In recent studies using a rat aortic balloon occlusion model, we have demonstrated that spinal grafting of rat or human neuronal precursors or human postmitotic hNT neurons leads to progressive amelioration of spasticity and rigidity and corresponding improvement in ambulatory function. In the present study, we characterized the optimal dosing regimen and safety profile of human spinal stem cells (HSSC) when grafted into the lumbar spinal cord segments of naive immunosuppressed minipigs. Gottingen-Minnesota minipigs (18-23 kg) were anesthetized with halothane, mounted into a spine-immobilization apparatus, and received five bilateral injections of HSSC delivered in 2, 4, 6, 8, or 10 µl of media targeted into L2-L5 central gray matter (lamina VII). The total number of delivered cells ranged between 2,500 and 100,000 per injection. Animals were immunosuppressed with Prograf for the duration of study. After cell grafting, ambulatory function was monitored daily using a Tarlov's score. Sensory functions were assessed by mechanically evoked skin twitch test. Animals survived for 6-7 weeks. Three days before sacrifice animals received daily injections of bromodeoxyuridine (100 mg/kg; IV) and were then transcardially perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde. Th12-L6 spinal column was then dissected; the spinal cord was removed and scanned with MRI. Lumbar transverse spinal cord sections were then cut and stained with a combination of human-specific (hNUMA, hMOC, hNSE, hSYN) or nonspecific (DCX, MAP2, GABA, CHAT) antibodies. The total number of surviving cells was estimated using stereological quantification. During the first 12-24 h after cell grafting, a modest motor weakness was observed in three of eight animals but was no longer present at 4 days to 7 weeks. No sensory dysfunction was seen at any time point. Postmortem MRI scans revealed the presence of the individual grafts in the targeted spinal cord areas. Histological examination of spinal cord sections revealed the presence of hNUMA-immunoreactive grafted cells distributed between the base of the dorsal horn and the ventral horn. In all grafts intense hMOC, DCX, and hSYN immunoreactivity in grafted cells was seen. In addition, a rich axodendritic network of DCX-positive processes was identified extending 300-700 µm from the grafts. On average, 45% of hNUMA-positive neurons were GABA immunoreactive. Stereological analysis of hNUMA-positive cells showed an average of 2.5-to 3-fold increase in number of surviving cells compared with the number of injected cells. Analysis of spinal structural morphology showed that in animals injected with more than 50,000 cells/injection or volumes of injectate higher than 6 µl/ injection there was tissue expansion and disruption of the local axodendritic network. Based on these data the safe total number of injected cells and volume of injectate were determined to be 30,000 cells delivered in ≤6 µl of media. These data demonstrate that highly reproducible delivery of a potential cell therapeutic candidate into spinal parenchyma can be...
BackgroundRecent results indicate a key role for cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) in the regulation of oocyte meiotic arrest in preovulatory mammalian follicles. The aim of our study was to determine whether the resumption of oocyte meiosis and expansion of cumulus cells in isolated pig cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) can be blocked by a high intracellular concentration of cGMP, and whether this effect is mediated by a cGMP-dependent inhibition of mitogen-activated protein kinase 3/1 (MAPK3/1).MethodsThe COCs were isolated from ovaries of slaughtered gilts and cultured in vitro in M199 supplemented with 5% fetal calf serum. The expression levels of the C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP) precursor (NPPC) and its receptor (NPR2) mRNAs during the culture of COCs were determined by real-time RT-PCR. To control the intracellular concentration of cGMP in the COCs, the culture medium was further supplemented with CNP or various concentrations of synthetic cGMP analogues; the concentration of cGMP in COCs was then assessed by ELISA. The effect of the drugs on oocyte maturation was assessed after 24 and 44 h of culture by determining nuclear maturation. The expansion of cumulus cells was assessed by light microscopy and the expression of cumulus expansion-related genes by real-time RT-PCR. A possible effect of cGMP on FSH-induced activation of MAPK3/1 was assessed by immunoblotting the COC proteins with phospho-specific and total anti-Erk1/2 antibodies.ResultsThe COCs expressed NPPC and NPR2, the key components of cGMP synthesis, and produced a large amount of cGMP upon stimulation with exogenous CNP, which lead to a significant (P < 0.05) delay in oocyte meiotic resumption. The COCs also responded to cGMP analogues by inhibiting the resumption of oocyte meiosis. The inhibitory effect of cGMP on meiotic resumption was reversed by stimulating the COCs with FSH. However, high concentration of intracellular cGMP was not able to suppress FSH-induced activation of MAPK3/1 in cumulus cells, cumulus expansion and expression of expansion-related genes (P > 0.05).ConclusionsThe findings of this study indicate that high cGMP concentrations inhibit the maturation of pig oocytes in vitro but the inhibitory mechanism does not involve the suppression of MAPK3/1 activation in cumulus cells.
