932 resultados para Neuronal Differentiation
Resumo:
Proper organ patterning depends on a tight coordination between cell proliferation and differentiation. The patterning of Drosophila retina occurs both very fast and with high precision. This process is driven by the dynamic changes in signaling activity of the conserved Hedgehog (Hh) pathway, which coordinates cell fate determination, cell cycle and tissue morphogenesis. Here we show that during Drosophila retinogenesis, the retinal determination gene dachshund (dac) is not only a target of the Hh signaling pathway, but is also a modulator of its activity. Using developmental genetics techniques, we demonstrate that dac enhances Hh signaling by promoting the accumulation of the Gli transcription factor Cubitus interruptus (Ci) parallel to or downstream of fused. In the absence of dac, all Hh-mediated events associated to the morphogenetic furrow are delayed. One of the consequences is that, posterior to the furrow, dac- cells cannot activate a Roadkill-Cullin3 negative feedback loop that attenuates Hh signaling and which is necessary for retinal cells to continue normal differentiation. Therefore, dac is part of an essential positive feedback loop in the Hh pathway, guaranteeing the speed and the accuracy of Drosophila retinogenesis.
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The generation of neurons from neural stem cells requires large-scale changes in gene expression that are controlled to a large extent by proneural transcription factors, such as Ascl1. While recent studies have characterized the differentiation genes activated by proneural factors, less is known on the mechanisms that suppress progenitor cell identity. Here, we show that Ascl1 induces the transcription factor MyT1 while promoting neuronal differentiation. We combined functional studies of MyT1 during neurogenesis with the characterization of its transcriptional program. MyT1 binding is associated with repression of gene transcription in neural progenitor cells. It promotes neuronal differentiation by counteracting the inhibitory activity of Notch signaling at multiple levels, targeting the Notch1 receptor and many of its downstream targets. These include regulators of the neural progenitor program, such as Hes1, Sox2, Id3, and Olig1. Thus, Ascl1 suppresses Notch signaling cell-autonomously via MyT1, coupling neuronal differentiation with repression of the progenitor fate.
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The neural crest is a group of migratory, multipotent stem cells that play a crucial role in many aspects of embryonic development. This uniquely vertebrate cell population forms within the dorsal neural tube but then emigrates out and migrates long distances to different regions of the body. These cells contribute to formation of many structures such as the peripheral nervous system, craniofacial skeleton, and pigmentation of the skin. Why some neural tube cells undergo a change from neural to neural crest cell fate is unknown as is the timing of both onset and cessation of their emigration from the neural tube. In recent years, growing evidence supports an important role for epigenetic regulation as a new mechanism for controlling aspects of neural crest development. In this thesis, I dissect the roles of the de novo DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) 3A and 3B in neural crest specification, migration and differentiation. First, I show that DNMT3A limits the spatial boundary between neural crest versus neural tube progenitors within the neuroepithelium. DNMT3A promotes neural crest specification by directly mediating repression of neural genes, like Sox2 and Sox3. Its knockdown causes ectopic Sox2 and Sox3 expression at the expense of neural crest territory. Thus, DNMT3A functions as a molecular switch, repressing neural to favor neural crest cell fate. Second, I find that DNMT3B restricts the temporal window during which the neural crest cells emigrate from the dorsal neural tube. Knockdown of DNMT3B causes an excess of neural crest emigration, by extending the time that the neural tube is competent to generate emigrating neural crest cells. In older embryos, this resulted in premature neuronal differentiation. Thus, DNMT3B regulates the duration of neural crest production by the neural tube and the timing of their differentiation. My results in avian embryos suggest that de novo DNA methylation, exerted by both DNMT3A and DNMT3B, plays a dual role in neural crest development, with each individual paralogue apparently functioning during a distinct temporal window. The results suggest that de novo DNA methylation is a critical epigenetic mark used for cell fate restriction of progenitor cells during neural crest cell fate specification. Our discovery provides important insights into the mechanisms that determine whether a cell becomes part of the central nervous system or peripheral cell lineages.
