scholarly journals In Vitro Derivation and Propagation of Spermatogonial Stem Cell Activity from Mouse Pluripotent Stem Cells

Cell Reports ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 17 (10) ◽  
pp. 2789-2804 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yukiko Ishikura ◽  
Yukihiro Yabuta ◽  
Hiroshi Ohta ◽  
Katsuhiko Hayashi ◽  
Tomonori Nakamura ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 1705-1705
Author(s):  
Joyce S.G Yeoh ◽  
Ronald van Os ◽  
Ellen Weersing ◽  
Bert Dontje ◽  
Edo Vellenga ◽  
...  

Abstract Fibroblast Growth Factors (FGF) are a large family of signaling molecules widely involved in tissue development, maintenance and repair. Little is known about the role of FGF/FGF-receptor signaling in the regulation of adult hematopoietic stem cells (HSC). In this study, we assessed the potential of exogenously added FGF-1/2, or retrovirally overexpressed FGF-1 to preserve HSC function in vitro and in vivo. First, we demonstrate that in vitro culture of unfractionated mouse bone marrow cells, in serum-free medium, supplemented with FGF-1 or FGF-2 or FGF-1 + 2 resulted in the robust generation of long-term repopulating (LTR) HSCs. Cultures were maintained for 12 weeks and during that time in vivo competitive reconstitution assays were performed. Stem cell activity was detectable at 3, 5, and 8 weeks after initiation of culture, but lost after 12 weeks. However, whereas 3 and 5 week cultured cells provided radioprotection in non-competitive assays, animals transplanted with 8 or 12 week cultured cells succumbed due to bone marrow failure. So far, we have been unable to expand single, highly purified Lin−Sca-1+c-Kit+ using FGF-1 + 2. Consequently, we speculated that essential intermediate cell populations or signals are required for FGF-induced stem cell conservation. To test this we cultured highly purified CD45.1 Lin−Sca-1+c-Kit+ cells in a co-culture with CD45.2 unfractionated BM. Co-cultured cells were transplanted after 5 weeks in lethally irradiated recipients, and CD45.1 chimerism levels were assessed. High levels of CD45.1 chimerism confirmed that Lin−Sca-1+c-Kit+ cells require an accessory signal in addition to FGF to induced stem cell activity in vitro. We subsequently tested stem cell potential of cells cultured in FGF-1 + 2 for 5 weeks, with the addition of SCF + IL-11 + Flt3L for the last 2, 4 or 7 days. Cell numbers increased with increasing time of growth factor presence. However, only when growth factors were present for 2 days engraftment of cultured cells in a competitive repopulation assay was increased 3.5-fold. Finally, we show by immunohistochemistry that ~10% of freshly isolated Lin−Sca-1+c-Kit+ expresses high levels of FGF-1. Retroviral overexpression of FGF-1 in stem cells resulted in increased growth potential and sustained clonogenic activity in vitro. Upon transplantation of transduced stem cells, FGF-1 overexpression resulted in increased white blood cell counts 4 weeks post-transplant compared to control animals. Most notable was a marked granulocytosis in FGF-1 overexpressing recipients Our results reveal FGF as an important regulator of HSC signaling and homeostasis. Importantly, in the presence of FGF stem cells can be maintained in vitro for 2 months. These findings open novel avenues for in vitro manipulation of stem cells for future clinical therapies.


Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 89 (12) ◽  
pp. 4337-4347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kateri A. Moore ◽  
Hideo Ema ◽  
Ihor R. Lemischka

