| Literature DB >> 31595404 |
Daniel Boon Loong Teh1,2, Ankshita Prasad3, Wenxuan Jiang4, Nianchen Zhang5, Yang Wu5, Hyunsoo Yang5, Sanyang Han6, Zhigao Yi7, Yanzhuang Yeo7, Toru Ishizuka8, Limsoon Wong9, Nitish Thakor10,11, Hiromu Yawo12, Xiaogang Liu7, Angelo All13,14,15.
Abstract
Optogenetic stimulation of neural stem cells (NSCs) enables their activity-dependent photo-modulation. This provides a spatio-temporal tool for studying activity-dependent neurogenesis and for regulating the differentiation of the transplanted NSCs. Currently, this is mainly driven by viral transfection of channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) gene, which requires high irradiance and complex in vivo/vitro stimulation systems. Additionally, despite the extensive application of optogenetics in neuroscience, the transcriptome-level changes induced by optogenetic stimulation of NSCs have not been elucidated yet. Here, we made transformed NSCs (SFO-NSCs) stably expressing one of the step-function opsin (SFO)-variants of chimeric channelrhodopsins, ChRFR(C167A), which is more sensitive to blue light than native ChR2, via a non-viral transfection system using piggyBac transposon. We set up a simple low-irradiance optical stimulation (OS)-incubation system that induced c-fos mRNA expression, which is activity-dependent, in differentiating SFO-NSCs. More neuron-like SFO-NCSs, which had more elongated axons, were differentiated with daily OS than control cells without OS. This was accompanied by positive/negative changes in the transcriptome involved in axonal remodeling, synaptic plasticity, and microenvironment modulation with the up-regulation of several genes involved in the Ca2+-related functions. Our approach could be applied for stem cell transplantation studies in tissue with two strengths: lower carcinogenicity and less irradiance needed for tissue penetration.Entities:
Keywords: Microarray genomic; Neural stem cells; Neurogenesis; Optogenetics stimulation
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31595404 DOI: 10.1007/s12017-019-08573-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuromolecular Med ISSN: 1535-1084 Impact factor: 3.843