Resumo:
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia - SFRH/BD/42848/2008, através do Programa MIT_Portugal em Sistemas de Bioengenharia; projectos PTDC/SAUNEU/104415/2008 e Projecto ref. 96542 da Fundação Caloust Gulbenkian
Resumo:
The mechanisms that guide progenitor cell fate and differentiation in the vertebrate central nervous system (CNS) are poorly understood. Gain-of-function experiments suggest that Notch signaling is involved in the early stages of mammalian neurogenesis. On the basis of the expression of Notch1 by putative progenitor cells of the vertebrate CNS, we have addressed directly the role of Notch1 in the development of the mammalian brain. Using conditional gene ablation, we show that loss of Notch1 results in premature onset of neurogenesis by neuroepithelial cells of the midbrain-hindbrain region of the neural tube. Notch1-deficient cells do not complete differentiation but are eliminated by apoptosis, resulting in a reduced number of neurons in the adult cerebellum. We have also analyzed the effects of Notch1 ablation on gliogenesis in vivo. Our results show that Notch1 is required for both neuron and glia formation and modulates the onset of neurogenesis within the cerebellar neuroepithelium.
Resumo:
Spinal cord neuronal restricted progenitor (NRP) cells, when transplanted into the neonatal anterior forebrain subventricular zone, migrate to distinct regions throughout the forebrain including the olfactory bulb, frontal cortex, and occipital cortex but not to the hippocampus. Their migration pattern and differentiation potential is distinct from anterior forebrain subventricular zone NRPs. Irrespective of their final destination, NRP cells do not differentiate into glia. Rather they synthesize neurotransmitters, acquire region-specific phenotypes, and receive synapses from host neurons after transplantation. Spinal cord NRPs express choline acetyl transferase even in regions where host neurons do not express this marker. The restricted distribution of transplanted spinal cord NRP cells and their acquisition of varied region-specific phenotypes suggest that their ultimate fate and phenotype is dictated by a combination of intrinsic properties and extrinsic cues from the host.
Resumo:
A regulatable retroviral vector in which the v-myc oncogene is driven by a tetracycline-controlled transactivator and a human cytomegalovirus minimal promoter fused to a tet operator sequence was used for conditional immortalization of adult rat neuronal progenitor cells. A single clone, HC2S2, was isolated and characterized. Two days after the addition of tetracycline, the HC2S2 cells stopped proliferating, began to extend neurites, and expressed the neuronal markers tau, NeuN, neurofilament 200 kDa, and glutamic acid decarboxylase in accordance with the reduced production of the v-myc oncoprotein. Differentiated HC2S2 cells expressed large sodium and calcium currents and could fire regenerative action potentials. These results suggest that the suppression of the v-myc oncogene may be sufficient to make proliferating cells exit from cell cycles and induce terminal differentiation. The HC2S2 cells will be valuable for studying the differentiation process of neurons.
Resumo:
The dentate gyrus of the hippocampus is one of the few areas of the adult brain that undergoes neurogenesis. In the present study, cells capable of proliferation and neurogenesis were isolated and cultured from the adult rat hippocampus. In defined medium containing basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2), cells can survive, proliferate, and express neuronal and glial markers. Cells have been maintained in culture for 1 year through multiple passages. These cultured adult cells were labeled in vitro with bromodeoxyuridine and adenovirus expressing beta-galactosidase and were transplanted to the adult rat hippocampus. Surviving cells were evident through 3 months postimplantation with no evidence of tumor formation. Within 2 months postgrafting, labeled cells were found in the dentate gyrus, where they differentiated into neurons only in the intact region of the granule cell layer. Our results indicate that FGF-2 responsive progenitors can be isolated from the adult hippocampus and that these cells retain the capacity to generate mature neurons when grafted into the adult rat brain.
