Literature DB >> 1538585

Nestin expression in embryonic human neuroepithelium and in human neuroepithelial tumor cells.

T Tohyama1, V M Lee, L B Rorke, M Marvin, R D McKay, J Q Trojanowski.   

Abstract

Nestin is a recently described member of the intermediate filament (IF) protein family that is especially abundant in neuroepithelial stem cells of the rat. The studies described here examine this class VI IF protein in the normal human developing central nervous system (CNS), human brain tumor-derived cell lines, and tissue samples of human CNS tumors. Human nestin exhibited biochemical and immunochemical properties similar to those of rat nestin. Further, as in the rat, nestin was detected immunohistochemically in several different types of immature human CNS cells, i.e. germinal matrix cells, neuroepithelial cells lining the central canal, radial glia and vascular cells. Nestin appeared in these cells at the earliest gestational age (i.e., 6 weeks) examined here and then it declined in all but the vascular cells at later embryonic stages. Nestin also was detected by immunocytochemistry in 6 of 7 primitive neuroectodermal tumor cell lines and in both of 2 malignant glioma cell lines examined. In these cell lines, nestin co-localized incompletely with bundles of IFs containing other IF proteins (i.e., vimentin, glial filament, neurofilament). Nestin was ubiquitous in a wide variety of brain tumors, but was most prominent in gliomas. The transient expression of nestin in primitive neuroepithelial cells at early stages of human embryogenesis and its abundance in neuroepithelial tumors suggest a role for nestin IFs in cellular events that precede the exit of embryonic CNS stem cells from the cell cycle and the commitment of the progeny of these stem cells to a specific lineage. The subsequent induction of different members of the IF protein family in phenotypically distinct CNS cells (i.e. neurons, glia) and the elimination of nestin from almost all differentiated CNS cells, imply that different classes of IFs subserve functions that are closely linked to the maturational state, as well as the lineage, of CNS cells.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1538585

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lab Invest        ISSN: 0023-6837            Impact factor:   5.662


  100 in total

1.  Expression of the intermediate filament nestin in gastrointestinal stromal tumors and interstitial cells of Cajal.

Authors:  T Tsujimura; C Makiishi-Shimobayashi; J Lundkvist; U Lendahl; K Nakasho; A Sugihara; T Iwasaki; M Mano; N Yamada; K Yamashita; A Toyosaka; N Terada
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 4.307

2.  PLAGL2 regulates Wnt signaling to impede differentiation in neural stem cells and gliomas.

Authors:  Hongwu Zheng; Haoqiang Ying; Ruprecht Wiedemeyer; Haiyan Yan; Steven N Quayle; Elena V Ivanova; Ji-Hye Paik; Hailei Zhang; Yonghong Xiao; Samuel R Perry; Jian Hu; Anant Vinjamoori; Boyi Gan; Ergun Sahin; Milan G Chheda; Cameron Brennan; Y Alan Wang; William C Hahn; Lynda Chin; Ronald A DePinho
Journal:  Cancer Cell       Date:  2010-05-18       Impact factor: 31.743

3.  Proof-of Concept that an Acute Trophic Factors Intervention After Spinal Cord Injury Provides an Adequate Niche for Neuroprotection, Recruitment of Nestin-Expressing Progenitors and Regeneration.

Authors:  Warin Krityakiarana; Paul M Zhao; Kevin Nguyen; Fernando Gomez-Pinilla; Naiphinich Kotchabhakdi; Jean de Vellis; Araceli Espinosa-Jeffrey
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2016-02-17       Impact factor: 3.996

4.  Critical role of TrkB and brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the differentiation and survival of retinal pigment epithelium.

Authors:  Z Z Liu; L Q Zhu; F F Eide
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  1997-11-15       Impact factor: 6.167

5.  Monoclonal antibodies to a rat nestin fusion protein recognize a 220-kDa polypeptide in subsets of fetal and adult human central nervous system neurons and in primitive neuroectodermal tumor cells.

Authors:  T Tohyama; V M Lee; L B Rorke; M Marvin; R D McKay; J Q Trojanowski
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  1993-07       Impact factor: 4.307

Review 6.  Stem cells and the origin and propagation of brain tumors.

Authors:  Brian A Emmenegger; Robert J Wechsler-Reya
Journal:  J Child Neurol       Date:  2008-10       Impact factor: 1.987

7.  Immunohistochemical study of central neurocytoma, subependymoma, and subependymal giant cell astrocytoma.

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Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 4.130

8.  Selective expression of presenilin 1 in neural progenitor cells rescues the cerebral hemorrhages and cortical lamination defects in presenilin 1-null mutant mice.

Authors:  Paul H Wen; Rita De Gasperi; Miguel A Gama Sosa; Anne B Rocher; Victor L Friedrich; Patrick R Hof; Gregory A Elder
Journal:  Development       Date:  2005-08-03       Impact factor: 6.868

9.  Expression of KIAA 0864 protein in neuroepithelial tumors: an analysis based on the presence of monoclonal antibody HFB-16.

Authors:  Yasuo Sugita; Yasuhiro Nakamura; Munehiko Yamamoto; Sachiko Ogasawara; Kouichi Ohshima; Minoru Shigemori
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2008-05-06       Impact factor: 4.130

Review 10.  Cellular and molecular pathology of medulloblastoma.

Authors:  J P Provias; L E Becker
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  1996-07       Impact factor: 4.130

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