Urraca Nora, Memon Rawaha, El-Iyachi Ikbale, Goorha Sarita, Valdez Colleen, Tran Quynh T, Scroggs Reese, Miranda-Carboni Gustavo A, Donaldson Martin, Bridges Dave, Reiter Lawrence T
Department of Neurology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, United States.
Department of Pediatric Dentistry, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN 38163, United States.
Stem Cell Res. 2015 Nov;15(3):722-730. doi: 10.1016/j.scr.2015.11.004. Epub 2015 Dec 1.
A major challenge to the study and treatment of neurogenetic syndromes is accessing live neurons for study from affected individuals. Although several sources of stem cells are currently available, acquiring these involve invasive procedures, may be difficult or expensive to generate and are limited in number. Dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) are multipotent stem cells that reside deep the pulp of shed teeth. To investigate the characteristics of DPSCs that make them a valuable resource for translational research, we performed a set of viability, senescence, immortalization and gene expression studies on control DPSC and derived neurons. We investigated the basic transport conditions and maximum passage number for primary DPSCs. We immortalized control DPSCs using human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) and evaluated neuronal differentiation potential and global gene expression changes by RNA-seq. We show that neurons from immortalized DPSCs share morphological and electrophysiological properties with non-immortalized DPSCs. We also show that differentiation of DPSCs into neurons significantly alters gene expression for 1305 transcripts. Here we show that these changes in gene expression are concurrent with changes in protein levels of the transcriptional repressor REST/NRSF, which is known to be involved in neuronal differentiation. Immortalization significantly altered the expression of 183 genes after neuronal differentiation, 94 of which also changed during differentiation. Our studies indicate that viable DPSCs can be obtained from teeth stored for ≥72 h, these can then be immortalized and still produce functional neurons for in vitro studies, but that constitutive hTERT immortalization is not be the best approach for long term use of patient derived DPSCs for the study of disease.
神经遗传综合征的研究和治疗面临的一个主要挑战是从受影响个体获取活神经元进行研究。尽管目前有几种干细胞来源,但获取这些干细胞涉及侵入性操作,生成可能困难或昂贵,且数量有限。牙髓干细胞(DPSCs)是存在于脱落牙齿牙髓深处的多能干细胞。为了研究使DPSCs成为转化研究宝贵资源的特性,我们对对照DPSCs和衍生神经元进行了一系列活力、衰老、永生化和基因表达研究。我们研究了原代DPSCs的基本传代条件和最大传代数。我们使用人端粒酶逆转录酶(hTERT)使对照DPSCs永生化,并通过RNA测序评估神经元分化潜力和全局基因表达变化。我们表明,永生化DPSCs衍生的神经元与未永生化的DPSCs具有相同的形态和电生理特性。我们还表明,DPSCs向神经元的分化显著改变了1305个转录本的基因表达。我们在此表明,这些基因表达变化与转录抑制因子REST/NRSF蛋白水平的变化同时发生,已知REST/NRSF参与神经元分化。永生化显著改变了神经元分化后183个基因的表达,其中94个基因在分化过程中也发生了变化。我们的研究表明,可以从储存≥72小时的牙齿中获得有活力的DPSCs,然后使其永生化,并且仍然可以产生用于体外研究的功能性神经元,但是组成型hTERT永生化不是长期使用患者来源的DPSCs进行疾病研究的最佳方法。