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RNA Profiling of Mouse Ependymal Cells after Spinal Cord Injury Identifies the Oncostatin Pathway as a Potential Key Regulator of Spinal Cord Stem Cell Fate

Ependymal cells reside in the adult spinal cord and display stem cell properties in vitro. They proliferate after spinal cord injury and produce neurons in lower vertebrates but predominantly astrocytes in mammals. The mechanisms underlying this glial-biased differentiation remain ill-defined. We ad...

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Autores principales: Chevreau, Robert, Ghazale, Hussein, Ripoll, Chantal, Chalfouh, Chaima, Delarue, Quentin, Hemonnot-Girard, Anne Laure, Mamaeva, Daria, Hirbec, Helene, Rothhut, Bernard, Wahane, Shalaka, Perrin, Florence Evelyne, Noristani, Harun Najib, Guerout, Nicolas, Hugnot, Jean Philippe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8699053/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34943841
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells10123332
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author Chevreau, Robert
Ghazale, Hussein
Ripoll, Chantal
Chalfouh, Chaima
Delarue, Quentin
Hemonnot-Girard, Anne Laure
Mamaeva, Daria
Hirbec, Helene
Rothhut, Bernard
Wahane, Shalaka
Perrin, Florence Evelyne
Noristani, Harun Najib
Guerout, Nicolas
Hugnot, Jean Philippe
author_facet Chevreau, Robert
Ghazale, Hussein
Ripoll, Chantal
Chalfouh, Chaima
Delarue, Quentin
Hemonnot-Girard, Anne Laure
Mamaeva, Daria
Hirbec, Helene
Rothhut, Bernard
Wahane, Shalaka
Perrin, Florence Evelyne
Noristani, Harun Najib
Guerout, Nicolas
Hugnot, Jean Philippe
author_sort Chevreau, Robert
collection PubMed
description Ependymal cells reside in the adult spinal cord and display stem cell properties in vitro. They proliferate after spinal cord injury and produce neurons in lower vertebrates but predominantly astrocytes in mammals. The mechanisms underlying this glial-biased differentiation remain ill-defined. We addressed this issue by generating a molecular resource through RNA profiling of ependymal cells before and after injury. We found that these cells activate STAT3 and ERK/MAPK signaling post injury and downregulate cilia-associated genes and FOXJ1, a central transcription factor in ciliogenesis. Conversely, they upregulate 510 genes, seven of them more than 20-fold, namely Crym, Ecm1, Ifi202b, Nupr1, Rbp1, Thbs2 and Osmr—the receptor for oncostatin, a microglia-specific cytokine which too is strongly upregulated after injury. We studied the regulation and role of Osmr using neurospheres derived from the adult spinal cord. We found that oncostatin induced strong Osmr and p-STAT3 expression in these cells which is associated with reduction of proliferation and promotion of astrocytic versus oligodendrocytic differentiation. Microglial cells are apposed to ependymal cells in vivo and co-culture experiments showed that these cells upregulate Osmr in neurosphere cultures. Collectively, these results support the notion that microglial cells and Osmr/Oncostatin pathway may regulate the astrocytic fate of ependymal cells in spinal cord injury.
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spelling pubmed-86990532021-12-24 RNA Profiling of Mouse Ependymal Cells after Spinal Cord Injury Identifies the Oncostatin Pathway as a Potential Key Regulator of Spinal Cord Stem Cell Fate Chevreau, Robert Ghazale, Hussein Ripoll, Chantal Chalfouh, Chaima Delarue, Quentin Hemonnot-Girard, Anne Laure Mamaeva, Daria Hirbec, Helene Rothhut, Bernard Wahane, Shalaka Perrin, Florence Evelyne Noristani, Harun Najib Guerout, Nicolas Hugnot, Jean Philippe Cells Article Ependymal cells reside in the adult spinal cord and display stem cell properties in vitro. They proliferate after spinal cord injury and produce neurons in lower vertebrates but predominantly astrocytes in mammals. The mechanisms underlying this glial-biased differentiation remain ill-defined. We addressed this issue by generating a molecular resource through RNA profiling of ependymal cells before and after injury. We found that these cells activate STAT3 and ERK/MAPK signaling post injury and downregulate cilia-associated genes and FOXJ1, a central transcription factor in ciliogenesis. Conversely, they upregulate 510 genes, seven of them more than 20-fold, namely Crym, Ecm1, Ifi202b, Nupr1, Rbp1, Thbs2 and Osmr—the receptor for oncostatin, a microglia-specific cytokine which too is strongly upregulated after injury. We studied the regulation and role of Osmr using neurospheres derived from the adult spinal cord. We found that oncostatin induced strong Osmr and p-STAT3 expression in these cells which is associated with reduction of proliferation and promotion of astrocytic versus oligodendrocytic differentiation. Microglial cells are apposed to ependymal cells in vivo and co-culture experiments showed that these cells upregulate Osmr in neurosphere cultures. Collectively, these results support the notion that microglial cells and Osmr/Oncostatin pathway may regulate the astrocytic fate of ependymal cells in spinal cord injury. MDPI 2021-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC8699053/ /pubmed/34943841 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells10123332 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Chevreau, Robert
Ghazale, Hussein
Ripoll, Chantal
Chalfouh, Chaima
Delarue, Quentin
Hemonnot-Girard, Anne Laure
Mamaeva, Daria
Hirbec, Helene
Rothhut, Bernard
Wahane, Shalaka
Perrin, Florence Evelyne
Noristani, Harun Najib
Guerout, Nicolas
Hugnot, Jean Philippe
RNA Profiling of Mouse Ependymal Cells after Spinal Cord Injury Identifies the Oncostatin Pathway as a Potential Key Regulator of Spinal Cord Stem Cell Fate
title RNA Profiling of Mouse Ependymal Cells after Spinal Cord Injury Identifies the Oncostatin Pathway as a Potential Key Regulator of Spinal Cord Stem Cell Fate
title_full RNA Profiling of Mouse Ependymal Cells after Spinal Cord Injury Identifies the Oncostatin Pathway as a Potential Key Regulator of Spinal Cord Stem Cell Fate
title_fullStr RNA Profiling of Mouse Ependymal Cells after Spinal Cord Injury Identifies the Oncostatin Pathway as a Potential Key Regulator of Spinal Cord Stem Cell Fate
title_full_unstemmed RNA Profiling of Mouse Ependymal Cells after Spinal Cord Injury Identifies the Oncostatin Pathway as a Potential Key Regulator of Spinal Cord Stem Cell Fate
title_short RNA Profiling of Mouse Ependymal Cells after Spinal Cord Injury Identifies the Oncostatin Pathway as a Potential Key Regulator of Spinal Cord Stem Cell Fate
title_sort rna profiling of mouse ependymal cells after spinal cord injury identifies the oncostatin pathway as a potential key regulator of spinal cord stem cell fate
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8699053/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34943841
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells10123332
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