| Literature DB >> 20033790 |
Yohei Hayashi1, Miho Kusuda Furue, Satoshi Tanaka, Michiko Hirose, Noriko Wakisaka, Hiroki Danno, Kiyoshi Ohnuma, Shiho Oeda, Yuko Aihara, Kunio Shiota, Atsuo Ogura, Shoichi Ishiura, Makoto Asashima.
Abstract
Because mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) do not contribute to the formation of extraembryonic placenta when they are injected into blastocysts, it is believed that mESCs do not differentiate into trophoblast whereas human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) can express trophoblast markers when exposed to bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4) in vitro. To test whether mESCs have the potential to differentiate into trophoblast, we assessed the effect of BMP4 on mESCs in a defined monolayer culture condition. The expression of trophoblast-specific transcription factors such as Cdx2, Dlx3, Esx1, Gata3, Hand1, Mash2, and Plx1 was specifically upregulated in the BMP4-treated differentiated cells, and these cells expressed trophoblast markers. These results suggest that BMP4 treatment in defined culture conditions enabled mESCs to differentiate into trophoblast. This differentiation was inhibited by serum or leukemia inhibitory factor, which are generally used for mESC culture. In addition, we studied the mechanism underlying BMP4-directed mESC differentiation into trophoblast. Our results showed that BMP4 activates the Smad pathway in mESCs inducing Cdx2 expression, which plays a crucial role in trophoblast differentiation, through the binding of Smad protein to the Cdx2 genomic enhancer sequence. Our findings imply that there is a common molecular mechanism underlying hESC and mESC differentiation into trophoblast.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 20033790 PMCID: PMC2862943 DOI: 10.1007/s11626-009-9266-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: In Vitro Cell Dev Biol Anim ISSN: 1071-2690 Impact factor: 2.416
Primer pairs used in RT–PCR
| Names | Sequences | Product size | Cycles |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 5′-CTGCTGTAGGCGGAATGTATGTCT-3′ | 146 | – |
| 5′-AAGGCTTGTTTGGCTCGTTACAC-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-TACTCGCCCAAGTCGGAATA-3′ | 174 | – |
| 5′-AGTAGATCGTTCGCGGCTTT-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-CGGCAAAGCGGACAATAACA-3′ | 195 | – |
| 5′-ATGTGCAGCCTCGGTTGGTA-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-GCTGTATGCTATGCCTCCCAACG-3′ | 166 | – |
| 5′-ACTCTGCAGCAGGCTCATCTGGT-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-GAGCTGGAGGCCTTTTTCCA-3′ | 194 | – |
| 5′-ACACCCACAGGGGGACTCAT-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-CTCGGCTCAACACCGTCAAT-3′ | 132 | – |
| 5′-AGCTGTCCCCACCGTTCTCT-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-TCCTACAGACCCGGCCAAAC-3′ | 163 | – |
| 5′-ACACGTTGGCAGCTTGGATG-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-ACCCAGAAGACTGTGGATGG-3′ | 173 | – |
| 5′-CACATTGGGGGTAGGAACAC-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-GGGCTACGGTGCAGAGGTAT-3′ | 163 | – |
| 5′-TGGATGGACGTCTTGGAGAA-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-TACCTGAGACCCGCCATCTG-3′ | 152 | 35 |
| 5′-AAGATGAAGCGTCCGTCGTG-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-TCGCCGAGCTAAATGGAGAA-3′ | 124 | – |
| 5′-TGCTGAGGCAACTCCCTTTT-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-CGGGATCTGCACTCGAGGAT-3′ | 183 | – |
| 5′-GGTGGGAAGTGGACGTTTGC-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-AAGTTGGGGAGTACACAATG-3′ | 195 | – |
| 5′-CACCATACCACACATATGGA-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-CATTTGGCTGAACTGTCTCA-3′ | 111 | 35 |
| 5′-GACTTCCTCTCGATTCTCTG-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-AGGAACAAGCCAGGCTCACA-3′ | 178 | 35 |
| 5′-TTCCGGACTGCGTTGATCTT-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-CGATGGATGGGTGTGGATGA-3′ | 165 | – |
| 5′-TGACAGGGCTGGCACTCAAG-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-GTCATGTCCGAGGCCGAGAA-3′ | 118 | – |
| 5′-AGCAGCGTCTTGGTCTTGCG-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-AGTCCCTGAAGCGCAGTTGG-3′ | 138 | 35 |
| 5′-TTGGAGCCTTCCGTCTCCTG-3′ | |||
|
| 5′-GTCATCCTGTGCCTGGGTGT-3′ | 163 | 35 |
| 5′-TGCCATCCTTCTCCTGGTCA-3′ |
