The mechanism by which electrical stimulation affects formation of neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) remains unknown. NG108-15, a neural cell line, is commonly used in in vitro co-culture models of myotubes to observe synapse formation; therefore, we employed this model to observe the effects of electrical stimulation on NMJ formation. Initially, L6 cells were differentiated and NG108-15 cells were then added to the same culture dish. After 2 and 3 days of co-culture, the cells were electrically stimulated at 50 V and 0.5 Hz for 0, 5, 30, and 60 min (C, ES5, ES30, and ES60 groups, respectively) and were analyzed after co-culture for 4 days. Immunofluorescence experiments showed significantly increased aggregation of acetylcholine receptors and inhibition of neural outgrowth in the ES30 and ES60 groups. Furthermore, ADAM19 and phospho-ErbB3 were found to be specifically localized in co-cultured NG108-15 cells. Immunoblotting demonstrated that synapsin 1, ADAM19 precursor and its activated form, phospho-ErbB3, and ERK1 protein levels had increased in an electrical stimulation period-dependent manner. Thus, we found that electrical stimulation accelerated NMJ formation, possibly through activation of ADAM19/neuregulin/ErbB signaling in NG108-15 cells.
The therapeutic effect of rehabilitation after cell therapy for brain injury remains unclear. Here, we report the neural stem/progenitor cells transplantation into a brain injury mouse model followed by treadmill exercise training. Among all experimental groups, mice that underwent transplantation and treadmill exercise demonstrated significant functional motor and electrophysiological improvement. Transplanted cells at the brain injury site were observed and differentiated into neurons and astrocytes. Transplanted cells significantly differentiated into neurons in the mice that underwent transplantation and treadmill exercise compared with those treated with only transplantation. Furthermore, the expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and growth-associated protein 43 mRNAs were significantly up-regulated in the mice that underwent transplantation and treadmill exercise than in those in other experimental groups during the early recovery stage. These results suggest that rehabilitation after neural stem/progenitor cell transplantation enhances neurogenesis and promotes the recovery of motor function in brain injury model mice.
GLI-similar 1 (GLIS1) is important for the reprogramming of fibroblasts into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). However, the molecular mechanisms of regulation of GLIS1 expression remain unclear. We have therefore examined GLIS1 expression in various cancer cell lines and demonstrated that GLIS1 expression was dramatically increased under hypoxic conditions. Importantly, GLIS1 expression was significantly attenuated in VHL-overexpressing renal cell carcinoma cells compared to the VHL-deficient parent control. Moreover, promoter analysis demonstrated that GLIS1 transcription was regulated by hypoxia through a hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs)-dependent mechanism. Co-transfection experiments revealed that HIF-2α had greater potency on the GLIS1 promoter activation than HIF-1α. Subsequent studies using wild-type and mutant HIF-2α demonstrated that DNA binding activity was not necessary but TADs were critical for GLIS1 induction. Finally, co-transfection experiments indicated that HIF-2α cooperated with AP-1 family members in upregulating GLIS1 transcription. These results suggest that the hypoxic signaling pathway may play a pivotal role in regulating the reprogramming factor GLIS1, via non-canonical mechanisms involving partner transcription factor rather than by direct HIF transactivation.
Stem cell-based therapies are promising tools for regenerative medicine and require bulk numbers of high-quality cells. Currently, cells are produced on demand and have a limited shelf-life as conventional cryopreservation is primarily designed for stock keeping. We present a study on bulk cryopreservation of the human iPSC lines UKKi011-A and BIONi010-C-41. By increasing cell concentration and volume, compared to conventional cryopreservation routines in cryo vials, one billion cells were frozen in 50 mL cryo bags. Upon thawing, the cells were immediately seeded in scalable suspension-based bioreactors for expansion to assess the stemness maintenance and for neural differentiation to assess their differentiation potential on the gene and protein levels. Both the conventional and bulk cryo approach show comparative results regarding viability and aggregation upon thawing and bioreactor inoculation. Reduced performance compared to the non-frozen control was compensated within 3 days regarding biomass yield. Stemness was maintained upon thawing in expansion. In neural differentiation, a delay of the neural marker expression on day 4 was compensated at day 9. We conclude that cryopreservation in cryo bags, using high cell concentrations and volumes, does not alter the cells’ fate and is a suitable technology to avoid pre-cultivation and enable time- and cost-efficient therapeutic approaches with bulk cell numbers.
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