| Literature DB >> 32036485 |
Timo Schomann1,2, Juvita D Iljas2,3, Ivo Que4, Yuedan Li2,4, Ernst Suidgeest5, Luis J Cruz4, Johan H M Frijns1,6, Alan Chan2,5, Clemens M W G Löwik7,8, Margriet A Huisman1,9, Laura Mezzanotte10,11.
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a devastating event for which current therapies are limited. Stem cell transplantation may lead to recovery of function via different mechanisms, such as cell replacement through differentiation, stimulation of angiogenesis and support to the microenvironment. Adult hair follicle bulge-derived stem cells (HFBSCs) possess neuronal differentiation capacity, are easy to harvest and are relatively immune-privileged, which makes them potential candidates for autologous stem cell-based therapy. In this study, we apply in vivo multimodal, optical and magnetic resonance imaging techniques to investigate the behavior of mouse HFBSCs in a mouse model of TBI. HFBSCs expressed Luc2 and copGFP and were examined for their differentiation capacity in vitro. Subsequently, transduced HFBSCs, preloaded with ferumoxytol, were transplanted next to the TBI lesion (cortical region) in nude mice, 2 days after injury. Brains were fixed for immunohistochemistry 58 days after transplantation. Luc2- and copGFP-expressing, ferumoxytol-loaded HFBSCs showed adequate neuronal differentiation potential in vitro. Bioluminescence of the lesioned brain revealed survival of HFBSCs and magnetic resonance imaging identified their localization in the area of transplantation. Immunohistochemistry showed that transplanted cells stained for nestin and neurofilament protein (NF-Pan). Cells also expressed laminin and fibronectin but extracellular matrix masses were not detected. After 58 days, ferumoxytol could be detected in HFBSCs in brain tissue sections. These results show that HFBSCs are able to survive after brain transplantation and suggest that cells may undergo differentiation towards a neuronal cell lineage, which supports their potential use for cell-based therapy for TBI.Entities:
Keywords: Bioluminescence imaging; Brain injury; Hair follicle bulge-derived stem cells; Magnetic resonance imaging; Stem cell treatment; Tracking
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32036485 PMCID: PMC7306043 DOI: 10.1007/s00441-020-03173-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Tissue Res ISSN: 0302-766X Impact factor: 5.249
Antibodies
| Type | Antibody | Host | Clon | Company | Cat. No. | Localization | Dilution | Control |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | CopGFP | Rabbit | polyclonal | Evrogen | AB513 | Cytoplasm | 1:200 | Luc2-copGFP transduced cells |
| Primary | Doublecortin (DCX) | Rabbit | polyclonal | Abcam | Ab18723 | Cytoplasm | 1:200 | C17.2, Brain (Mouse) tissue lysate - normal tissue, 0 days old |
| Primary | Fibronectin | Rabbit | polyclonal | Sigma-Aldrich | F3648 | Extracellular matrix glycoprotein | 1:400 | |
| Primary | GFAP | Rabbit | polyclonal | DAKO | Z0334 | Cytoplasm | 1:500 | RT4-D6PT2 |
| Primary | Ki-67 | Rabbit | polyclonal | Abcam | ab15580 | Nuclear | 1:100 | Human dermal fibroblasts |
| Primary | Laminin | Rabbit | polyclonal | Dako | Z009701 | Extracellular matrix | 1:200 | RT4-D6P2T, MelbA, HFBSCs |
| Primary | Luc2 | Mouse | monoclonal | DSHB | DSHB-LUC-2 | Cytoplasm | 25:100 | Luc2-copGFP transduced cells |
| Primary | Nestin 4D11 | Mouse | monoclonal | Biosensis | M-1385-100 | Cytoplasm | 1:300 | C17.2 (NSCs), M14, RT4-D6P2T |
| Primary | NF-Pan | Mouse | monoclonal | EMD Millipore | NE1017 | Cytoskeleton | 1:1000 | Mouse brain slices |
| Secondary | Alexa Fluor™ 555 | Goat | polyclonal | BioLegend | 405,324 | 1:200 | ||
| Secondary | Alexa Fluor™ 750 | Goat | polyclonal | Abcam | ab175733 | 1:200 |
Fig. 1In vitro differentiation and loading with ferumoxytol of transduced HFBSCs. Prior to differentiation (day − 1) pCDH-EF1α-Luc2-T2A-copGFP-transduced cells exhibited a bright green-fluorescent signal of copGFP (a) and had normal morphologies (a″; phase contrast). The merged image (a‴) demonstrates that all cells were transduced with the reporter gene construct. Within 7 days, HFBSCs adapted neuronal morphologies (b; copGFP fluorescence and b′; Phase contrast). Scale bar is 100 μm. HFBSCs transduced with the pCDH-DCX-Luc2-T2A-copGFP construct did not express copGFP (or Luc2) prior to differentiation (day − 1) as indicated by the absence of a fluorescent signal (c). However, cells expressed copGFP under regulation of the DCX promoter as indicated by the green fluorescent signal 7 days after start of the differentiation (d). HFBSCs also adapted neuronal morphologies (d′; phase contrast). Scale bar is 100 μm. Perls’ Prussian blue (PB) staining + DAB intensification stained ferumoxytol within the cells as marked by a brown precipitate (e′). Faint copGFP fluorescence persisted through the staining process as can be observed in the fluorescence (e) and merged images (e″). Scale bar is 100 μm
