International journal of molecular sciences
Miranda, CO;Hegedüs, K;Kis, G;Antal, M;
PMID: 37108107 | DOI: 10.3390/ijms24086943
A great deal of evidence supports the inevitable importance of spinal glycinergic inhibition in the development of chronic pain conditions. However, it remains unclear how glycinergic neurons contribute to the formation of spinal neural circuits underlying pain-related information processing. Thus, we intended to explore the synaptic targets of spinal glycinergic neurons in the pain processing region (laminae I-III) of the spinal dorsal horn by combining transgenic technology with immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization accompanied by light and electron microscopy. First, our results suggest that, in addition to neurons in laminae I-III, glycinergic neurons with cell bodies in lamina IV may contribute substantially to spinal pain processing. On the one hand, we show that glycine transporter 2 immunostained glycinergic axon terminals target almost all types of excitatory and inhibitory interneurons identified by their neuronal markers in laminae I-III. Thus, glycinergic postsynaptic inhibition, including glycinergic inhibition of inhibitory interneurons, must be a common functional mechanism of spinal pain processing. On the other hand, our results demonstrate that glycine transporter 2 containing axon terminals target only specific subsets of axon terminals in laminae I-III, including nonpeptidergic nociceptive C fibers binding IB4 and nonnociceptive myelinated A fibers immunoreactive for type 1 vesicular glutamate transporter, indicating that glycinergic presynaptic inhibition may be important for targeting functionally specific subpopulations of primary afferent inputs.
Minatoguchi, S;Saito, S;Furuhashi, K;Sawa, Y;Okazaki, M;Shimamura, Y;Kaihan, AB;Hashimoto, Y;Yasuda, Y;Hara, A;Mizutani, Y;Ando, R;Kato, N;Ishimoto, T;Tsuboi, N;Esaki, N;Matsuyama, M;Shiraki, Y;Kobayashi, H;Asai, N;Enomoto, A;Maruyama, S;
PMID: 35354870 | DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-09331-5
Perivascular mesenchymal cells (PMCs), which include pericytes, give rise to myofibroblasts that contribute to chronic kidney disease progression. Several PMC markers have been identified; however, PMC heterogeneity and functions are not fully understood. Here, we describe a novel subset of renal PMCs that express Meflin, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein that was recently identified as a marker of fibroblasts essential for cardiac tissue repair. Tracing the lineage of Meflin+ PMCs, which are found in perivascular and periglomerular areas and exhibit renin-producing potential, showed that they detach from the vasculature and proliferate under disease conditions. Although the contribution of Meflin+ PMCs to conventional α-SMA+ myofibroblasts is low, they give rise to fibroblasts with heterogeneous α-SMA expression patterns. Genetic ablation of Meflin+ PMCs in a renal fibrosis mouse model revealed their essential role in collagen production. Consistent with this, human biopsy samples showed that progressive renal diseases exhibit high Meflin expression. Furthermore, Meflin overexpression in kidney fibroblasts promoted bone morphogenetic protein 7 signals and suppressed myofibroblastic differentiation, implicating the roles of Meflin in suppressing tissue fibrosis. These findings demonstrate that Meflin marks a PMC subset that is functionally distinct from classic pericytes and myofibroblasts, highlighting the importance of elucidating PMC heterogeneity.
Xie, Y;Kuan, AT;Wang, W;Herbert, ZT;Mosto, O;Olukoya, O;Adam, M;Vu, S;Kim, M;Tran, D;Gómez, N;Charpentier, C;Sorour, I;Lacey, TE;Tolstorukov, MY;Sabatini, BL;Lee, WA;Harwell, CC;
PMID: 35196485 | DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.110416
Neuron-glia interactions play a critical role in the regulation of synapse formation and circuit assembly. Here we demonstrate that canonical Sonic hedgehog (Shh) pathway signaling in cortical astrocytes acts to coordinate layer-specific synaptic connectivity. We show that the Shh receptor Ptch1 is expressed by cortical astrocytes during development and that Shh signaling is necessary and sufficient to promote the expression of genes involved in regulating synaptic development and layer-enriched astrocyte molecular identity. Loss of Shh in layer V neurons reduces astrocyte complexity and coverage by astrocytic processes in tripartite synapses; conversely, cell-autonomous activation of Shh signaling in astrocytes promotes cortical excitatory synapse formation. Furthermore, Shh-dependent genes Lrig1 and Sparc distinctively contribute to astrocyte morphology and synapse formation. Together, these results suggest that Shh secreted from deep-layer cortical neurons acts to specialize the molecular and functional features of astrocytes during development to shape circuit assembly and function.
