| Literature DB >> 30463599 |
Nihal AlMuraikhi1, Dalia Ali1,2, Aliah Alshanwani3, Radhakrishnan Vishnubalaji1, Muthurangan Manikandan1, Muhammad Atteya1,4, Abdulaziz Siyal1, Musaad Alfayez1, Abdullah Aldahmash1,5, Moustapha Kassem1,2,6, Nehad M Alajez7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Better understanding of the signaling pathways that regulate human bone marrow stromal stem cell (hBMSC) differentiation into bone-forming osteoblasts is crucial for their clinical use in regenerative medicine. Chemical biology approaches using small molecules targeting specific signaling pathways are increasingly employed to manipulate stem cell differentiation fate.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30463599 PMCID: PMC6249887 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-018-1068-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Real-time PCR primer sequences
| Gene name | Forward primer | Reverse primer |
|---|---|---|
| ACTB | 5′AGCCATGTACGTTGCTA | 5′AGTCCGCCTAGAAGCA |
| ALP | 5′GGA ACT CCT GAC CCT TGA CC3′ | 5′TCC TGT TCA GCT CGT ACT GC3′ |
| RUNX2 | 5′GTA GAT GGA CCT CGG GAA CC3′ | 5′GAG GCG GTC AGA GAA CAA AC3′ |
| COMP | 5′CCGACACCGCCTGCGTTCTT3′ | 5′AGCGCCGCGTTGGTTTCCTG3′ |
| THBS2 | 5′TTGGCAAACCAGGAGCTCAG3′ | 5′GGTCTTGCGGTTGATGTTGC3′ |
| TNF | 5′ACT TTG GAG TGA TCG GCC3′ | 5′GCT TGA GGG TTT GCT ACA AC3′ |
| LIF | 5′GCCACCCATGTCACAACAAC | 5′CCCCCTGGGCTGTGTAATAG |
| SOCS3 | 5′TTCGGGACCAGCCCCC3′ | 5′AAACTTGCTGTGGGTGACCA3′ |
Fig. 1Functional screen of stem cell signaling small molecule library for their effects on osteoblast differentiation of human bone marrow stromal stem cells (hBMSCs). hBMSCs were induced into osteoblasts for 10 days in the presence of the indicated small molecule inhibitors (3.0 μM) or DMSO vehicle control. Data are presented as mean alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity ± SEM, n ≥ 10 from three independent experiments. Small molecules are grouped according to their targeted signaling pathway. DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.05; ***P < 0.0005
Characteristics of the selected 11 compounds of stem cell signaling library
| Name of compound | Target | Pathway |
|---|---|---|
| LY411575 | Gamma-secretase | Proteases |
| Sotrastaurin | PKC | TGF-beta/Smad |
| SB525334 | TGF-beta/Smad | TGF-beta/Smad |
| Ruxolitinib (INCB018424) | JAK1/JAK2 | JAK/STAT |
| LGK-974 | Wnt/beta-catenin | Stem cells and Wnt |
| ICG-001 | Wnt/beta-catenin | Stem cells and Wnt |
| BIO | GSK-3 | PI3K/Akt/mTOR |
| TWS119 | GSK-3 | PI3K/Akt/mTOR |
| Fasudil (HA-1077) HCl | ROCK | Cell cycle |
| Baricitinib (LY3009104, INCB028050) | JAK | Epigenetics |
| BMS-833923 | Hedgehog/smoothened | GPCR and G protein |
Fig. 2The effect of a selected panel of small molecules targeting multiple signaling pathways on osteoblast differentiation of hBMSCs. a Representative alkaline phosphatase (ALP) staining of hBMSCs on day 10 following treatment with the indicated compounds (concentration 3.0 μM). Images were taken at × 10 magnification using a Zeiss inverted microscope. b Quantification of ALP activity in hBMSCs following treatment with the indicated compounds (concentration 3 μM) versus vehicle-treated control cells at day 10. Data are presented as mean percentage ALP activity ± SEM, n > 16. **P < 0.05; ***P < 0.0005. c Cell viability assay using alamarBlue showing the relative cell viability in hBMSCs following treatment with the indicated compounds (3 μM) versus vehicle-treated control cells on day 10 post-osteoblast differentiation. Abbreviations: ALP alkaline phosphatase, DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide
Fig. 3The effect of ruxolitinib on osteoblastic differentiation of hBMSCs. a hMSCs were induced into osteoblasts for 21 days in the absence (left panel) or presence (right panel) of ruxolitinib and were stained for mineralized matrix formation using Alizarin Red stain. Images were taken at × 10 magnification using a Zeiss inverted microscope. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis for gene expression of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and RUNX2 in hBMSCs inducted into osteoblasts for 10 days (b) or 21 days (c) in the absence (blue) or presence (red) of ruxolitinib. Cells treated with DMSO were used as control. Gene expression was normalized to β-actin. Data are presented as mean fold change ± SEM (n = 6) from two independent experiments. ***P ≤ 0.0005. Abbreviations: ALP alkaline phosphatase, RUNX2 runt-related transcription factor 2, DMSO dimethyl sulfoxide
Fig. 4Ruxolitinib affects multiple pathways during osteoblastic differentiation of hBMSCs. a Heat map analysis and unsupervised hierarchical clustering performed on differentially expressed genes during osteoblast differentiation of ruxolitinib-treated compared to DMSO-treated control hBMSCs. b Pie chart illustrating the distribution of selected enriched pathway categories for the downregulated genes identified in osteoblast differentiated ruxolitinib-treated hBMSCs compared to DMSO-treated control cells. c Validation of a selected panel of downregulated genes during osteoblastic differentiation of ruxolitinib-treated hBMSCs compared to DMSO-treated control cells using qRT-PCR. Gene expression was normalized to β-actin. Data are presented as mean fold change ± SEM (n = 6) from two independent experiments; *P < 0.05; ***P < 0.0005
Fig. 5Ruxolitinib inhibits in vivo ectopic bone formation. Ruxolitinib-treated and control hBMSCs were implanted with hydroxyl apatite/tricalcium phosphate (HA/TCP) subcutaneously into NOD/SCID mice. The histology of in vivo bone formation was examined with H&E (a) and Sirius red (b) staining. Black arrows indicate the bone formation (× 20), and black line shows the bone formed zone with osteoblast between the HA and spindle-shaped hMSCs (× 40). Images were taken at × 20 (first row; scale bar = 100 μm) and × 40 (second row; scale bar = 50 μm) magnification using a light microscope. Abbreviation: H&E hematoxylin and eosin