Fig. 2Observation of Luc2 activity in TBI mice in vivo. Representative overlays of pCDH-EF1α-Luc2-T2A-copGFP-transduced HFBSCs from 2 (a), 14 (a′), 33 (a″) and 49 days after transplantation (a‴). The bioluminescent signal increased with relative stability over the course of time. Representative overlays of HFBSCs transduced with pCDH-DCX-Luc2-T2A-copGFP over the same period of time. No bioluminescent signal was observed 2 days after transplantation (b). The signal increased between 14 days (b′) and 33 days (b″) but was almost undetectable after 49 days (b‴). Analysis of the bioluminescent signal was measured 2, 14, 33 and 49 days after transplantation (c). The bioluminescence data were normalized with the initial signal and measured 2 days after transplantation, which depicts the trend of the bioluminescent signal from HFBSCs over time. The bioluminescent signal of pCDH-EF1α-Luc2-T2A-copGFP-transduced HFBSCs increased steadily over the course of time, while the bioluminescence of pCDH-DCX-Luc2-T2A-copGFP-transduced HFBSCs decreased after 33 days and was almost undetectable at 49 days
Fig. 3MRI of ferumoxytol-loaded HFBSCs in TBI mice at different Bregma levels in vivo. Different sources of T2*-weighted contrast are illustrated in areas close to the TBI or more remotely. The upper panel shows representative scans of the region containing the TBI lesion 1 day (a) and 48 days after transplantation (a′). The scan at day 1 revealed a hypointense area containing clotted iron-containing erythrocytes (asterisk), which vanished over the course of time. Dotted box: injected cells. The lower panel shows representative scans of the transplanted ferumoxytol-loaded transduced HFBSCs over the same course of time (b, b′). The dotted box at day 1 after transplantation shows the location of ferumoxytol-containing cells. Asterisk: clotted erythrocytes. The hypointense signal of ferumoxytol could also be imaged at the transplantation site at least 48 days after transplantation. Scale bar is 200 μm
Fig. 4Immunohistochemical staining of HFBSCs constitutively expressing Luc2 and copGFP. Sections of mouse brains containing transduced HFBSCs exhibited native green fluorescence emitted by copGFP after fixation, sectioning and staining of the sections (a, b, c, d; green). Sections containing copGFP-expressing HFBSCs were stained for either copGFP (a′ and c′) or Luc2 (b′ and d′). CopGFP-expressing HFBSCs stained for copGFP (a′; red) and the neural progenitor cell marker nestin (a″; gray). The merged image (a′′′′) shows colocalization of copGFP (a′), nestin (a″) and DNA (a‴) of copGFP-expressing HFBSCs in the mouse brain. HFBSCs, which expressed copGFP (b; green), also stained for Luc2 (b′; red). GFAP (b″; gray) stained in the mouse brain but is absent in HFBSCs (b‴; green/red). Transplanted HFBSCs (c/c′; green/red) stained for NF-Pan (c″; gray). None of the copGFP-expressing HFBSCs (d/d′; green/red) stained for DCX (d″). Scale bar = 50 μm
Fig. 5Immunohistochemical staining for extracellular matrix and proliferating cells. CopGFP-expressing HFBSCs in mouse brain sections exhibited native fluorescence (a, b, and c; copGFP protein; green). Additionally, sections were stained for Luc2 (a′, b′, and c′; red). The surrounding area of some HFBSCs stained for fibronectin (a″; gray). The vicinity of transplanted HFBSCs stained for laminin (b″; gray). Staining for Ki-67 (c″; gray) was negative in sections containing HFBSCs (green/red). Scale bar = 50 μm
Overview of staining pattern
| Antibody | Cultured HFBSCs | Transplanted HFBSCs | Specification | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HFBSCs | copGFP | Positive | Positive | Transduced HFBSCs expressing copGFP |
| Luc2 | Positive | Positive | Transduced HFBSCs expressing Luc2 | |
| Neural Crest | Nestin | Positive | Positive | Neural crest cells and neuronal progenitors |
| Neuron | DCX | Negative | Weakly positive | Early neuronal development |
| NF-Pan | Weakly positive | Positive | Neurons | |
| Glial Cell | GFAP | Negative | Negative | Glial cells in the peripheral and central nervous system |
| ECM | Fibronectin | Negative | Positive | Cell adhesion, growth, migration, differentiation, neuron protection |
| Laminin | Positive | Positive | Cell attachment, stimulates neuronal differentiation, promotion of tissue survival | |
| Other | Ki-67 | Positive | Negative | Proliferating cells |
Fig. 6Perls’ Prussian blue staining with DAB intensification of mouse brain sections. Immunohistochemically stained sections from Fig. 4(a–a′′′′) and Fig. 5(b–b′′′′) (IHC) were also stained with Perls’ Prussian blue with DAB intensification. This showed that HFBSCs stain for ferumoxytol 58 days after transplantation in TBI mice (a′ and b′; ferumoxytol). The merged image of the ferumoxytol staining and the corresponding immunofluorescence image reveals colocalization of Fe3+ deposits and a fluorescent signal (a″ and b″; merged). Scale bar is 25 μm. The native fluorescence of the copGFP, which persists also after the preparation of the brain sections, indicates the location of the HFBSCs within the mouse brain (c; scale bar is 250 μm), i.e., the cortex (c′; scale bar is 50 μm) and the corpus callosum (c″; scale bar is 100 μm; enlarged images of boxes). Illustration of the injection site of HFBSCs in the mouse brain (d; adapted from the Neurostar Robotic Stereotactic Software)