15 research outputs found

    Targeting Lysophosphatidic Acid Signaling Retards Culture-Associated Senescence of Human Marrow Stromal Cells

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    Marrow stromal cells (MSCs) isolated from mesenchymal tissues can propagate in vitro to some extent and differentiate into various tissue lineages to be used for cell-based therapies. Cellular senescence, which occurs readily in continual MSC culture, leads to loss of these characteristic properties, representing one of the major limitations to achieving the potential of MSCs. In this study, we investigated the effect of lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), a ubiquitous metabolite in membrane phospholipid synthesis, on the senescence program of human MSCs. We show that MSCs preferentially express the LPA receptor subtype 1, and an abrogation of the receptor engagement with the antagonistic compound Ki16425 attenuates senescence induction in continually propagated human MSCs. This anti-aging effect of Ki16425 results in extended rounds of cellular proliferation, increased clonogenic potential, and retained plasticity for osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation. Expressions of p16Ink4a, Rb, p53, and p21Cip1, which have been associated with cellular senescence, were all reduced in human MSCs by the pharmacological inhibition of LPA signaling. Disruption of this signaling pathway was accompanied by morphological changes such as cell thinning and elongation as well as actin filament deformation through decreased phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase. Prevention of LPA receptor engagement also promoted ubiquitination-mediated c-Myc elimination in MSCs, and consequently the entry into a quiescent state, G0 phase, of the cell cycle. Collectively, these results highlight the potential of pharmacological intervention against LPA signaling for blunting senescence-associated loss of function characteristic of human MSCs

    P2Y receptors on astrocytes and microglia mediate opposite effects in astroglial proliferation

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    Nucleotides released upon brain injury signal to astrocytes and microglia playing an important role in astrogliosis, but the participation of microglia in the purinergic modulation of astrogliosis is still unclear. Highly enriched astroglial cultures and co-cultures of astrocytes and microglia were used to investigate the influence of microglia in the modulation of astroglial proliferation mediated by nucleotides. In highly enriched astroglial cultures, adenosine-5’-triphosphate (ATP), adenosine 5’-O-(3-thio)-triphosphate (ATPγS), adenosine 5’-O-(3-thio)-diphosphate (ADPβS; 0.01–1 mM), and adenosine-5’-diphosphate (ADP; 0.1–1 mM) increased proliferation up to 382%, an effect abolished in co-cultures containing 8% of microglia. The loss of ATP proliferative effect in co-cultures is supported by its fast metabolism and reduced ADP accumulation, an agonist of P2Y1,12 receptors that mediate astroglial proliferation. No differences in ADPβS and ATPγS metabolism or P2Y1,12 receptors expression were found in co-cultures that could explain the loss of their proliferative effect. However, conditioned medium from microglia cultures or co-cultures treated with ADPβS, when tested in highly enriched astroglial cultures, also prevented ADPβS proliferative effect. None of the uracil nucleotides tested had any effect in proliferation of highly enriched astroglial cultures, but uridine-5′-triphosphate (UTP; 0.1–1 mM) inhibited proliferation up to 66% in co-cultures, an effect that was dependent on uridine-5’-diphosphate (UDP) accumulation, coincident with a co-localization of P2Y6 receptors in microglia and due to cell apoptosis. The results indicate that microglia control astroglial proliferation by preventing the proliferative response to adenine nucleotides and favouring an inhibitory effect of UTP/UDP. Several microglial P2Y receptors may be involved by inducing the release of messengers that restrain astrogliosis, a beneficial effect for neuronal repair mechanisms following brain injury
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