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Dissertação de Mestrado, Ciências Biomédicas, Departamento de Ciências Biomédicas e Medicina, Universidade do Algarve, 2013
Resumo:
En el hipotálamo en desarrollo, el ácido gamma-amino butírico (GABA) produce depolarización neuronal, pudiendo incluso disparar potenciales de acción y causar la apertura de canales de calcio dependientes de voltaje. Esto se debe a que la concentración intracelular de Cl- es alta respecto al medio extracelular, por lo que en reposo el potencial de equilibrio de GABA es más positivo que el potencial de membrana. A medida que el desarrollo transcurre, la concentración intracelular de Cl- disminuye y se produce un cambio en la respuesta de depolarizante (etapa excitatoria) a hiperpolarizante (etapa inhibitoria). Se ha demostrado que este cambio ocurre también en neuronas hipotalámicas in vitro. El dimorfismo sexual del cerebro de los vertebrados es consecuencia de la acción del estrógeno aromatizado a partir de andrógenos segregados por el testículo durante el "periodo crítico" del desarrollo cerebral. Evidencias previas de nuestro y otros laboratorios pusieron de manifiesto diferencias en el crecimiento y diferenciación de neuronas que no podían atribuirse a la acción hormonal, ya que ocurren antes que se inicie el brusco aumento de la secreción gonadal, alrededor del día 18 de desarrollo embrionario en la rata (E18). Además de las diferencias morfológicas, encontramos diferencias sexuales en la forma que las neuronas hipotalámicas responden a muscimol, un agonista específico del receptor GABAA. A los 9 días in vitro (9 DIV) la respuesta a muscimol fue hiperpolarizante (etapa inhibitoria) y además fue de mayor amplitud, área y duración en machos respecto a hembras. Esto nos indica que las neuronas provenientes de embriones machos son intrínsecamente diferentes a las de embriones hembra aún antes de la acción organizadora de los esteroides sexuales. En base a estas evidencias nos propusimos continuar nuestros estudios sobre la participación de GABA en la determinación de diferencias sexuales en el cerebro antes de la acción organizadora de los esteroides gonadales. Para ello, en cultivos de neuronas hipotalámicas de E16 separados por sexos, estudiaremos:- la respuesta a muscimol de las neuronas, en la etapa excitatoria (2 DIV) de la acción de GABA.- las composición de subunidades de los receptores GABAA en la etapa excitatoria/inhibitoria de la acción de GABA.- la participación de los receptores GABAA sobre el crecimiento neurítico.- la activación de la vía de las MAP quinasas por muscimol.- la participación de los receptores GABAA sobre el crecimiento axonal inducido por estradiol in vitro.Toda la metodología propuesta es de uso habitual en nuestro laboratorio e involucra herramientas de la electrofisiología y la biología celular-molecular; como patch-clamp, cultivo de neuronas hipotalámicas, Western blot, RT-PCR, entre otras. Esperamos encontrar diferencias sexuales en la amplitud, área y duración de la respuesta de las neuronas hipotalámicas al muscimol a los 2 DIV, y que éstas se deban a una diferente composición de subunidades del receptor GABAA. En cuanto a la participación del receptor GABAA en la neuritogenesis, esperamos encontrar mayor longitud neurítica en neuronas macho como así también una activación sexualmente dimórfica de la vía de las MAP quinasas. Además esperamosque la acción de un antagonista del receptor GABAA interfiera con la axogénesis inducida por estradiol in vitro, característica que muestra diferencia sexual también a favor de los machos, lo que reforzaría nuestra hipótesis. La importancia y originalidad de este proyecto reside en la evaluación de la participación del sistema GABAérgico en la determinación de características que durante el desarrollo, podrían estar involucradas en la determinación de diferencias sexuales permanentes en el cerebro adulto independientemente de la acción de los esteroides sexuales. Hasta la fecha, no ha sido evaluada la influencia de los receptores GABAA en la diferenciación sexual del cerebro antes de la acción organizadora de los esteroides gonadales.
Resumo:
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been shown to play important roles in both brain development and the regulation of adult neural cell functions. However, a systematic analysis of brain miRNA functions has been hindered by a lack of comprehensive information regarding the distribution of miRNAs in neuronal versus glial cells. To address this issue, we performed microarray analyses of miRNA expression in the four principal cell types of the CNS (neurons, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, and microglia) using primary cultures from postnatal d 1 rat cortex. These analyses revealed that neural miRNA expression is highly cell-type specific, with 116 of the 351 miRNAs examined being differentially expressed fivefold or more across the four cell types. We also demonstrate that individual neuron-enriched or neuron-diminished RNAs had a significant impact on the specification of neuronal phenotype: overexpression of the neuron-enriched miRNAs miR-376a and miR-434 increased the differentiation of neural stem cells into neurons, whereas the opposite effect was observed for the glia-enriched miRNAs miR-223, miR-146a, miR-19, and miR-32. In addition, glia-enriched miRNAs were shown to inhibit aberrant glial expression of neuronal proteins and phenotypes, as exemplified by miR-146a, which inhibited neuroligin 1-dependent synaptogenesis. This study identifies new nervous system functions of specific miRNAs, reveals the global extent to which the brain may use differential miRNA expression to regulate neural cell-type-specific phenotypes, and provides an important data resource that defines the compartmentalization of brain miRNAs across different cell types.