Figure 1.The effect of BMP4 on mESCs in defined culture conditions. (A) phase contrast photomicrographs of differentiated mESCs cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium for 4 d (left) and 8 d (right). Scale bars are 100 µm. (B) quantitative real-time RT–PCR analysis of trophoblast-specific transcription factor expressions. The mESCs cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium for 0, 2, 4, 6, and 8 d were analyzed. (C) Quantitative RT–PCR analysis of differentiation markers of mESCs. The cells cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium for 4 d were analyzed. The amount of undifferentiated mESCs is indicated as 1. (D) Proliferation of differentiating mESCs on various BMP4 concentrations. mESCs were seeded in a 24-well dish at 5 × 103 cells per well on each BMP4 concentration in ESF5. Cells were counted every 24 h. The values are the mean ± SEM (n = 4). (E) quantitative RT–PCR analysis of BMP4-induced trophoblast transcription factors in mESCs cultured in BMP4, activin A (10 ng/ml), or FGF4-supplemented (25 ng/ml) ESF5 medium on laminin for 4 d was analyzed. The gene expressions were normalized by the amount of Gapdh. The amount of the undifferentiated mES is indicated as 1. The values are the mean ± SEM (n = 4).
Figure 2.Differentiation into trophoblast from mESCs in vivo. (A) Immunocytostaining with trophoblast marker antibodies of the cells cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium for 4 d (right) or undifferentiated mESCs (left). Immunoreactivity of Cdh3 (upper left), Cdx2 (upper right), CK7 (lower left), and Cx31 (lower right) was visualized with AlexaFluor-488-conjugated secondary antibodies (green). Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue). Scale bars were 50 µm. (B) RT–PCR analysis of the expression of placental markers in differentiated mESCs. (C) Flow cytometric analysis of mESCs (blue) and differentiated cells at eight culture days (red). (D) Immunocytostaining with anti-Cdh3 antibodies of the cells cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium for 8 d. Arrows indicate the nuclei of hyperploid cells. Scale bars were 50 µm. (E) Flow cytometric analysis of mESCs (blue) and differentiated cells at eight culture days (red). The DNA contents were visualized with propidium iodide. Diploid (2N), tetraploid (4N), and octaploid (8N) DNA contents are indicated in the DNA content graph.
Figure 3.The effect of ECM components on the differentiation into trophoblast from mESCs. (A) Proliferation of differentiating mESCs on various ECM components. mESCs were seeded in a 24-well dish at 5 × 103 cells per well on each ECM component in ESF5 medium supplemented with BMP4. Cells were counted every 48 h. The values are the mean ± SEM (n = 3). (B) Immunocytostaining and TUNEL assay of the differentiated mESCs cultured for 4 d in BMP4-supplemented medium. As trophoblast markers, CK7 was detected with specific antibodies (red). TUNEL assay (Chemicon) was performed according to the manufacturers’ direction and labeled fixed cells with fluorescence (green). Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue). Scale bars are 50 µm. (C) Percentages of CK7-positive cells. Percentages are calculated from the observation of more than 500 cells for each sample. The values are the mean + SEM (n = 3). (D) Percentages of TUNEL-positive cells. Percentages are calculated from the observation of more than 500 cells for each sample. The values are the mean + SEM (n = 3).
Figure 4.Effect of FCS and LIF on the differentiation into trophoblast. The effect of FCS: the cells were cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium with 10% FCS (indicating as “BMP4 with FCS”) or without FCS (indicating as “BMP4 only”) for 4 d. (A) Quantitative real-time RT–PCR analysis of the expression of trophoblast-specific transcription factors. The gene expressions were normalized by the amount of Gapdh. The values are the mean ± SEM (n = 4). (B) Immunocytochemistry with Cdh3 antibodies. Immunopositive reaction of Cdh3 antibody was visualized with AlexaFluor-488-conjugated secondary antibodies (green). Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue). Scale bars are 50 µm. The effect of LIF: the cells were cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium with 10 ng/ml of LIF (indicating as “BMP4 with LIF”) or without LIF (indicating as “BMP4 only”) for 4 d. (C) Quantitative real-time RT–PCR analysis of the expression of trophoblast-specific transcription factors. (D) Immunocytochemistry with Cdh3 antibodies. (E) Immunocytochemistry with anti-Nanog or anti-SSEA1 antibodies. Immunopositive reaction of anti-Nanog or anti-SSEA1 antibody was visualized with AlexaFluor-488-conjugated secondary antibodies (green).