Abstract The cellular and molecular mechanisms that regulate the most primitive hematopoietic stem cell are not well understood. We have undertaken a systematic dissection of the complex hematopoietic microenvironment to define some of these mechanisms. An extensive panel of immortalized stromal cell lines from murine fetal liver were established and characterized. Collectively, these cell lines display extensive heterogeneity in their in vitro hematopoietic supportive capacity. In the current studies, we describe a long-term in vitro culture system using a single stromal cell clone (AFT024) that qualitatively and quantitatively supports transplantable stem cell activity present in highly purified populations. We show multilineage reconstitution in mice that received the equivalent of as few as 100 purified bone marrow and fetal liver stem cells cultured for 4 to 7 weeks on AFT024. The cultured stem cells meet all functional criteria currently ascribed to the most primitive stem cell population. The levels of stem cell activity present after 5 weeks of coculture with AFT024 far exceed those present in short-term cytokine-supported cultures. In addition, maintenance of input levels of transplantable stem cell activity is accompanied by expansion of other classes of stem/progenitor cells. This suggests that the stem/progenitor cell population is actively proliferating in culture and that the AFT024 cell line provides a milieu that stimulates progenitor cell proliferation while maintaining in vivo repopulating activity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii53-iii54
Author(s):  
J Auzmendi-Iriarte ◽  
A Saenz-Antoñanzas ◽  
J Andermatten ◽  
A Elua-Pinin ◽  
E Aldaba ◽  
...  

Abstract BACKGROUND Glioblastoma’s origin and development is not only associated to genetic alterations, but also to epigenetic changes. Indeed, an altered expression or activity of epigenetic enzymes such as histone deacetylases (HDAC) has been associated to cancer stem cell activity, which has been widely described as a major feature for therapy resistance and tumor recurrence. In particular, inhibition of HDAC6 is an increasingly attractive pharmacological strategy, due to its association with low toxicity. Thus, the aim of the present study was to determine the impact of a new HDAC6-selective-inhibitor in glioblastoma and glioma stem cells. MATERIAL AND METHODS To test the effect of QTX compound in glioblastoma and glioma stem cell lines, cell viability after 72h of treatment was studied by MTT assay. After evaluation of IC50, QTX in vitro activity was analyzed, focusing on proliferation, apoptosis and stemness of U87-MG cell line and confirmed in a patient-derived glioma stem cell line. In vivo antitumor effect was evaluated using U87-MG cells xenografted in immunocompromised mice; after tumor formation, 5 mice were randomly selected as control group and another 5 for QTX treatment (intraperitoneal administration of 50 mg/kg; 5 days of dosing / 2 days off for 2 weeks). Mice weight was measured daily and tumor volume every two days. RESULTS We demonstrated that QTX reduces viability of all tested glioblastoma cells, even more greatly than normal astrocytes. Indeed, QTX diminishes proliferation and induces apoptosis in both conventional and patient-derived glioma cell lines. In particular, this effect was accompanied by a reduction of self-renewal properties of glioma stem cells. Interestingly, QTX in vitro activity was more effective comparing to the pan-inhibitor SAHA or the HDAC6-selective inhibitor Tubastatin A. Furthermore, QTX delayed tumor initiation and progression in vivo, without presenting significant side effects. CONCLUSION QTX compound presents a promising anti-tumor effect both in vitro and in vivo in glioblastoma, at least in part, inhibiting glioma stem cell activity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 102 (4) ◽  
pp. 950-962
Author(s):  
Thierry N’Tumba-Byn ◽  
Makiko Yamada ◽  
Marco Seandel

Abstract Germline stem and progenitor cells can be extracted from the adult mouse testis and maintained long-term in vitro. Yet, the optimal culture conditions for preserving stem cell activity are unknown. Recently, multiple members of the Eph receptor family were detected in murine spermatogonia, but their roles remain obscure. One such gene, Ephb2, is crucial for maintenance of somatic stem cells and was previously found enriched at the level of mRNA in murine spermatogonia. We detected Ephb2 mRNA and protein in primary adult spermatogonial cultures and hypothesized that Ephb2 plays a role in maintenance of stem cells in vitro. We employed CRISPR-Cas9 targeting and generated stable mutant SSC lines with complete loss of Ephb2. The characteristics of Ephb2-KO cells were interrogated using phenotypic and functional assays. Ephb2-KO SSCs exhibited reduced proliferation compared to wild-type cells, while apoptosis was unaffected. Therefore, we examined whether Ephb2 loss correlates with activity of canonical pathways involved in stem cell self-renewal and proliferation. Ephb2-KO cells had reduced ERK MAPK signaling. Using a lentiviral transgene, Ephb2 expression was rescued in Ephb2-KO cells, which partially restored signaling and proliferation. Transplantation analysis revealed that Ephb2-KO SSCs cultures formed significantly fewer colonies than WT, indicating a role for Ephb2 in preserving stem cell activity of cultured cells. Transcriptome analysis of wild-type and Ephb2-KO SSCs identified Dppa4 and Bnc1 as differentially expressed, Ephb2-dependent genes that are potentially involved in stem cell function. These data uncover for the first time a crucial role for Ephb2 signaling in cultured SSCs.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 2459-2459
Author(s):  
Eric Deneault ◽  
Sonia Cellot ◽  
Amélie Faubert ◽  
Jean-Philippe Laverdure ◽  
Mélanie Fréchette ◽  
...  

