| Literature DB >> 25694098 |
Takayuki Nakagomi1, Shuji Kubo2, Akiko Nakano-Doi1, Rika Sakuma1, Shan Lu1,3, Aya Narita1, Maiko Kawahara1,4, Akihiko Taguchi5, Tomohiro Matsuyama1.
Abstract
Brain vascular pericytes (PCs) are a key component of the blood-brain barrier (BBB)/neurovascular unit, along with neural and endothelial cells. Besides their crucial role in maintaining the BBB, increasing evidence shows that PCs have multipotential stem cell activity. However, their multipotency has not been considered in the pathological brain, such as after an ischemic stroke. Here, we examined whether brain vascular PCs following ischemia (iPCs) have multipotential stem cell activity and differentiate into neural and vascular lineage cells to reconstruct the BBB/neurovascular unit. Using PCs extracted from ischemic regions (iPCs) from mouse brains and human brain PCs cultured under oxygen/glucose deprivation, we show that PCs developed stemness presumably through reprogramming. The iPCs revealed a complex phenotype of angioblasts, in addition to their original mesenchymal properties, and multidifferentiated into cells from both a neural and vascular lineage. These data indicate that under ischemic/hypoxic conditions, PCs can acquire multipotential stem cell activity and can differentiate into major components of the BBB/neurovascular unit. Thus, these findings support the novel concept that iPCs can contribute to both neurogenesis and vasculogenesis at the site of brain injuries.Entities:
Keywords: Blood-brain barrier; Ischemia; Neurovascularization; Pericyte; Reprogramming; Stem cell plasticity
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25694098 DOI: 10.1002/stem.1977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells ISSN: 1066-5099 Impact factor: 6.277