| Literature DB >> 25807871 |
Vega García-Escudero1,2, María Rosales1, José Luis Muñoz3, Esteban Scola4, Javier Medina4, Hena Khalique1, Guillermo Garaulet1, Antonio Rodriguez1, Filip Lim1.
Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a degenerative motor neuron disease which currently has no cure. Research using rodent ALS models transgenic for mutant superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) has implicated that glial-neuronal interactions play a major role in the destruction of motor neurons, but the generality of this mechanism is not clear as SOD1 mutations only account for less than 2% of all ALS cases. Recently, this hypothesis was backed up by observation of similar effects using astrocytes derived from post-mortem spinal cord tissue of ALS patients which did not carry SOD1 mutations. However, such necropsy samples may not be easy to obtain and may not always yield viable cell cultures. Here, we have analysed olfactory mucosa (OM) cells, which can be easily isolated from living ALS patients. Disease-specific changes observed when ALS OM cells were co-cultured with human spinal cord neurons included decreased neuronal viability, aberrant neuronal morphology and altered glial inflammatory responses. Our results show the potential of OM cells as new cell models for ALS.Entities:
Keywords: SOD-1 neurotoxicity; amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; inflammation-responsive promoter; non-cell autonomous toxicity; olfactory mucosa
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25807871 PMCID: PMC4459844 DOI: 10.1111/jcmm.12488
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Mol Med ISSN: 1582-1838 Impact factor: 5.310
Information about olfactory mucosa donors
| Patient | Gender | Age | Maximum cell passage | Number of cells/mm2 for confluence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C1 | Male | 26 | 10 | 260 |
| C2 | Male | 36 | >10 | 364 |
| C3 | Female | 51 | >10 | 260 |
| C16 | Male | 20 | >10 | 260 |
| C17 | Female | 25 | >10 | 260 |
| C18 | Female | 22 | >10 | 260 |
| C19 | Male | 29 | >10 | 260 |
| C20 | Female | 30 | >10 | 364 |
| ALS1 | Male | 57 | >10 | 208 |
| ALS3 | Male | 72 | 9 | 364 |
| ALS4 | Male | 48 | >10 | 208 |
| ALS5 | Male | 36 | 10 | 208 |
| ALS6 | Female | 61 | >10 | 260 |
| ALS7 | Male | 40 | >10 | 364 |
| ALS8 | Male | 39 | >10 | 364 |
Figure 1Spinal cord neuron survival after co-culture with olfactory mucosa (OM). (A) Scheme of the procedure using flow cytometry to study the survival of CFSE-labelled spinal cord neurons after co-culture with OM cells from healthy control or ALS donors. (B) Flow cytometry quantification of the number of CFSE-labelled surviving neurons after 2 weeks of co-culture with OM cells or in the absence of these cells (none). The left graph shows means and standard errors of the mean (SEM) of three independent assays of each OM sample. Samples are ordered by ascending patient age within each group (control and ALS). The right graph represents the combined mean and SEM of the control or ALS groups with the P-value for comparison of the means.
Figure 2Morphology of the surviving spinal cord neurons after co-culture with olfactory mucosa (OM). (A) Representative immunofluorescence images of the surviving spinal cord neurons labelled for βIII-tubulin after 2 weeks of co-culture over monolayers of OM from four different healthy control donors (upper row) and four different ALS patients (lower row). Nuclei were labelled with DAPI. (B) Morphometric quantification of spinal cord neurons after co-culture over OM cells. CFSE-labelled cells were classified as: neuronal if they exhibited filamentous βIII-tubulin staining and the length of the longest neurite was at least four times the length of the longest axis of the nucleus; non-neuronal if they exhibited diffuse βIII-tubulin staining and all neurites were shorter than four times the length of the longest axis of the nucleus. A minimum of 15 neurons in at least nine random fields were scored for each OM sample. Graphs represent the percentage of cells exhibiting each morphology, showing means and standard errors of the mean of eight different controls and seven different ALS OM samples with the P-value for comparison of the means. The scale bar represents 50 μm.
Figure 3Study of the inflammatory response in ALS cell models. Cells were transduced with reporter lentivectors encoding the luciferase gene under the control of three inflammation-responsive promoters (NFκBp, an artificial promoter containing multiple NF-κB binding sites; IL1/IL6p, consisting of the human IL-6 promoter fused to the enhancer region of the human IL-1 promoter; or ESELp, the human E-selectin promoter) or the constitutive spleen focus-forming virus promoter (SFFVp). Normalized luciferase activity was obtained by dividing the luciferase activity measured in relative light units (RLU) for each inflammation-responsive promoter by the mean activity of the SFFVp reporter in the same conditions. Graphs represent means and standard errors of the mean (SEM) of three independent samples. (A) Reporter activities in untreated control olfactory mucosa (OM) cells (Basal) or after challenge with LPS (500 ng/ml) for either 6 or 27 hrs. (B) Reporter activities in control human astrocytes or those overexpressing SOD1wt or SOD1G37R either without (Basal) or with LPS challenge for 6 hrs. Comparison of mean luciferase activities (corresponding P-values are shown) after LPS treatment of astrocytes overexpressing SODG37R with those overexpressing SODwt revealed a significant increase using the NFκBp reporter; this effect was similar using the ESELp reporter, although not statistically significant. (C) Western blot analysis of SOD1 expression in the human astrocyte ALS cell models used in B. (D) The left graph shows luciferase activities of the NFκBp reporter in OM cells from eight control donors and seven ALS patients either without (Basal) or with LPS challenge for 6 hrs. Samples are ordered by ascending patient age within each group (control and ALS). The right graph represents the combined mean and SEM of the control or ALS groups. (E) Similar study to that shown in D but using the ESELp reporter.
Figure 4Study of the inflammatory response in ALS cell models co-cultured with spinal cord neurons. Cells were transduced with reporter lentivectors encoding the luciferase gene under the control of an artificial promoter containing multiple NF-κB binding sites (NFκBp) or the constitutive spleen focus-forming virus promoter (SFFVp). Normalized luciferase activity was obtained by dividing the luciferase activity measured in relative light units (RLU) for each inflammation-responsive promoter by the mean activity of the SFFVp reporter in the same conditions. Graphs represent means and standard errors of the mean (SEM) of three independent samples. (A) Reporter activities in control human astrocytes or those overexpressing SOD1wt or SOD1G37R cultured either alone (Basal) or with spinal cord neurons for 5 days (Neurons). (B) Western blot analysis of SOD1 expression in the human astrocyte ALS cell models used in A. (C) The left graph shows reporter activities in olfactory mucosa cells from eight control donors and seven ALS patients cultured either alone (Basal) or with spinal cord neurons for 1 day. Samples are ordered by ascending patient age within each group (control and ALS). The right graph represents the combined mean and SEM of the control or ALS groups with the P-value for comparison of the means.