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Notch Is Not Involved in Physioxia-Mediated Stem Cell Maintenance in Midbrain Neural Stem Cells

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The physiological oxygen tension in fetal brains (∼3%, physioxia) is beneficial for the maintenance of neural stem cells (NSCs). Sensitivity to oxygen varies between NSCs from different fetal brain regions, with midbrain NSCs showing selective susceptibility. Data on Hif-1...

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Autores principales: Herrmann, Anne, Meyer, Anne K., Braunschweig, Lena, Wagenfuehr, Lisa, Markert, Franz, Kolitsch, Deborah, Vukicevic, Vladimir, Hartmann, Christiane, Siebert, Marlen, Ehrhart-Bornstein, Monika, Hermann, Andreas, Storch, Alexander
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Society for Stem Cell Research 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10465337/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37105558
http://dx.doi.org/10.15283/ijsc22168
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author Herrmann, Anne
Meyer, Anne K.
Braunschweig, Lena
Wagenfuehr, Lisa
Markert, Franz
Kolitsch, Deborah
Vukicevic, Vladimir
Hartmann, Christiane
Siebert, Marlen
Ehrhart-Bornstein, Monika
Hermann, Andreas
Storch, Alexander
author_facet Herrmann, Anne
Meyer, Anne K.
Braunschweig, Lena
Wagenfuehr, Lisa
Markert, Franz
Kolitsch, Deborah
Vukicevic, Vladimir
Hartmann, Christiane
Siebert, Marlen
Ehrhart-Bornstein, Monika
Hermann, Andreas
Storch, Alexander
author_sort Herrmann, Anne
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The physiological oxygen tension in fetal brains (∼3%, physioxia) is beneficial for the maintenance of neural stem cells (NSCs). Sensitivity to oxygen varies between NSCs from different fetal brain regions, with midbrain NSCs showing selective susceptibility. Data on Hif-1α/Notch regulatory interactions as well as our observations that Hif-1α and oxygen affect midbrain NSCs survival and proliferation prompted our investigations on involvement of Notch signalling in physioxia-dependent midbrain NSCs performance. METHODS AND RESULTS: Here we found that physioxia (3% O(2)) compared to normoxia (21% O(2)) increased proliferation, maintained stemness by suppression of spontaneous differentiation and supported cell cycle progression. Microarray and qRT-PCR analyses identified significant changes of Notch related genes in midbrain NSCs after long-term (13 days), but not after short-term physioxia (48 hours). Consistently, inhibition of Notch signalling with DAPT increased, but its stimulation with Dll4 decreased spontaneous differentiation into neurons solely under normoxic but not under physioxic conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Notch signalling does not influence the fate decision of midbrain NSCs cultured in vitro in physioxia, where other factors like Hif-1α might be involved. Our findings on how physioxia effects in midbrain NSCs are transduced by alternative signalling might, at least in part, explain their selective susceptibility to oxygen.
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spelling pubmed-104653372023-08-31 Notch Is Not Involved in Physioxia-Mediated Stem Cell Maintenance in Midbrain Neural Stem Cells Herrmann, Anne Meyer, Anne K. Braunschweig, Lena Wagenfuehr, Lisa Markert, Franz Kolitsch, Deborah Vukicevic, Vladimir Hartmann, Christiane Siebert, Marlen Ehrhart-Bornstein, Monika Hermann, Andreas Storch, Alexander Int J Stem Cells Original Article BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The physiological oxygen tension in fetal brains (∼3%, physioxia) is beneficial for the maintenance of neural stem cells (NSCs). Sensitivity to oxygen varies between NSCs from different fetal brain regions, with midbrain NSCs showing selective susceptibility. Data on Hif-1α/Notch regulatory interactions as well as our observations that Hif-1α and oxygen affect midbrain NSCs survival and proliferation prompted our investigations on involvement of Notch signalling in physioxia-dependent midbrain NSCs performance. METHODS AND RESULTS: Here we found that physioxia (3% O(2)) compared to normoxia (21% O(2)) increased proliferation, maintained stemness by suppression of spontaneous differentiation and supported cell cycle progression. Microarray and qRT-PCR analyses identified significant changes of Notch related genes in midbrain NSCs after long-term (13 days), but not after short-term physioxia (48 hours). Consistently, inhibition of Notch signalling with DAPT increased, but its stimulation with Dll4 decreased spontaneous differentiation into neurons solely under normoxic but not under physioxic conditions. CONCLUSIONS: Notch signalling does not influence the fate decision of midbrain NSCs cultured in vitro in physioxia, where other factors like Hif-1α might be involved. Our findings on how physioxia effects in midbrain NSCs are transduced by alternative signalling might, at least in part, explain their selective susceptibility to oxygen. Korean Society for Stem Cell Research 2023-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10465337/ /pubmed/37105558 http://dx.doi.org/10.15283/ijsc22168 Text en Copyright © 2023 by the Korean Society for Stem Cell Research https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Herrmann, Anne
Meyer, Anne K.
Braunschweig, Lena
Wagenfuehr, Lisa
Markert, Franz
Kolitsch, Deborah
Vukicevic, Vladimir
Hartmann, Christiane
Siebert, Marlen
Ehrhart-Bornstein, Monika
Hermann, Andreas
Storch, Alexander
Notch Is Not Involved in Physioxia-Mediated Stem Cell Maintenance in Midbrain Neural Stem Cells
title Notch Is Not Involved in Physioxia-Mediated Stem Cell Maintenance in Midbrain Neural Stem Cells
title_full Notch Is Not Involved in Physioxia-Mediated Stem Cell Maintenance in Midbrain Neural Stem Cells
title_fullStr Notch Is Not Involved in Physioxia-Mediated Stem Cell Maintenance in Midbrain Neural Stem Cells
title_full_unstemmed Notch Is Not Involved in Physioxia-Mediated Stem Cell Maintenance in Midbrain Neural Stem Cells
title_short Notch Is Not Involved in Physioxia-Mediated Stem Cell Maintenance in Midbrain Neural Stem Cells
title_sort notch is not involved in physioxia-mediated stem cell maintenance in midbrain neural stem cells
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10465337/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37105558
http://dx.doi.org/10.15283/ijsc22168
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