| Literature DB >> 21247432 |
Winifred Wy Yau1, Mei Kuen Tang, Elve Chen, Ivan Wc Wong, Henry Ss Lee, Kenneth Kh Lee.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hair bulge progenitor cells (HBPCs) are multipotent stem cells derived from the bulge region of mice vibrissal hairs. The purified HBPCs express CD34, K15 and K14 surface markers. It has been reported that HBPCs could be readily induced to transdifferentiate into adipocytes and osteocytes. However, the ability of HBPCs to transdifferentiate into cardiomyocytes has not yet been investigated. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21247432 PMCID: PMC3033794 DOI: 10.1186/1477-5956-9-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteome Sci ISSN: 1477-5956 Impact factor: 2.480
Figure 1Establishment of primary hair bulge cell culture. (A) Immunohistological staining revealed a large number of CD34+ cells (arrows) present in the vicinity of the hair bulge (HB) inferior to sebaceous glands (SG). (B) Showing an isolated hair follicle from mouse vibrissal hair. The hair bulge was dissected (extent indicated by the dotted lines) from the follicle and used for explant culture. (C) Showing cells that have migrated out from the bulge explant to form colonies of cells all around the explant. (D) Showing the appearance of HBPCs following purification with anti-CD34 conjugated magnetic beads.
Primers for semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis
| Gene | Primer sequences (5' to 3') | Product | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| β-actin | Sense | 5'-TGT TAC CAA CTG GGA CGA C-3' | 573 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-AAG GAA GGC TGG AAA AGA G-3' | |||
| CD34 | Sense | 5'-TAG CCC AGT CTG AGG TTA GG-3' | 205 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-AGC AGA ACT CCA GAG GTG AC-3' | |||
| Dkk1 | Sense | 5'-TGT CTA GGG GGT CGA ATG TA-3' | 300 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-CAC AGA GCC CCA AAT GTA TC-3' | |||
| Etv6 | Sense | 5'-GTC TCC TTC AGC AGA AAC CA-3' | 424 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-CTG ATC CCA ACT GTG TGT CA-3' | |||
| GATA4 | Sense | 5'-GTG GTG GGT TTT TCT TTG TG-3' | 443 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-CAT AGT CAC CAA GGC TGC TT-3' | |||
| Hes6 | Sense | 5'-AGG GTA GCA GCT TTC AGG AT-3' | 354 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-CCT GAG CTG TCT CCA CCT TA-3' | |||
| Keratin 5 | Sense | 5'-GGA CCA GTC AAC ATC TCT GT-3' | 378 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-TGC CTA AAA GAA GCA GTC TC-3' | |||
| Keratin 14 | Sense | 5'-GAA TGG TTC TTC AGC AAG AC-3' | 386 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-ATG AGG AGA ATT GGG AAG AT-3' | |||
| Kremen1 | Sense | 5'-GCA TCC ATT TCA ACT TCA CC-3' | 431 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-CGT ACA CAG TCC ATC CTT CC-3' | |||
| Mthfr | Sense | 5'-CGT AGA GCA ACT TAG GGA GA-3' | 314 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-CCC ATG AGA AGA ACT AGC AG-3' | |||
| Nestin | Sense | 5'-GAA TCA GAT CGC TCA GAT CC-3' | 487 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-GCA CGA CAC CAG TAG AAC TGG-3' | |||
| Nkx-2.5 | Sense | 5'-ATC CTA AAC CTG GAG CAG CA-3' | 501 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-AGA TCT TGA CCT GCG TGG AC-3' | |||
| Osteocalcin | Sense | 5'-GCA GCT TGG TGC ACA CCT AG-3' | 405 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-ACC TTA TTG CCC TCC TGC TT-3' | |||
| Phc1 | Sense | 5'-AGC AGA CTT TGC AGA GAA GA-3' | 212 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-TAT ACT GGC TGG GGA TCC TG-3' | |||
| Plod2 | Sense | 5'-GCC AGA AGG TGA GAT TAC TG-3' | 397 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'GCA CAA CAG GGT ACT TGT CT-3' | |||
| PPAR-γ | Sense | 5'-ACT GTC GGT TTC AGA AGT GC-3' | 258 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-GAT CTC TTG CAC GGC TTC TA-3' | |||
| Sik1 | Sense | 5'-GGA GAG GAA AGG AGA CAC TT-3' | 296 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-GGA TAC TGA GTG CTT GCT TC-3' | |||
| Sox2 | Sense | 5'-GCC CTG CAG TAC AAC TCC AT-3' | 363 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-GTC ATT TGC TGT GGG TGA TG-3' | |||
| Srms | Sense | 5'-TCC CTA TGA AGG AAT GAC CA-3' | 354 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-AGC CTG TGT CAG TGA AGG AG-3' | |||
| Tbx5 | Sense | 5'-CAA AGA CAG GTC TTG CGA TT-3' | 426 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-GGT GAG TTT GAG CTT CTG GA-3' | |||
| Tcf3 | Sense | 5'-CTT ATC CCC CAA CTA CGA TG-3' | 315 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-ATA GGA GTC GGG AGG TCT CT-3' | |||
| Wnt11 | Sense | 5'-AGG ATC CCA AGC CAA TAA AC-3' | 330 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-GGA TCC CAC CTT CTC ATT CT-3' | |||
| YY1 | Sense | 5'-GCG GCA AGA AGA GTT ACC TG-3' | 418 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-GGT GTG CAG ATG CTT TCT CA-3' | |||
| Ezh2 | Sense | 5'-AGG CTA ATT GGG ACC AAA AC-3' | 306 | |
| Anti-sense | 5'-AAA GCG GTT TTG ACA CTC TG-3' | |||
Figure 2Characterization of CD34. (A-B) Immunofluorescent staining showed HBPCs specifically expressed established HBPCs surface markers Keratin 14 (K14) and 15 (K15). (C) Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis confirmed that the HBPCs expressed K14. In addition, HBPCs also expressed K5 and Snail and Sox2. (D) In contrast, dermal fibroblasts (DFs) isolated from adjacent to the hair bulge did not express K14 and K5. β-actin served as an internal control.
Figure 3Developmental potential of HBPCs. (A) Adipogenic potential of HBPCs was examined. Oil Red O dye staining revealed the presence of adipocytes (arrows) in the HBPC cultures, 3 weeks after adipogenic-inducing medium treatment. Approximately 27 ± 3% of the induced cells were adipocytes. (B) Scanning electron micrograph showing a representative adipocyte that have formed in the cultures. The cytoplasm of these cells was filled with numerous small lipid vesicles (arrows). (C) Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis revealed that after the HBPCs were incubated with adipogenic-inducing medium for 3 weeks, CD34 and Nestin (HBPC marker) expression were inhibited while PPAR-γ (adipocyte marker) expression was induced. β-actin served as an internal control. (D) Osteogenic potential of HBPCs was also examined. Alizarin Red S staining revealed the presence of osteocytes (arrows) in the cultures, after 3 weeks osteogenic-inducing medium induction. Approximately 31 ± 3% of the treated cells have transdifferentiated into osteocytes (arrows). (E) Transmission electron micrograph showing a representative osteocyte that has transdifferentiated from the HBPCs. These cells were capable of secreting bone matrix (arrows). (F) Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis revealed that after HBPCs were incubated in osteogenic-inducing medium for 3 weeks, CD34 and Nestin expressions were inhibited while Osteocalcin (bone marker) was activated. β-actin served as an internal control.
Figure 4Cardiomyogenic induction of HBPCs by Cardiogenol C. (A) Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis revealed that Cardiogenol C could induce HBPCs to express cardiac-specific markers GATA4, Tbx5 and Nkx2.5. β-actin served as an internal control. (B-C) Immunofluorescent staining showed HBPCs expressed myogenic transcription factor Nkx2.5 (white arrows) following 5 μM Cardiogenol C treatment for 4 days. In contrast, the untreated samples were negatively stained.
Figure 5Cardiogenol C induces HBPCs to express GATA4. Immunofluorescent staining (A-D) and semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis (E) revealed that HBPCs began expressing GATA4 (arrows) 4 days after Cardiogenol C treatment.
Figure 6Effects of Valproic acid on cardiomyogenic induction by Cardiogenol C. Cardiogenol C-treated and untreated HBPCs were stained with Cardiac Specific Troponin I and sarcomeric myosin heavy chain (MF20) antibodies. The results revealed that Cardiogenol C-treated HBPCs expressed cardiac specific troponin I (G-H) and sarcomeric myosin heavy chain (J-L) progressively. HBPCs treated with Valproic acid alone (M-P) or Valproic acid plus Cardiogenol C (Q-T) did not induce GATA4 or cardiac specific troponin I expressions (M-T).
Figure 7Effects of Cardiogenol C on HBPCs proliferation. MTT assay showed that Cardiogenol C treatment significantly inhibited HBPCs proliferation.
Figure 8Comparative proteomic analysis: Identification of protein up-regulated by Cardiogenol C. The silver stained 2-DE gel showing proteins differentially up-regulated in HBPCs by Cardiogenol C.
Figure 9Comparative proteomic analysis: Identification of protein down-regulated by Cardiogenol C. The silver stained 2-DE gel showing proteins differentially down-regulated in HBPCs by Cardiogenol C.
Comparative proteomic analysis: proteins up-regulated by Cardiogenol C in HBPCs
| Proteins identified | Observed MW(kDa)/pI | Theoretical MW (kDa)/pI | Accession number | Folds increase | Reported functions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| COP9 signalosome complex subunit 6 | 41/5.4 | 35.9/5.5 | O88545 | 1.7 | A complex involved in various cellular and developmental processes. It is an essential regulator of the ubiquitin conjugation pathway |
| Emerin | 27/4.6 | 29.4/4.9 | O08579 | 2.3 | Emerin may be required for the stability and normal function of rigorously moving nuclei in skeletal muscle and heart |
| Methylenetetrahydro folate reductase (Mthfr) | 70/4.9 | 74.7/5.2 | Q9WU20 | 2.4 | Folate is important for normal heart development. It is a key enzyme in folate and homocysteine metabolism |
| Myosin light polypeptide 6 | 14/4.7 | 16.8/4.6 | Q60605 | 1.4 | Regulatory light chain of myosin |
| Myosin light polypeptide 3 | 19/4.9 | 21.8/5.0 | P08590 | 1.6 | Regulatory light chain of myosin |
| Procollagen-lysine,2- oxoglutarate 5- dioxygenase 2 precursor (Plod2) | 80/6.5 | 84.5/6.3 | Q9R0B9 | 4.0 | Essential for the stability of the intermolecular collagen cross-links; highly expressed in heart, lung, kidney, eye, ovary, and placenta |
| Protein C-ets-1 | 55/4.8 | 50.2/5.0 | P27577 | 1.7 | Transcription factor. Binds to DAXX. Interacts with UBE2I. Essential for normal coronary and myocardial development in chicken embryos |
| Salt-inducible kinase (SIK1) | 81/6.4 | 85.0/6.4 | Q60670 | 3.8 | Transient role during the earliest stages of myocardial cell differentiation and/or primitive chamber formation and may also be important for the earliest stages of skeletal muscle growth and/or differentiation. Potential role in G2/M cell cycle regulation |
| SWI/SNF related protein Smarce1 | 49/4.5 | 46.6/4.9 | O54941 | 1.9 | Involved in transcriptional activation and repression of select genes by chromatin remodeling (alteration of DNA-nucleosome topology) |
| Transcription cofactor HES-6 | 23/5.3 | 24.4/5.2 | Q9JHE6 | 1.4 | Up-regulate the transcription of ASCL1 and TCF3. Promotes cell differentiation |
| Tripartite motif- containing protein 54 | 36/5. | 40.3/5.1 | Q9BYV2 | 1.6 | It may bind and stabilize microtubule during myotube formation |
| Troponin C | 17/4.2 | 18.4/4.0 | P19123 | 1.4 | Troponin is the central regulatory protein of striated muscle contraction. The binding of calcium to Tn-C abolishes the inhibitory action of Tn on actin filaments |
Comparative proteomic analysis: proteins down-regulated by Cardiogenol C in HBPCs
| Proteins identified | Observed | Theoretical MW (kDa)/pI | Accession number | Folds decrease | Reported functions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cell division protein kinase 6 (Cdk6) | 36/6.2 | 37.0/6.2 | Q64261 | 1.7 | Probably involved in the control of the cell cycle. Interacts with D-type G1 cyclins |
| Growth/differentiation factor 8 (GDF-8) | 39/6.6 | 42.9/6.6 | O08689 | 2.2 | Acts specifically as a negative regulator of skeletal muscle growth |
| Kremen protein 1 precursor (Kremen1) | 63/6.5 | 51.7/6.7 | Q99N43 | 3.7 | Receptor for Dickkopf protein. Cooperation with Dickkopf to block Wnt/beta-catenin signaling |
| Tight junction protein ZO-1 | 130/6.4 | 194.7/6.2 | P39447 | 1.4 | The N-terminal may be involved in transducing a signal required for tight junction assembly, while the C-terminal may have specific properties of tight junctions. The alpha domain might be involved in stabilizing junctions |
| Transcription factor ETV6 | 60/6.5 | 56.4/6.8 | P97360 | 3.6 | Transcription repressor; binds to the DNA sequence 5' CCGGAAGT-3' |
| Tyrosine protein kinase Srms | 56/6.6 | 55.8/6.7 | Q62270 | 1.5 | May be involved in proliferation or differentiation of keratinocytes in the skin |
Figure 10RT-PCR analysis of differentially expressed proteins. Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis was performed to confirm that some of differentially expressed proteins identified in the comparative proteomics were also differentially transcribed. (A) The transcription levels of Hes6, Mthfr, Plod2 and SIK1 were found up-regulated in the Cardiogenol C-treated samples. (B) ETV6, GDF-8, Kremen1 and Srms expression were down-regulated by Cardiogenol C. β-actin served as an internal control.
Figure 11Activation of Wnt signaling pathway following Cardiogenol C induction. (A) Western blot analysis revealed that Kremen1 was down-regulated in Cardiogenol C-treated HBPCs. Tubulin served as an internal control. (B) Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis revealed Dkk1 and Kremen1, which are normally involved in the Wnt signaling pathway, were down-regulated in Cardiogenol C-treated HBPCs while Lef1 and Wnt11 expression were up-regulated.
Figure 12β-catenin and Islet1 expression in HBPCs after Cardiogenol C treatment. (A-B) Immunofluorescent staining revealed the presence of the β-catenin (white arrows) in the Cardiogenol C-treated HBPCs but not in the untreated HBPCs. (C-D). Immunofluorescent staining revealed HBPCs expressed Islet1 (white arrows) following Cardiogenol C-treatment but not in the untreated cells.
Figure 13Cardiogenol C inhibits chromatin remodeling gene expression in HBPCs. (A) Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis of three components of the polycomb gene complex (Phc1, Ezh2 and YY1). Expressions of all three genes were down-regulated in HBPCs following Cardiogenol C-treatment. The bar chart showed the normalized density measurements of the PCR bands. (B and C) Western blot analyses confirmed that Cardiogenol C inhibited Phc1and Ezh2 expressions in HBPCs. α-tubulin served as an internal control. The bar charts showed the normalized density measurements of the protein bands. The experiments were performed in triplicates, and each data point was expressed as mean value ± SEM. *Statistically significant difference (p < 0.05).