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Murine Features of Neurogenesis in the Human Hippocampus across the Lifespan from 0 to 100 Years

BACKGROUND: Essentially all knowledge about adult hippocampal neurogenesis in humans still comes from one seminal study by Eriksson et al. in 1998, although several others have provided suggestive findings. But only little information has been available in how far the situation in animal models woul...

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Autores principales: Knoth, Rolf, Singec, Ilyas, Ditter, Margarethe, Pantazis, Georgios, Capetian, Philipp, Meyer, Ralf P., Horvat, Volker, Volk, Benedikt, Kempermann, Gerd
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2813284/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20126454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008809
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author Knoth, Rolf
Singec, Ilyas
Ditter, Margarethe
Pantazis, Georgios
Capetian, Philipp
Meyer, Ralf P.
Horvat, Volker
Volk, Benedikt
Kempermann, Gerd
author_facet Knoth, Rolf
Singec, Ilyas
Ditter, Margarethe
Pantazis, Georgios
Capetian, Philipp
Meyer, Ralf P.
Horvat, Volker
Volk, Benedikt
Kempermann, Gerd
author_sort Knoth, Rolf
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Essentially all knowledge about adult hippocampal neurogenesis in humans still comes from one seminal study by Eriksson et al. in 1998, although several others have provided suggestive findings. But only little information has been available in how far the situation in animal models would reflect the conditions in the adult and aging human brain. We therefore here mapped numerous features associated with adult neurogenesis in rodents in samples from human hippocampus across the entire lifespan. Such data would not offer proof of adult neurogenesis in humans, because it is based on the assumption that humans and rodents share marker expression patterns in adult neurogenesis. Nevertheless, together the data provide valuable information at least about the presence of markers, for which a link to adult neurogenesis might more reasonably be assumed than for others, in the adult human brain and their change with increasing age. METHODS AND FINDINGS: In rodents, doublecortin (DCX) is transiently expressed during adult neurogenesis and within the neurogenic niche of the dentate gyrus can serve as a valuable marker. We validated DCX as marker of granule cell development in fetal human tissue and used DCX expression as seed to examine the dentate gyrus for additional neurogenesis-associated features across the lifespan. We studied 54 individuals and detected DCX expression between birth and 100 years of age. Caveats for post-mortem analyses of human tissues apply but all samples were free of signs of ischemia and activated caspase-3. Fourteen markers related to adult hippocampal neurogenesis in rodents were assessed in DCX-positive cells. Total numbers of DCX expressing cells declined exponentially with increasing age, and co-expression of DCX with the other markers decreased. This argued against a non-specific re-appearance of immature markers in specimen from old brains. Early postnatally all 14 markers were co-expressed in DCX-positive cells. Until 30 to 40 years of age, for example, an overlap of DCX with Ki67, Mcm2, Sox2, Nestin, Prox1, PSA-NCAM, Calretinin, NeuN, and others was detected, and some key markers (Nestin, Sox2, Prox1) remained co-expressed into oldest age. CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest that in the adult human hippocampus neurogenesis-associated features that have been identified in rodents show patterns, as well as qualitative and quantitative age-related changes, that are similar to the course of adult hippocampal neurogenesis in rodents. Consequently, although further validation as well as the application of independent methodology (e.g. electron microscopy and cell culture work) is desirable, our data will help to devise the framework for specific research on cellular plasticity in the aging human hippocampus.
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spelling pubmed-28132842010-02-03 Murine Features of Neurogenesis in the Human Hippocampus across the Lifespan from 0 to 100 Years Knoth, Rolf Singec, Ilyas Ditter, Margarethe Pantazis, Georgios Capetian, Philipp Meyer, Ralf P. Horvat, Volker Volk, Benedikt Kempermann, Gerd PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Essentially all knowledge about adult hippocampal neurogenesis in humans still comes from one seminal study by Eriksson et al. in 1998, although several others have provided suggestive findings. But only little information has been available in how far the situation in animal models would reflect the conditions in the adult and aging human brain. We therefore here mapped numerous features associated with adult neurogenesis in rodents in samples from human hippocampus across the entire lifespan. Such data would not offer proof of adult neurogenesis in humans, because it is based on the assumption that humans and rodents share marker expression patterns in adult neurogenesis. Nevertheless, together the data provide valuable information at least about the presence of markers, for which a link to adult neurogenesis might more reasonably be assumed than for others, in the adult human brain and their change with increasing age. METHODS AND FINDINGS: In rodents, doublecortin (DCX) is transiently expressed during adult neurogenesis and within the neurogenic niche of the dentate gyrus can serve as a valuable marker. We validated DCX as marker of granule cell development in fetal human tissue and used DCX expression as seed to examine the dentate gyrus for additional neurogenesis-associated features across the lifespan. We studied 54 individuals and detected DCX expression between birth and 100 years of age. Caveats for post-mortem analyses of human tissues apply but all samples were free of signs of ischemia and activated caspase-3. Fourteen markers related to adult hippocampal neurogenesis in rodents were assessed in DCX-positive cells. Total numbers of DCX expressing cells declined exponentially with increasing age, and co-expression of DCX with the other markers decreased. This argued against a non-specific re-appearance of immature markers in specimen from old brains. Early postnatally all 14 markers were co-expressed in DCX-positive cells. Until 30 to 40 years of age, for example, an overlap of DCX with Ki67, Mcm2, Sox2, Nestin, Prox1, PSA-NCAM, Calretinin, NeuN, and others was detected, and some key markers (Nestin, Sox2, Prox1) remained co-expressed into oldest age. CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest that in the adult human hippocampus neurogenesis-associated features that have been identified in rodents show patterns, as well as qualitative and quantitative age-related changes, that are similar to the course of adult hippocampal neurogenesis in rodents. Consequently, although further validation as well as the application of independent methodology (e.g. electron microscopy and cell culture work) is desirable, our data will help to devise the framework for specific research on cellular plasticity in the aging human hippocampus. Public Library of Science 2010-01-29 /pmc/articles/PMC2813284/ /pubmed/20126454 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008809 Text en Knoth et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Knoth, Rolf
Singec, Ilyas
Ditter, Margarethe
Pantazis, Georgios
Capetian, Philipp
Meyer, Ralf P.
Horvat, Volker
Volk, Benedikt
Kempermann, Gerd
Murine Features of Neurogenesis in the Human Hippocampus across the Lifespan from 0 to 100 Years
title Murine Features of Neurogenesis in the Human Hippocampus across the Lifespan from 0 to 100 Years
title_full Murine Features of Neurogenesis in the Human Hippocampus across the Lifespan from 0 to 100 Years
title_fullStr Murine Features of Neurogenesis in the Human Hippocampus across the Lifespan from 0 to 100 Years
title_full_unstemmed Murine Features of Neurogenesis in the Human Hippocampus across the Lifespan from 0 to 100 Years
title_short Murine Features of Neurogenesis in the Human Hippocampus across the Lifespan from 0 to 100 Years
title_sort murine features of neurogenesis in the human hippocampus across the lifespan from 0 to 100 years
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2813284/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20126454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0008809
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