Literature DB >> 21521032

Fetal neural tube stem cells from Pax3 mutant mice proliferate, differentiate, and form synaptic connections when stimulated with folic acid.

Shunsuke Ichi1, Hiromichi Nakazaki, Vanda Boshnjaku, Ravneet Monny Singh, Barbara Mania-Farnell, Guifa Xi, David G McLone, Tadanori Tomita, Chandra Shekhar K Mayanil.   

Abstract

Although maternal intake of folic acid (FA) prevents neural tube defects in 70% of the population, the exact mechanism of prevention has not been elucidated. We hypothesized that FA affects neural stem cell (NSC) proliferation and differentiation. This hypothesis was examined in a folate-responsive spina bifida mouse model, Splotch (Sp(-/-)), which has a homozygous loss-of-function mutation in the Pax3 gene. Neurospheres were generated with NSCs from the lower lumbar neural tube of E10.5 wild-type (WT) and Sp(-/-) embryos, in the presence and absence of FA. In the absence of FA, the number of neurospheres generated from Sp(-/-) embryos compared with WT was minimal (P<0.05). Addition of FA to Sp(-/-) cultures increased the expression of a Pax3 downstream target, fgfr4, and rescued NSC proliferative potential, as demonstrated by a significant increase in neurosphere formation (P<0.01). To ascertain if FA affected cell differentiation, FA-stimulated Sp(-/-) neurospheres were allowed to differentiate in the continued presence or absence of FA. Neurospheres from both conditions expressed multi-potent stem cell characteristics and the same differentiation potential as WT. Further, multiple neurospheres from both WT and FA-stimulated Sp(-/-) cell cultures formed extensive synaptic connections. On the whole, FA-mediated rescue of neural tube defects in Sp(-/-) embryos promotes NSC proliferation at an early embryonic stage. FA-stimulated Sp(-/-) neurospheres differentiate and form synaptic connections, comparable to WT.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21521032     DOI: 10.1089/scd.2011.0100

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stem Cells Dev        ISSN: 1547-3287            Impact factor:   3.272


  13 in total

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4.  Fetal alcohol syndrome, chemo-biology and OMICS: ethanol effects on vitamin metabolism during neurodevelopment as measured by systems biology analysis.

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Authors:  Takao Tsurubuchi; Elise V Allender; M Rizwan Siddiqui; Kyu-Won Shim; Shunsuke Ichi; Vanda Boshnjaku; Barbara Mania-Farnell; Guifa Xi; Richard H Finnell; David G McLone; Tadanori Tomita; C S Mayanil
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Review 6.  HDAC signaling in neuronal development and axon regeneration.

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7.  MARK2/Par1b Insufficiency Attenuates DVL Gene Transcription via Histone Deacetylation in Lumbosacral Spina Bifida.

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8.  Nuclear localization of folate receptor alpha: a new role as a transcription factor.

Authors:  Vanda Boshnjaku; Kyu-Won Shim; Takao Tsurubuchi; Shunsuke Ichi; Elise V Szany; Guifa Xi; Barbara Mania-Farnell; David G McLone; Tadanori Tomita; C Shekhar Mayanil
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9.  High dose folic acid supplementation of rats alters synaptic transmission and seizure susceptibility in offspring.

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Review 10.  Neural tube defects, folic acid and methylation.

Authors:  Apolline Imbard; Jean-François Benoist; Henk J Blom
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