Mixed primary culture and clonal analysis provide evidence that NG2 proteoglycan-expressing cells after spinal cord injury are glial progenitors
Autor: | Jean R. Wrathall, Soonmoon Yoo |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 2007 |
Předmět: |
Nerve Tissue Proteins
Biology Culture Media Serum-Free Nestin Rats Sprague-Dawley Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience Myelin Intermediate Filament Proteins Developmental Neuroscience medicine Animals Cell Lineage Antigens Progenitor cell Spinal cord injury Cells Cultured Spinal Cord Injuries Cell Proliferation Microglia Stem Cells Cell Differentiation Recovery of Function medicine.disease Coculture Techniques Oligodendrocyte Clone Cells Nerve Regeneration Rats Cell biology Oligodendroglia medicine.anatomical_structure nervous system Cell culture Astrocytes Immunology Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins Female Proteoglycans Neuroglia Biomarkers Astrocyte |
Zdroj: | Developmental Neurobiology. 67:860-874 |
ISSN: | 1932-846X 1932-8451 |
DOI: | 10.1002/dneu.20369 |
Popis: | NG2+ cells in the adult rat spinal cord proliferate after spinal cord injury (SCI) and are postulated to differentiate into mature glia to replace some of those lost to injury. To further study these putative endogenous precursors, tissue at 3 days after SCI or from uninjured adults was dissociated, myelin partially removed and replicate cultures grown in serum-containing or serum-free medium with or without growth factors for up to 7 days in vitro (DIV). Cell yield after SCI was 5–6 times higher than from the normal adult. Most cells were OX42+ microglia/macrophages but there were also more than twice the normal number of NG2+ cells. Most of these coexpressed A2B5 or nestin, as would be expected for glial progenitors. Few cells initially expressed mature astrocyte (GFAP) or oligodendrocyte (CC1) markers, but more did at 7 DIV, suggesting differentiation of glial precursors in vitro. To test the hypothesis that NG2+ cells after SCI express progenitor-like properties, we prepared free-floating sphere and single cell cultures from purified suspension of NG2+ cells from injured spinal cord. We found that sphere cultures could be passaged in free-floating subcultures, and upon attachment the spheres clonally derived from an acutely purified single cell differentiated into oligodendrocytes and rarely astrocytes. Taken together, these data support the hypothesis that SCI stimulates proliferation of NG2+ cells that are glial progenitor cells. Better understanding the intrinsic properties of the NG2+ cells stimulated by SCI may permit future therapeutic manipulations to improve recovery after SCI. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2007. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |