Literature DB >> 15277705

Differentiation prevents assessment of neural stem cell pluripotency after blastocyst injection.

Béatrice Gréco1, Hoi Pang Low, Eric C Johnson, Rebecca A Salmonsen, Judith Gallant, Stephen N Jones, Alonzo H Ross, Lawrence D Recht.   

Abstract

Earlier studies reported that neural stem (NS) cells injected into blastocysts appeared to be pluripotent, differentiating into cells of all three germ layers. In this study, we followed in vitro green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labeled NS and embryonic stem (ES) cells injected into blastocysts. Forty-eight hours after injection, significantly fewer blastocysts contained GFP-NS cells than GFP-ES cells. By 96 hours, very few GFP-NS cells remained in blastocysts compared with ES cells. Moreover, 48 hours after injection, GFP-NS cells in blastocysts extended long cellular processes, ceased expressing the NS cell marker nestin, and instead expressed the astrocytic marker glial fibrillary acidic protein. GFP-ES cells in blastocysts remained morphologically undifferentiated, continuing to express the pluripotent marker stage-specific embryonic antigen-1. Selecting cells from the NS cell population that preferentially formed neurospheres for injection into blastocysts resulted in identical results. Consistent with this in vitro behavior, none of almost 80 mice resulting from NS cell-injected blastocysts replaced into recipient mothers were chimeric. These results strongly support the idea that NS cells cannot participate in chimera formation because of their rapid differentiation into glia-like cells. Thus, these results raise doubts concerning the pluripotency properties of NS cells.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15277705     DOI: 10.1634/stemcells.22-4-600

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stem Cells        ISSN: 1066-5099            Impact factor:   6.277


  2 in total

1.  Adhesion is prerequisite, but alone insufficient, to elicit stem cell pluripotency.

Authors:  Phillip Karpowicz; Tomoyuki Inoue; Sue Runciman; Brian Deveale; Raewyn Seaberg; Marina Gertsenstein; Lois Byers; Yojiro Yamanaka; Sandra Tondat; John Slevin; Seiji Hitoshi; Janet Rossant; Derek van der Kooy
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2007-05-16       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Xenotransplantation of adult hippocampal neural progenitors into the developing zebrafish for assessment of stem cell plasticity.

Authors:  Elizabeth J Sandquist; Jeffrey J Essner; Donald S Sakaguchi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-05-24       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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