We have recently shown that epidermal growth factor (EGF) strongly stimulates expansion of porcine oocyte-cumulus complexes (OCCs) isolated from large follicles (>6 mm) and does not promote expansion of OCCs from small (3-4-mm) follicles. In order to elucidate the role of EGF in OCCs expansion, in the present study, we first examined the presence of EGF receptors (EGFRs) in cumulus cells isolated from follicles of different sizes. Surprisingly, immunoblotting showed that cumulus cells obtained from all follicular size categories contained similar amounts of EGFR protein. On the other hand, we found a dramatic difference in the pattern of protein tyrosine phosphorylation in a comparison of cumulus cells isolated from small and large follicles treated by EGF. Furthermore, tyrosine-phosphorylated EGFR was specifically immunoprecipitated with antiphosphotyrosine antibodies from EGF-treated cumulus cells isolated from the large follicles. This result strongly indicates that only OCCs from the large follicles contain mature EGFRs that are capable of becoming activated by EGF. Remarkably, preincubation of cumulus cells from small follicles (3-4 mm) with FSH strongly increased EGF-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation to levels comparable with OCCs from large follicles. The FSH-dependent activation of EGFRs was beneficial for expansion of OCCs isolated from the small follicles since OCCs treated sequentially by FSH (3 h) and EGF (1 h) underwent expansion significantly better then OCCs cultured in FSH or EGF alone. We conclude that a FSH-dependent pathway has an important role in the maturation of the EGFR in cumulus cells and that activation of EGFR-dependent signaling is sufficient to induce expansion.
The aim of this work was to assess the FSH-stimulated expression of epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like peptides in cultured cumulusoocyte complexes (COCs) and to find out the effect of the peptides on cumulus expansion, oocyte maturation, and acquisition of developmental competence in vitro. FSH promptly stimulated expression of amphiregulin (AREG) and epiregulin (EREG), but not betacellulin (BTC) in the cultured COCs. Expression of AREG and EREG reached maximum at 2 or 4 h after FSH addition respectively. FSH also significantly stimulated expression of expansion-related genes (PTGS2, TNFAIP6, and HAS2) in the COCs at 4 and 8 h of culture, with a significant decrease at 20 h of culture. Both AREG and EREG also increased expression of the expansion-related genes; however, the relative abundance of mRNA for each gene was much lower than in the FSH-stimulated COCs. In contrast to FSH, AREG and EREG neither stimulated expression of CYP11A1 in the COCs nor an increase in progesterone production by cumulus cells. AREG and EREG stimulated maturation of oocytes and expansion of cumulus cells, although the percentage of oocytes that had reached metaphase II was significantly lower when compared to FSH-induced maturation. Nevertheless, significantly more oocytes stimulated with AREG and/or EREG developed to blastocyst stage after parthenogenetic activation when compared to oocytes stimulated with FSH alone or combinations of FSH/LH or pregnant mares serum gonadotrophin/human chorionic gonadotrophin. We conclude that EGF-like peptides do not mimic all effects of FSH on the cultured COCs; nevertheless, they yield oocytes with superior developmental competence.
All porcine oocytes cultured 20 hr in medium with 10 μg/ml cycloheximide rested in the germinal vesicle (GV) stage but with the highly condensed bivalents in nucleoplasm. When these oocytes were washed and cultured in the control medium for 2, 4, and 6 hr, germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) was completed in 0, 86, and 100% of them, respectively. When similarly inhibited oocytes cultured successively only 2.5 hr in the control medium were given again in cycloheximide enriched medium (3.5 hr), nearly all of them reached late diakinesis stage again. It means that oocytes cultured for 20 hr and washed free of this inhibitor of protein synthesis completed GVBD rapidly (4 hr) and protein synthesis crucial for nuclear membrane disintegration occurred already during the first 2 hr after washing of inhibitor. All oocytes cultured for 20 hr in medium with 1 mM p‐aminobenzamidine rested in GV with chromatin around the compact nucleolus. The successive culture in cycloheximide (20 hr) and p‐aminobenzamidine (10 hr) prevented GVBD in all oocytes, too. In contrast, when the oocytes washed after cycloheximide block (20 hr) were cultured in p‐aminobenzamidine enriched medium 2 and 3 hr and again for 6 hr in cycloheximide medium, the nuclear membrane dissolved in 62 and 68% of oocytes, respectively. These data suggest that inhibition of protein synthesis in pig oocytes does not prevent the high condensation of bivalents in GV. However, nuclear membrane breakdown requires the successive protein synthesis and proteolysis.
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