Figure 5.The effects of Noggin, inhibitory Smad6 on the BMP4-induced differentiation of mESCs into trophoblast. The effect of Noggin: the cells were cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium with 300 ng/ml of Noggin (indicating as “BMP4 with Noggin”) or without Noggin (indicating as “BMP4 only”) for 4 d. (A) Quantitative real-time RT–PCR analysis of the BMP4-induced expression of trophoblast-specific transcription factors. These gene expressions were normalized by the amount of Gapdh. The values are the mean ± SEM (n = 4). (B) Immunocytostaining with Cdh3 antibodies. Immunoreactivity of Cdh3 antibody was visualized with AlexaFluor-488-conjugated secondary antibodies (green). Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue). Scale bars were 50 µm. The effect of inhibitory Smad; (C) protein samples were lysed from the mESCs stimulated by 100 ng/ml of BMP4 for 0, 15, and 60 min. Phosphorylation level of Smad1/5/8 in mESCs was analyzed by Western blotting using antibodies to phospho Smad1/5/8 proteins or total Smad1/5/8 proteins. Alpha-tubulin was used as the loading control. (D) Protein samples were lysed from mESCs transfected with Smad6 plasmids (indicating as “Smad6 OE”) or mock plasmids (indicating as “Mock”) for 48 h. Protein content of Smad6 in mESCs was analyzed by Western blotting using antibodies to Smad6 proteins. Alpha-tubulin was used as the loading control. (E) The cells transfected with Smad6-expressing vectors (indicating as “Smad6 OE”) or mock vectors (indicating as “Mock”) were cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium for 72 h. Quantitative real-time RT–PCR analysis of the BMP4-induced expression of trophoblast-specific transcription factors. (F) Immunocytostaining with Cdh3 antibodies.
Figure 6.The effects of shRNA against Cdx2 on the BMP4-induced differentiation of mESCs into trophoblast. The cells carrying shRNA-expressing vectors against Cdx2 (indicating as “Cdx2 shRNA”) or control shRNA-expressing vectors (indicating as “Control shRNA”) were cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium for 48 h. (A) Quantitative real-time RT–PCR analysis of the BMP4-induced expression of trophoblast-specific transcription factors. These gene expressions were normalized by the amount of Gapdh. The values are the mean ± SEM (n = 4). Asterisks indicate p < 0.05 by Student’s t test. (B) Immunocytostaining with Cdh3 antibodies. Immunoreactivity of Cdh3 antibody was visualized with AlexaFluor-488-conjugated secondary antibodies (green). Nuclei were stained with DAPI (blue). Scale bars were 50 µm.
Figure 7.Direct activation of Cdx2 by BMP–Smad pathway. (A) Conserved sequence domain in the genomic region of Cdx2 gene in vertebrates. Colored peaks (purple, coding; pink, non-coding) indicate the regions of at least 100 bp and 60% homology. Magnified sequence of CICS1 compared between human and mouse is shown in the bottom part. Putative Smad1 protein binding sequences (GCCG or CGGC) are enclosed in green box. (B) Dual-luciferase assay of CICS1 transcriptional activity by BMP4. The cells carrying the reporter vectors constructed with the sequence containing CICS1 were cultured in BMP4-supplemented ESF5 medium for 48 h. N.C. indicates empty vectors. The values are the mean ± SEM (n = 4). (C) EMSA of CICS1 bound by Smad1 and the cofactor, Smad4. (D) ChIP assays of CICS1 bound by pSmad1. Genomic fragments of CICS1, 4 kb upstream or 4 kb downstream regions bound by pSmad1/5/8 protein, were immunoprecipitated with anti-pSmad1/5/8 antibody and were analyzed by PCR. (E) Quantitative graphs of ChIP assays calculated from the ratio of the amount of bound anti-pSmad1 antibodies to the amount of control IgG. The values are the mean ± SEM (n = 4). * indicates p < 0.05 by Student’s t test.