Abstract The maintenance of blood homeostasis depends on hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), which rely on two critical properties, namely multipotency and self-renewal. The former enables differentiation into multiple lineages, the latter ensures preservation of fate upon cellular division. By definition, a self-renewal division implies that a HSC is permissive to cell cycle entry, while restrained from engaging in differentiation, apoptosis or senescence pathways. Despite the tremendous progress made towards the identification of the molecular circuitry that governs ESC fate, genes controlling this process in adult HSCs have proven more difficult to unmask. This is principally due to our inability to maintain or expand HSC ex vivo as homogenous populations, to the absence of a stringent surrogate marker to follow the HSC multipotent state and to changes in cell phenotype observed shortly upon facing the selective pressures of in vitro culture conditions, impeding HSC tracking in this context. We now report the results of a novel in vitro to in vivo functional screen, which identified a series of nuclear factors that induced high levels of HSC activity similar to that previously achieved with Hoxb4. We created a database consisting of 689 nuclear factors considered as potential candidate regulators of HSC activity. This list was mostly derived from microarray gene expression profiling of normal and leukemia stem cells including our recently generated FLA2 leukemia (1 in 1.5 cells are leukemia stem cells, G.S. et coll., in preparation). It was also enriched by genes obtained following a review of the literature on stem cell self-renewal. Genes in this database were next ranked from 1 (lowest priority) to 10 (highest priority) based on 3 factors: differential expression between primitive and more mature cellular fractions (e.g., LT-HSC-enriched: 3 points), expression levels (high, highest priority: max 3 points) and the consistency of findings between datasets (max 4 points). Genes with a score of 6 and above (n=139) were selected for functional studies, of which 104 were tested in HSCs, using a high-throughput overexpression in vitro to in vivo assay tailored to circumvent current limitations imposed by the biology of HSCs. In total, 18 new determinants have emerged, 11 of which act in a cell autonomous manner, namely Ski, Smarcc1, Vps72, Trim27, Sox4, Klf10, Prdm16, Erdr1, Cnbp, Xbp1 and Hnrpdl, while the remaining provide a non-autonomous influence on HSC activity, i.e, Fos, Hmgb1, Tcfec, Sfpi1, Zfp472, Hdac1 and Pml. Clonal and phenotypic analyses of hematopoietic tissues derived from selected recipients confirmed that the majority of these factors induced HSC expansion in vitro without perturbing their differentiation in vivo. Epistatic analyses further reveals that 3 of the most potent candidates, namely Ski, Prdm16 and Klf10 may exploit both mechanisms, i.e., cell and non-cell autonomous. The utilization of this novel screening method together with the creation of a database enriched for potential determinants and candidate regulators of adult stem cell activity can now be exploited to devise regulatory networks in these cells.


2013 ◽  
Vol 189 (4S) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hideyuki Kamisawa ◽  
Kentaro Mizuno ◽  
Makoto Imura ◽  
Yoshinobu Moritoki ◽  
Hidenori Nishio ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 286
Author(s):  
A. Dinnyes ◽  
M. K. Pirity ◽  
E. Gocza ◽  
P. Osteil ◽  
N. Daniel ◽  
...  

