Effects of Erythropoietin in Murine-Induced Pluripotent Cell-Derived Panneural Progenitor Cells

被引:0
|
作者
Nils Offen
Johannes Flemming
Hares Kamawal
Ruhel Ahmad
Wanja Wolber
Christian Geis
Holm Zaehres
Hans R. Schöler
Hannelore Ehrenreich
Albrecht M. Müller
Anna-Leena Sirén
机构
[1] University of Würzburg,Department of Experimental Neurosurgery
[2] University of Würzburg,Center for Experimental Molecular Medicine (ZEMM)
[3] University of Würzburg,Department of Neurology
[4] Jena University Hospital,Department of Neurology and Center for Sepsis Control and Care (CSCC)
[5] Max-Planck Institute for Molecular Biomedicine,Department of Cell and Developmental Biology
[6] Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine,Clinical Neuroscience
[7] Lund University,Lund Stem Cell Center
[8] University of California,Department of Neurosciences
来源
Molecular Medicine | 2013年 / 19卷
关键词
Neuronlike Cells; Active Presynaptic Terminals; Neurosphere Formation; Neural Differentiation Conditions; Spot Insight Camera;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Induced cell fate changes by reprogramming of somatic cells offers an efficient strategy to generate autologous pluripotent stem (iPS) cells from any adult cell type. The potential of iPS cells to differentiate into various cell types is well established, however the efficiency to produce functional neurons from iPS cells remains modest. Here, we generated panneural progenitor cells (pNPCs) from mouse iPS cells and investigated the effect of the neurotrophic growth factor erythropoietin (EPO) on their survival, proliferation and neurodifferentiation. Under neural differentiation conditions, iPS-derived pNPCs gave rise to microtubule-associated protein-2 positive neuronlike cells (34% to 43%) and platelet-derived growth factor receptor positive oligodendrocytelike cells (21% to 25%) while less than 1% of the cells expressed the astrocytic marker glial fibrillary acidic protein. Neuronlike cells generated action potentials and developed active presynaptic terminals. The pNPCs expressed EPO receptor (EPOR) mRNA and displayed functional EPOR signaling. In proliferating cultures, EPO (0.1–3 U/mL) slightly improved pNPC survival but reduced cell proliferation and neurosphere formation in a concentration-dependent manner. In differentiating cultures EPO facilitated neurodifferentiation as assessed by the increased number of γ-III-tubulin positive neurons. Our results show that EPO inhibits iPS pNPC self-renewal and promotes neurogenesis.
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页码:399 / 408
页数:9
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