5 research outputs found
A perturbed MicroRNA expression pattern characterizes embryonic neural stem cells derived from a severe mouse model of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA)
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an inherited neuromuscular disorder and the leading genetic cause of death in infants. Despite the disease-causing gene, survival motor neuron (SMN1), encodes a ubiquitous protein, SMN1 deficiency preferentially affects spinal motor neurons (MNs), leaving the basis of this selective cell damage still unexplained. As neural stem cells (NSCs) are multipotent self-renewing cells that can differentiate into neurons, they represent an in vitro model for elucidating the pathogenetic mechanism of neurodegenerative diseases such as SMA. Here we characterize for the first time neural stem cells (NSCs) derived from embryonic spinal cords of a severe SMNĪ7 SMA mouse model. SMNĪ7 NSCs behave as their wild type (WT) counterparts, when we consider neurosphere formation ability and the expression levels of specific regional and self-renewal markers. However, they show a perturbed cell cycle phase distribution and an increased proliferation rate compared to wild type cells. Moreover, SMNĪ7 NSCs are characterized by the differential expression of a limited number of miRNAs, among which miR-335-5p and miR-100-5p, reduced in SMNĪ7 NSCs compared to WT cells. We suggest that such miRNAs may be related to the proliferation differences characterizing SMNĪ7 NSCs, and may be potentially involved in the molecular mechanisms of SMA
Does the term 'trophic' actually mean anti-amyloidogenic? The case of NGF.
The term trophic is widely used to indicate a general pro-survival action exerted on target cells by different classes of extracellular messengers, including neurotrophins (NTs), a family of low-molecular-weight proteins whose archetypal member is the nerve growth factor (NGF). The pro-survival action exerted by NTs results from a coordinated activation of multiple metabolic pathways, some of which have only recently come to light. NGF has been shown to exert a number of different, experimentally distinguishable effects on neurons, such as survival, differentiation of target neurons, growth of nerve fibers and their guidance (tropism) toward the source of its production. We have proposed a more complete definition of the NGF trophic action that should also include its newly discovered property of inhibiting the amyloidogenic processing of amyloid precursor protein (APP), which is among the first hypothesized primary trigger of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis. This inhibitory action appears to be mediated by a complex series of molecular events and by interactions among NGF receptors (TrkA and p75), APP processing and tau metabolic fate and fun
The Expression of the Chemokine CXCL14 Correlates with Several Aggressive Aspects of Glioblastoma and Promotes Key Properties of Glioblastoma Cells.
Glioblastoma (GBM) is a primary brain tumor whose prognosis is inevitably dismal, leading
patients to death in about 15 months from diagnosis. Tumor cells in the mass of the neoplasm
are in continuous exchange with cells of the stromal microenvironment, through the production of
soluble molecules, among which chemokines play prominent roles. CXCL14 is a chemokine with a
pro-tumor role in breast and prostate carcinoma, where it is secreted by cancer associated fibroblasts,
and contributes to tumor growth and invasion. We previously observed that CXCL14 expression
is higher in GBM tissues than in healthy white matter. Here, we study the eects of exogenously
supplemented CXCL14 on key tumorigenic properties of human GBM cell lines. We show that
CXCL14 enhances the migration ability and the proliferation of U87MG and LN229 GBM cell lines.
None of these eects was aected by the use of AMD3100, an inhibitor of CXCR4 receptor, suggesting
that the observed CXCL14 eects are not mediated by this receptor. We also provide evidence that
CXCL14 enhances the sphere-forming ability of glioblastoma stem cells, considered the initiating
cells, and is responsible for tumor onset, growth and recurrence. In support of our in vitro results,
we present data from several GBM expression datasets, demonstrating that CXCL14 expression is
inversely correlated with overall survival, that it is enriched at the leading edge of the tumors and in
infiltrating tumor areas, and it characterizes mesenchymal and NON G-CIMP tumors, known to have
a particularly bad prognosis. Overall, our results point to CXCL14 as a protumorigenic chemokine
in GBM
The Expression of the Chemokine CXCL14 Correlates with Several Aggressive Aspects of Glioblastoma and Promotes Key Properties of Glioblastoma Cells.
Glioblastoma (GBM) is a primary brain tumor whose prognosis is inevitably dismal, leading patients to death in about 15 months from diagnosis. Tumor cells in the mass of the neoplasm are in continuous exchange with cells of the stromal microenvironment, through the production of soluble molecules, among which chemokines play prominent roles. CXCL14 is a chemokine with a pro-tumor role in breast and prostate carcinoma, where it is secreted by cancer associated fibroblasts, and contributes to tumor growth and invasion. We previously observed that CXCL14 expression is higher in GBM tissues than in healthy white matter. Here, we study the eects of exogenously supplemented CXCL14 on key tumorigenic properties of human GBM cell lines. We show that CXCL14 enhances the migration ability and the proliferation of U87MG and LN229 GBM cell lines. None of these eects was aected by the use of AMD3100, an inhibitor of CXCR4 receptor, suggesting that the observed CXCL14 eects are not mediated by this receptor. We also provide evidence that CXCL14 enhances the sphere-forming ability of glioblastoma stem cells, considered the initiating cells, and is responsible for tumor onset, growth and recurrence. In support of our in vitro results, we present data from several GBM expression datasets, demonstrating that CXCL14 expression is inversely correlated with overall survival, that it is enriched at the leading edge of the tumors and in infiltrating tumor areas, and it characterizes mesenchymal and NON G-CIMP tumors, known to have a particularly bad prognosis. Overall, our results point to CXCL14 as a protumorigenic chemokine in GBM