| Literature DB >> 33004487 |
Enric Llorens-Bobadilla1, James M Chell1, Pierre Le Merre2, Yicheng Wu1, Margherita Zamboni1, Joseph Bergenstråhle3, Moa Stenudd1, Elena Sopova2, Joakim Lundeberg3, Oleg Shupliakov2,4, Marie Carlén2,5, Jonas Frisén6.
Abstract
Injuries to the central nervous system (CNS) are inefficiently repaired. Resident neural stem cells manifest a limited contribution to cell replacement. We have uncovered a latent potential in neural stem cells to replace large numbers of lost oligodendrocytes in the injured mouse spinal cord. Integrating multimodal single-cell analysis, we found that neural stem cells are in a permissive chromatin state that enables the unfolding of a normally latent gene expression program for oligodendrogenesis after injury. Ectopic expression of the transcription factor OLIG2 unveiled abundant stem cell-derived oligodendrogenesis, which followed the natural progression of oligodendrocyte differentiation, contributed to axon remyelination, and stimulated functional recovery of axon conduction. Recruitment of resident stem cells may thus serve as an alternative to cell transplantation after CNS injury.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33004487 DOI: 10.1126/science.abb8795
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728