The influence of electric fields on hippocampal neural progenitor cells
Autor: | Asha T. Fleury, Sagar S Chawla, Christian J. Tormos, Donald S. Sakaguchi, Surya K. Mallapragada, Vadim Petruk, Carlos Atico Ariza, Jisun Oh |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Nervous system
Cancer Research Endogeny Cell Count Biology Hippocampal formation Hippocampus Electricity In vivo Cell Movement medicine Animals Progenitor cell Mitosis Cell Proliferation Neurons Stem Cells Cell Biology Anatomy Immunohistochemistry Neural stem cell Rats Inbred F344 Cell biology Rats medicine.anatomical_structure Stem cell |
Zdroj: | Stem cell reviews and reports. 6(4) |
ISSN: | 2629-3277 |
Popis: | The differentiation and proliferation of neural stem/progenitor cells (NPCs) depend on various in vivo environmental factors or cues, which may include an endogenous electrical field (EF), as observed during nervous system development and repair. In this study, we investigate the morphologic, phenotypic, and mitotic alterations of adult hippocampal NPCs that occur when exposed to two EFs of estimated endogenous strengths. NPCs treated with a 437 mV/mm direct current (DC) EF aligned perpendicularly to the EF vector and had a greater tendency to differentiate into neurons, but not into oligodendrocytes or astrocytes, compared to controls. Furthermore, NPC process growth was promoted perpendicularly and inhibited anodally in the 437 mV/mm DC EF. Yet fewer cells were observed in the DC EF, which in part was due to a decrease in cell viability. The other EF applied was a 46 mV/mm alternating current (AC) EF. However, the 46 mV/mm AC EF showed no major differences in alignment or differentiation, compared to control conditions. For both EF treatments, the percent of mitotic cells during the last 14 h of the experiment were statistically similar to controls. Reported here, to our knowledge, is the first evidence of adult NPC differentiation affected in an EF in vitro. Further investigation and application of EFs on stem cells is warranted to elucidate the utility of EFs to control phenotypic behavior. With progress, the use of EFs may be engineered to control differentiation and target the growth of transplanted cells in a stem cell-based therapy to treat nervous system disorders. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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