Moreno, R;Buehler, D;Lambert, PF;
PMID: 36016373 | DOI: 10.3390/v14081751
Murine papillomavirus, MmuPV1, causes natural infections in laboratory mice that can progress to squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) making it a useful preclinical model to study the role of papillomaviruses in cancer. Papillomavirus can infect cells within hair follicles, which contain multiple epithelial progenitor cell populations, including Lgr5+ progenitors, and transgenic mice expressing human papillomavirus oncogenes develop tumors derived from Lgr5 progenitors. We therefore tested the hypothesis that Lgr5+ progenitors contribute to neoplastic lesions arising in skins infected with MmuPV1 by performing lineage tracing experiments. Ears of 6-8-week-old Lgr5-eGFP-IRES-CreERT2/Rosa26LSLtdTomato mice were treated topically with 4-OH Tamoxifen to label Lgr5+ progenitor cells and their progeny with tdTomato and, 72 h later, infected with MmuPV1. Four months post-infection, tissue at the infection site was harvested for histopathological analysis and immunofluorescence to determine the percentage of tdTomato+ cells within the epithelial lesions caused by MmuPV1. Squamous cell dysplasia showed a low percentage of tdTomato+ cells (7%), indicating that it arises primarily from non-Lgr5 progenitor cells. In contrast, cutaneous SCC (cSCC) was substantially more positive for tdTomato+ cells (42%), indicating that cSCCs preferentially arise from Lgr5+ progenitors. Biomarker analyses of dysplasia vs. cSCC revealed further differences consistent with cSCC arising from LGR5+ progenitor cells.
Morphological and neurochemical characterization of glycinergic neurons in laminae I-IV of the mouse spinal dorsal horn
The Journal of comparative neurology
Miranda, CO;Hegedüs, K;Wildner, H;Zeilhofer, HU;Antal, M;
PMID: 34382691 | DOI: 10.1002/cne.25232
A growing body of experimental evidence shows that glycinergic inhibition plays vital roles in spinal pain processing. In spite of this, however, our knowledge about the morphology, neurochemical characteristics, and synaptic relations of glycinergic neurons in the spinal dorsal horn is very limited. The lack of this knowledge makes our understanding about the specific contribution of glycinergic neurons to spinal pain processing quite vague. Here we investigated the morphology and neurochemical characteristics of glycinergic neurons in laminae I-IV of the spinal dorsal horn using a GlyT2::CreERT2-tdTomato transgenic mouse line. Confirming previous reports, we show that glycinergic neurons are sparsely distributed in laminae I-II, but their densities are much higher in lamina III and especially in lamina IV. First in the literature, we provide experimental evidence indicating that in addition to neurons in which glycine colocalizes with GABA, there are glycinergic neurons in laminae I-II that do not express GABA and can thus be referred to as glycine-only neurons. According to the shape and size of cell bodies and dendritic morphology, we divided the tdTomato-labeled glycinergic neurons into three and six morphological groups in laminae I-II and laminae III-IV, respectively. We also demonstrate that most of the glycinergic neurons co-express neuronal nitric oxide synthase, parvalbumin, the receptor tyrosine kinase RET, and the retinoic acid-related orphan nuclear receptor β (RORβ), but there might be others that need further neurochemical characterization. The present findings may foster our understanding about the contribution of glycinergic inhibition to spinal pain processing.