT. Methods: mRNA in situ hybridisation and immunostaining for E-cadherin, β-catenin, SNAIL1, ZEB1, ZEB2, N-cadherin and TWIST1 were assessed in the main tumour, tumour buds and tumour stroma on multipunch tissue microarrays from 120 well-characterised PDACs and associated with the clinicopathological features, including peritumoural (PTB) and intratumoural (ITB) budding. Results: Tumour-budding cells showed increased levels of ZEB1 (P<0.0001) and ZEB2 (P=0.0119) and reduced E-cadherin and β-catenin (P<0.0001, each) compared with the main tumour. Loss of membranous β-catenin in the main tumour (P=0.0009) and tumour buds (P=0.0053), without nuclear translocation, as well as increased SNAIL1 in tumour and stromal cells (P=0.0002, each) correlated with high PTB. ZEB1 overexpression in the main tumour-budding and stromal cells was associated with high ITB (P=0.0084; 0.0250 and 0.0029, respectively) and high PTB (P=0.0005; 0.0392 and 0.0007, respectively). ZEB2 overexpression in stromal cells correlated with higher pT stage (P=0.03), lymphatic invasion (P=0.0172) and lymph node metastasis (P=0.0152). Conclusions: In the tumour microenvironment of phenotypically aggressive PDAC, tumour-budding cells express EMT hallmarks at protein and mRNA levels underlining their EMT-type character and are surrounded by stromal cells expressing high levels of the E-cadherin repressors ZEB1, ZEB2 and SNAIL1, this being strongly associated with the tumour-budding phenotype. Moreover, our findings suggest the existence of subtypes of stromal cells in PDAC with phenotypical and functional heterogeneity.
Chang HL Bamodu OA Ong JR, Lee WH, Yeh CT, Tsai JT
PMID: 32326045 | DOI: 10.3390/cells9041020
BACKGROUND:
With recorded under-performance of current standard therapeutic strategies as highlighted by high rates of post-treatment (resection or local ablation) recurrence, resistance to chemotherapy, poor overall survival, and an increasing global incidence, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) constitutes a medical challenge. Accumulating evidence implicates the presence of HCC stem cells (HCC-SCs) in HCC development, drug-resistance, recurrence, and progression. Therefore, treatment strategies targeting both HCC-SCs and non-CSCs are essential.
METHODS:
Recently, there has been an increasing suggestion of MALAT1 oncogenic activity in HCC; however, its role in HCC stemness remains unexplored. Herein, we investigated the probable role of MALAT1 in the SCs-like phenotype of HCC and explored likely molecular mechanisms by which MALAT1 modulates HCC-SCs-like and metastatic phenotypes.
RESULTS:
We showed that relative to normal, cirrhotic, or dysplastic liver conditions, MALAT1 was aberrantly expressed in HCC, similar to its overexpression in Huh7, Mahlavu, and SK-Hep1 HCC cells lines, compared to the normal liver cell line THLE-2. We also demonstrated a positive correlation between MALAT1 expression and poor cell differentiation status in HCC using RNAscope. Interestingly, we demonstrated that shRNA-mediated silencing of MALAT1 concomitantly downregulated the expression levels of ?-catenin, Stat3, c-Myc, CK19, vimentin, and Twist1 proteins, inhibited HCC oncogenicity, and significantly suppressed the HCC-SCs-related dye-effluxing potential of HCC cells and reduced their ALDH-1 activity, partially due to inhibited MALAT1-?-catenin interaction. Additionally, using TOP/FOP (TCL/LEF-Firefly luciferase) Flash, RT-PCR, and western blot assays, we showed that silencing MALAT1 downregulates ?-catenin expression, dysregulates the canonical Wnt signaling pathway, and consequently attenuates HCC tumorsphere formation efficiency, with concurrent reduction in CD133+ and CD90+ HCC cell population, and inhibits tumor growth in SK-Hep1-bearing mice. Conclusions: Taken together, our data indicate that MALAT1/Wnt is a targetable molecular candidate, and the therapeutic targeting of MALAT1/Wnt may constitute a novel promising anticancer strategy for HCC treatment.
Laboratory investigation; a journal of technical methods and pathology
Kim, H;Lee, SB;Myung, JK;Park, JH;Park, E;Il Kim, D;Lee, C;Kim, Y;Park, CM;Kim, MB;Lim, GC;Jang, B;
PMID: 35145202 | DOI: 10.1038/s41374-022-00739-1
The histogenesis of pleomorphic adenoma (PA) of the salivary glands remains controversial. PAs are characterized by the transition of epithelial cells to spindled mesenchymal cells, known as epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). The present study aimed to identify a major EMT-inducing transcription factor (EMT-TF) in PAs. Real-time PCR analysis of SNAIL, SLUG, ZEB1, and TWIST1 demonstrated that only SLUG was significantly upregulated in normal salivary glands and PAs. Combined in situ hybridization for SLUG and multiplex immunohistochemistry for CK19 and P63 revealed that SLUG was specifically expressed in the myoepithelial cells of normal salivary glands. In PAs, SLUG was expressed in neoplastic myoepithelial cells and stromal cells but not in the luminal cells lining the inner layers of tumor glands. SLUG expression showed no correlation with PLAG1 expression, and in vitro experiments demonstrated that PLAG1 suppression in primary cultured PA cells or PLAG1 overexpression in HEK 293 T cells did not affect SLUG levels, indicating that PLAG1 was not involved in the upregulation of SLUG in PAs. The suppression of SLUG expression in cultured PA cells resulted in a morphology change to a less elongated shape and attenuated tumor growth. In addition, SLUG downregulation led to increased E-cadherin and decreased N-cadherin and vimentin expression levels along with decreased migratory activity in cultured PA cells. These findings suggest that SLUG is a major TF that can induce EMT in PAs. In summary, SLUG is specifically and highly expressed in the myoepithelial cells and stromal cells of PAs and is a key regulator of EMT in PAs.