Pluripotent stem cells have the capacity to divide indefinitely and to differentiate to all the somatic tissues. They can be genetically manipulated in vitro by knocking in and out genes, therefore they serve as an excellent tool for gene-function studies and for the generation of models for human diseases. Since 1981, when the first mouse embryonic stem cell (ESC) line was generated, several attempts have been made to generate pluripotent stem cells from other species as it would help us to understand the differences and similarities of signaling pathways involved in pluripotency and differentiation, and would reveal whether the fundamental mechanism controlling self-renewal of pluripotent cells is conserved among different species. This review gives an overlook of embryonic and induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSCs) research in the rabbit which is one of the most relevant non-rodent species for animal models. To date, several lines of putative ESCs and iPSCs have been described in the rabbit. All expressed stem cell-associated markers and exhibited longevity and pluripotency in vitro, but none have been proven to exhibit full pluripotency in vivo. Moreover, similarly to several domestic species, markers used to characterize the putative ESCs are not fully adequate because studies in domestic species have revealed that they are not specific to the pluripotent inner cell mass. Future validation of rabbit pluripotent stem cells would benefit greatly from a reliable panel of molecular markers specific to pluripotent cells of the developing rabbit embryo. The status of isolation and characterization of the putative pluripotency genes in rabbit will be discussed. Using rabbit specific pluripotency genes we might be able to reprogram somatic cells and generate induced pluripotent stem cells more efficiently thus overcome some of the challenges towards harnessing the potential of this technology. This study was financed by EU FP7 (PartnErS, PIAP-GA-2008-218205; InduHeart, PEOPLE-IRG-2008-234390; InduVir, PEOPLE-IRG-2009-245808; RabPstem, PERG07-GA-2010-268422; PluriSys, HEALTH-2007-B-223485; AniStem, PIAP-GA-2011-286264), NKTH-OTKA-EU-7KP HUMAN-MB08-C-80-205; Plurabbit, OMFB-00130-00131/2010 ANR-NKTH/09-GENM-010-01.


2017 ◽  
Vol 214 (6) ◽  
pp. 1631-1641 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudia Carrieri ◽  
Stefano Comazzetto ◽  
Amit Grover ◽  
Marcos Morgan ◽  
Andreas Buness ◽  
...  

The spermatogonial stem cell (SSC) that supports spermatogenesis throughout adult life resides within the GFRα1-expressing A type undifferentiated spermatogonia. The decision to commit to spermatogenic differentiation coincides with the loss of GFRα1 and reciprocal gain of Ngn3 (Neurog3) expression. Through the analysis of the piRNA factor Miwi2 (Piwil4), we identify a novel population of Ngn3-expressing spermatogonia that are essential for efficient testicular regeneration after injury. Depletion of Miwi2-expressing cells results in a transient impact on testicular homeostasis, with this population behaving strictly as transit amplifying cells under homeostatic conditions. However, upon injury, Miwi2-expressing cells are essential for the efficient regenerative capacity of the testis, and also display facultative stem activity in transplantation assays. In summary, the mouse testis has adopted a regenerative strategy to expand stem cell activity by incorporating a transit-amplifying population to the effective stem cell pool, thus ensuring rapid and efficient tissue repair.


2015 ◽  
Vol 370 (1680) ◽  
pp. 20140365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Rostovskaya ◽  
Nicholas Bredenkamp ◽  
Austin Smith

