Cargando…

Differences between the neurogenic and proliferative abilities of Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and the ciliary epithelium from the adult human eye

Much controversy has arisen on the nature and sources of stem cells in the adult human retina. Whilst ciliary epithelium has been thought to constitute a source of neural stem cells, a population of Müller glia in the neural retina has also been shown to exhibit neurogenic characteristics. This stud...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bhatia, Bhairavi, Jayaram, Hari, Singhal, Shweta, Jones, Megan F., Limb, G. Astrid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Academic Press 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3268355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21989110
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.exer.2011.09.015
_version_ 1782222371243950080
author Bhatia, Bhairavi
Jayaram, Hari
Singhal, Shweta
Jones, Megan F.
Limb, G. Astrid
author_facet Bhatia, Bhairavi
Jayaram, Hari
Singhal, Shweta
Jones, Megan F.
Limb, G. Astrid
author_sort Bhatia, Bhairavi
collection PubMed
description Much controversy has arisen on the nature and sources of stem cells in the adult human retina. Whilst ciliary epithelium has been thought to constitute a source of neural stem cells, a population of Müller glia in the neural retina has also been shown to exhibit neurogenic characteristics. This study aimed to compare the neurogenic and proliferative abilities between these two major cell populations. It also examined whether differences exist between the pigmented and non-pigmented ciliary epithelium (CE) from the adult human eye. On this basis, Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and pigmented and non-pigmented CE were isolated from human neural retina and ciliary epithelium respectively. Expression of glial, epithelial and neural progenitor markers was examined in these cells following culture under adherent and non-adherent conditions and treatments to induce neural differentiation. Unlike pigmented CE which did not proliferate, non-pigmented CE cells exhibited limited proliferation in vitro, unless epidermal growth factor (EGF) was present in the culture medium to prolong their survival. In contrast, Müller glial stem cells (MSC) cultured as adherent monolayers reached confluence within a few weeks and continued to proliferative indefinitely in the absence of EGF. Both MSC and non-pigmented CE expressed markers of neural progenitors, including SOX2, PAX6, CHX10 and NOTCH. Nestin, a neural stem cell marker, was only expressed by MSC. Non-pigmented CE displayed epithelial morphology, limited photoreceptor gene expression and stained strongly for pigmented epithelial markers upon culture with neural differentiation factors. In contrast, MSC adopted neural morphology and expressed markers of retinal ganglion cells and photoreceptors when cultured under similar conditions. This study provides the first demonstration that pigmented CE possess different proliferative abilities from non-pigmented CE. It also showed that although non-pigmented CE express genes of retinal progenitors, they do not differentiate into neurons in vitro, as that seen with Müller glia that proliferate indefinitely in vitro and that acquire markers of retinal neurons in culture under neural differentiation protocols. From these observations it is possible to suggest that Müller glia that express markers of neural progenitors and become spontaneously immortalized in vitro constitute a potential source of retinal neurons for transplantation studies and fulfil the characteristics of true stem cells due to their proliferative and neurogenic ability.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3268355
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher Academic Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-32683552012-01-30 Differences between the neurogenic and proliferative abilities of Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and the ciliary epithelium from the adult human eye Bhatia, Bhairavi Jayaram, Hari Singhal, Shweta Jones, Megan F. Limb, G. Astrid Exp Eye Res Article Much controversy has arisen on the nature and sources of stem cells in the adult human retina. Whilst ciliary epithelium has been thought to constitute a source of neural stem cells, a population of Müller glia in the neural retina has also been shown to exhibit neurogenic characteristics. This study aimed to compare the neurogenic and proliferative abilities between these two major cell populations. It also examined whether differences exist between the pigmented and non-pigmented ciliary epithelium (CE) from the adult human eye. On this basis, Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and pigmented and non-pigmented CE were isolated from human neural retina and ciliary epithelium respectively. Expression of glial, epithelial and neural progenitor markers was examined in these cells following culture under adherent and non-adherent conditions and treatments to induce neural differentiation. Unlike pigmented CE which did not proliferate, non-pigmented CE cells exhibited limited proliferation in vitro, unless epidermal growth factor (EGF) was present in the culture medium to prolong their survival. In contrast, Müller glial stem cells (MSC) cultured as adherent monolayers reached confluence within a few weeks and continued to proliferative indefinitely in the absence of EGF. Both MSC and non-pigmented CE expressed markers of neural progenitors, including SOX2, PAX6, CHX10 and NOTCH. Nestin, a neural stem cell marker, was only expressed by MSC. Non-pigmented CE displayed epithelial morphology, limited photoreceptor gene expression and stained strongly for pigmented epithelial markers upon culture with neural differentiation factors. In contrast, MSC adopted neural morphology and expressed markers of retinal ganglion cells and photoreceptors when cultured under similar conditions. This study provides the first demonstration that pigmented CE possess different proliferative abilities from non-pigmented CE. It also showed that although non-pigmented CE express genes of retinal progenitors, they do not differentiate into neurons in vitro, as that seen with Müller glia that proliferate indefinitely in vitro and that acquire markers of retinal neurons in culture under neural differentiation protocols. From these observations it is possible to suggest that Müller glia that express markers of neural progenitors and become spontaneously immortalized in vitro constitute a potential source of retinal neurons for transplantation studies and fulfil the characteristics of true stem cells due to their proliferative and neurogenic ability. Academic Press 2011-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3268355/ /pubmed/21989110 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.exer.2011.09.015 Text en © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Open Access under CC BY 3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) license
spellingShingle Article
Bhatia, Bhairavi
Jayaram, Hari
Singhal, Shweta
Jones, Megan F.
Limb, G. Astrid
Differences between the neurogenic and proliferative abilities of Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and the ciliary epithelium from the adult human eye
title Differences between the neurogenic and proliferative abilities of Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and the ciliary epithelium from the adult human eye
title_full Differences between the neurogenic and proliferative abilities of Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and the ciliary epithelium from the adult human eye
title_fullStr Differences between the neurogenic and proliferative abilities of Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and the ciliary epithelium from the adult human eye
title_full_unstemmed Differences between the neurogenic and proliferative abilities of Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and the ciliary epithelium from the adult human eye
title_short Differences between the neurogenic and proliferative abilities of Müller glia with stem cell characteristics and the ciliary epithelium from the adult human eye
title_sort differences between the neurogenic and proliferative abilities of müller glia with stem cell characteristics and the ciliary epithelium from the adult human eye
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3268355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21989110
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.exer.2011.09.015
work_keys_str_mv AT bhatiabhairavi differencesbetweentheneurogenicandproliferativeabilitiesofmullergliawithstemcellcharacteristicsandtheciliaryepitheliumfromtheadulthumaneye
AT jayaramhari differencesbetweentheneurogenicandproliferativeabilitiesofmullergliawithstemcellcharacteristicsandtheciliaryepitheliumfromtheadulthumaneye
AT singhalshweta differencesbetweentheneurogenicandproliferativeabilitiesofmullergliawithstemcellcharacteristicsandtheciliaryepitheliumfromtheadulthumaneye
AT jonesmeganf differencesbetweentheneurogenicandproliferativeabilitiesofmullergliawithstemcellcharacteristicsandtheciliaryepitheliumfromtheadulthumaneye
AT limbgastrid differencesbetweentheneurogenicandproliferativeabilitiesofmullergliawithstemcellcharacteristicsandtheciliaryepitheliumfromtheadulthumaneye