| Literature DB >> 35782975 |
Sheng Zhou1, Song Chen2, Yixuan Amy Pei1, Ming Pei1,3.
Abstract
Basement membrane proteins are known to guide cell structures, differentiation, and tissue repair. Although there is a wealth of knowledge on the functions of laminins, perlecan, and type IV collagen in maintaining tissue homeostasis, not much is known about nidogen. As a key molecule in the basement membrane, nidogen contributes to the formation of a delicate microenvironment that proves necessary for stem cell lineage-specific differentiation. In this review, the expression of nidogen is delineated at both cellular and tissue levels from embryonic to adult stages of development; the effect of nidogens is also summarized in the context of musculoskeletal development and regeneration, including but not limited to adipogenesis, angiogenesis, chondrogenesis, myogenesis, and neurogenesis. Furthermore, potential mechanisms underlying the role of nidogens in stem cell-based tissue regeneration are also discussed. This concise review is expected to facilitate our existing understanding and utilization of nidogen in tissue engineering and regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: Adipose; Basement membrane; Cartilage; Differentiation; Nerve; Nidogens; Vessel
Year: 2021 PMID: 35782975 PMCID: PMC9243345 DOI: 10.1016/j.gendis.2021.03.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Dis ISSN: 2352-3042
Figure 1Core basement membrane components and binding interactions. (A) Both type IV collagen and laminin are trimeric proteins that are capable of self-assembly into independent networks. While laminin initiates basement membrane assembly, type IV collagen contributes tensile strength. The link of this interaction is strengthened by nidogens and perlecan, the latter of which regulates the hydration of the basement membrane by providing a negative charge through heparan sulfate sugar chains.,, (B) The collagen network interacts with the laminin network through binding bridges - perlecan and nidogen, in which perlecan can also interact with itself. The double-headed arrows represent interactions. (C) Structural representation of nidogen-1 and -2, each consisting of 3 globular domains—G1, G2, and G3—separated by a link region and a rod domain. The rod domain of nidogen-2 has four EGF (epidermal growth factor-like module) and two TY (thyroglobulin-like module) motifs while nidogen-1 has four EGF and one TY motif. In the globular domain G3, nidogen-1 has one more EGF motif than nidogen-2.
Figure 2Proven expression of nidogen isoforms. Nidogen-1 has been detected not only in human bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs), but also in human and mouse embryos along with nidogen-2.,,, During the adulthood of human, mouse and rat models, nidogen expression has been broadly found in various tissues, such as muscle,,36, 37, 38, vessel,,, tendon, cartilage,78, 79, 80 nerve,, and fat,, (Table 1 for details). The black triangle represents positive expression of nidogen isoforms in the cells or tissues of human (H), mouse (M) and/or rat (R).
Expression of nidogen isoforms in lineage differentiation of musculoskeletal tissues.
| Tissue/cells | Nidogen-1 | Nidogen-2 | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cartilage | mouse femoral head (qPCR, IHC) | bovine MCP (IGEM, IHC); | |
| mouse TMJ (IHC) | mouse TMJ (IHC) | ||
| mouse embryo (IF) | mouse embryo (IF) | ||
| human embryo metacarpus or rib anlagen (IHC); human healthy and OA knee (IGS, IHC) | human embryo metacarpus or rib anlagen (IHC); human healthy and OA knee (IGS, IHC) | ||
| Fat | human visceral fat (proteomics) | human visceral fat (proteomics) | |
| – | human visceral fat (CILAIR-based secretome analysis) | ||
| mouse epidydimal and subcutaneous fat (IF) | – | ||
| Muscle | mouse embryo limb (IF) | – | |
| mouse diaphragm and limb muscles (IF) | mouse diaphragm and limb muscles (IF) | ||
| mouse cardiac muscles (IF) | mouse cardiac muscles (IF) | ||
| mouse soleus and cardiac muscles (IF, WB) | mouse soleus and cardiac muscles (IF, WB); mouse soleus muscles (IGS) | ||
| mouse skeletal and cardiac muscles (IF, RIA) | mouse skeletal and cardiac muscles (IF, RIA) | ||
| mouse skeletal muscles (IF, NB, RIA, WB) | mouse skeletal muscles (IF, NB, RIA, WB) | ||
| Nerve | – | ||
| – | |||
| rat DRG (IF) | – | ||
| rat sciatic nerve (IF, ISH, qPCR, WB) | rat sciatic nerve (IF, ISH, qPCR, WB) | ||
| Tendon | mouse (IF) | – | |
| Vessel | mouse embryo radial glia (IF) | – | |
| mouse capillary in muscles (IF) | – | ||
| mouse vessels in RIP-Tag2 pancreatic islet tumors (IF) | – | ||
| mouse retinal capillaries (IF, WB) | mouse retinal capillaries (IF) | ||
| BMSC | expression in human cells following 28-day adipogenic induction (IF) | – | |
| increased expression in human cells following 28-day adipogenic induction (qPCR) | – | ||
| 3T3-L1 | increased expression in supernatants but decreased in mouse cells in 6-day adipogenic induction (IP) | – | |
| – | increased expression in mouse cells in 14-day adipogenesis (microarray) | ||
| peak expression at day 3 in supernatants of mouse cells in 7-day adipogenic induction (SILAC) | peak expression at day 3 in supernatants of mouse cells in 7-day adipogenic induction (SILAC) | ||
| increased expression in supernatants of mouse cells in 9-day adipogenic induction (proteomics) | – | ||
| – | increased in mouse cells in 14-day adipogenic induction (IF, qPCR) | ||
| peak expression in supernatants of mouse cells in the middle stage of 10-day adipogenic induction (MS) | – |
Abbreviations: BMSC: bone marrow stromal cells; C. elegans: Caenorhabditis elegans; CILAIR: Comparison of Isotope-Labeled Amino acid Incorporation Rates; DRG: dorsal root ganglia; IF: immunofluorescence; IGEM: immunogold electron microscopy; IGS: immunogold histochemistry; IHC: immunohistochemistry; IP: immunoprecipitation; ISH: in situ hybridization; MCP: metacarpophalangeal joint; MS: mass spectrometry; NB: northern blot; OA: osteoarthritis; qPCR: quantitative polymerase chain reaction; RIA: radioimmunoassays; SILAC: stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture; TMJ: temporomandibular joint; WB: western blot.
Figure 3Basement membrane signaling cascade. Basement membrane core molecules—laminin, type IV collagen, perlecan, and nidogen—regulate cell adhesion, migration, polarization, proliferation, and differentiation via directly or indirectly binding to cell surface receptors such as dystroglycan (DG), integrin, receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK), and discoidin domain receptor 1 (DDR1). For example, laminin-6 plays a role in mechanical signaling transduction by assembling into multi-molecular fibrillary complexes with perlecan via a DG-dependent and integrin-independent manner. Laminin binding to DG also triggers the GRB2 (growth factor receptor-bound protein 2)-RAC1-PAK1-JNK (c-Jun N-terminal kinase) pathway that contributes to hypertrophy. Evidence shows a direct connection between DG and MAP kinase (MEK) and between DG and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). Type IV collagen plays a role by interacting with the laminin network through perlecan and nidogen followed by binding with integrins and DDR1. Perlecan modulates cell survival, migration, and proliferation by tethering growth factors., By binding to laminin and type IV collagen, nidogen plays a role in maintaining capillary integrity through forming a non-covalent high-affinity stabilizing bridge.