Human pluripotent stem cells can in principle be used as a source of any differentiated cell type for disease modelling, drug screening, toxicology testing or cell replacement therapy. Type I diabetes is considered a major target for stem cell applications due to the shortage of primary human beta cells. Several protocols have been reported for generating pancreatic progenitors by in vitro differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells. Here we first assessed one of these protocols on a panel of pluripotent stem cell lines for capacity to engender glucose sensitive insulin-producing cells after engraftment in immunocompromised mice. We observed variable outcomes with only one cell line showing a low level of glucose response. We, therefore, undertook a systematic comparison of different methods for inducing definitive endoderm and subsequently pancreatic differentiation. Of several protocols tested, we identified a combined approach that robustly generated pancreatic progenitors in vitro from both embryo-derived and induced pluripotent stem cells. These findings suggest that, although there are intrinsic differences in lineage specification propensity between pluripotent stem cell lines, optimal differentiation procedures may consistently direct a substantial fraction of cells into pancreatic specification.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 92-92
Author(s):  
Klaus Rehe ◽  
Kerrie Wilson ◽  
Simon Bomken ◽  
Hesta McNeill ◽  
Martin Stanulla ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 92 Research on cancer stem cells, cells that self-renew and reconstitute the full phenotype of the original malignancy, has yielded controversial results regarding their frequency and identity for many cancers. The hierarchical stem cell model has been well established in some malignancies such as acute myeloid leukemia and states that only rare, immunophenotypically immature blasts harbor stem cell activity, resembling a normal physiological hierarchy. The opposing stochastic model proposes that stemness in cancer cells is supported by extrinsic stimuli and that a substantial fraction of malignant cells have this potential. Continued optimization of in vivo xenotransplantation modeling recently caused a paradigm shift for some cancers, for example in malignant melanoma where stem cell activity was found in as many as 1 in 4 cells. For acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) we and others previously challenged the hierarchical model by demonstrating that both immature and more mature leukemic blasts contain self-renewal properties (Cancer Cell 2008, 14(1), p47-58). In this study we address the frequency of leukemic stem cells in the bulk leukemia and also, more specifically, in subpopulations of different blast maturity by using unsorted and highly purified flow sorted cell fractions. Primary patient material as well as leukemic blasts harvested from engrafted mouse bone marrow (secondary and tertiary material) were sorted for their CD10, CD20 or CD34 expression followed by orthotopic intrafemoral transplantation into severely immunocompromised NOD/scid IL2Rγnull (NSG) mice. Engraftment of transplanted CD19+CD10low and CD19+CD10high, CD19+CD20low and CD19+CD20high and CD19+CD34low and CD19+CD34high blast populations was monitored by 5 color flow cytometry using material from consecutive bone marrow punctures, final bone marrow harvests and/or single cell suspensions from spleens. Primary ALL samples from 15 high risk (BCR/ABL positive (n=8), BCR/ABL like ALL (n=2), high hyperdiploid/MRD positive (n=2), MRD positive (n=1), MLL/AF4 (n=2)), 3 intermediate risk (high WBC/MRD negative (n=2), age >10 years (n=1)) and 3 standard risk (n=3) patients were included. Cells sorted into CD19+CD10low and CD19+CD10high fractions were transplanted from primary patient material (n=4, HR; n=1, SR) and from secondary samples (n=4, HR; n=1; IR) with cells from one HR patient used at limiting dilutions. As few as 100 sorted cells of either fraction were sufficient to repopulate the leukemia. CD19+CD20high and CD19+CD20 low fractions from primary (n=7, HR; n=1, IR), secondary (n=5, HR; n=1, IR) and tertiary material (n=2, HR; n=1, IR) engrafted NSG mice. Limiting dilutions were performed on secondary (n=4, HR) and tertiary material (n=2, HR). Cell numbers required for engraftment varied between leukemias with as few as 100 cells being sufficient to cause engraftment. Limiting dilution experiments using CD19+CD34high and CD19+CD34low fractions from secondary (n=1, HR) and tertiary (n=1, HR) material yielded engraftment with as few as 10 CD19+CD34high and 100 CD19+CD34low cells. Similarly, unsorted primary (n=11, HR; n=2, IR), secondary (n=2, HR) and tertiary material (n=1, HR) required as few as 10 cells for leukemic reconstitution. Taken together, both unsorted and sorted blasts of all immunophenotypes and transplanted with low numbers were able to reconstitute the complete original phenotype of the patient leukemia. All limiting dilutions were transplanted down to 10 cells per mouse and those mice not engrafted yet are still under observation. Furthermore, the ability to self-renew was demonstrated by serial transplantation. Finally, we compared expression of self-renewal associated genes (BMI1, EZH2, HMGA2, MEIS1, TERT) in CD19+CD34low and CD19+CD34high fractions of 5 HR and 1 SR samples with that in cord blood. Interestingly, expression of these genes was not dependent on the CD34 status of the leukemic cells, whereas HMGA2, MEIS1 and TERT were upregulated in CD34+ cord blood cells. In summary we provide strong evidence for the stochastic cancer stem cell model in B precursor ALL by demonstrating that (i) a broad spectrum of blast immunophenotypes exhibit stem cell characteristics and (ii) that this stemness is highly frequent among ALL cells. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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