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More than 30 years ago, Altman and Das showed that two regions of the
postnatal rat brain, the hippocampus and the olfactory bulb, contain
dividing cells that become Neurons [5, 6]. Despite these reports, the
prevailing view at the time was that nerve cells in the adult brain do
not divide. In fact, the notion that Stem Cells in the adult brain can
generate its three major cell types—astrocytes and oligodendrocytes, as
well as neurons—was not accepted until far more recently. Within the
past five years, a series of studies has shown that stem cells occur in
the adult mammalian brain and that these cells can generate its three
major cell lineages [35, 48, 63, 66, 90, 96, 104] (see Chapter 8.
Rebuilding the Nervous System with Stem Cells).
Today, scientists believe that stem cells in the fetal and adult brain
divide and give rise to more stem cells or to several types of
precursor cells. Neuronal precursors (also called neuroblasts) divide
and give rise to nerve cells (neurons), of which there are many types.
Glial precursors give rise to astrocytes or oligodendrocytes.
Astrocytes are a kind of glial cell, which lend both mechanical and
metabolic support for neurons; they make up 70 to 80 percent of the
cells of the adult brain. Oligodendrocytes make myelin, the fatty
material that ensheathes nerve cell axons and speeds nerve
transmission. Under normal, in vivo conditions, neuronal precursors do
not give rise to glial cells, and glial precursors do not give rise to
neurons. In contrast, a fetal or adult CNS (central nervous system—the
brain and spinal cord) stem cell may give rise to neurons, astrocytes,
or oligodendrocytes, depending on the Signals
it receives and its three-dimensional environment within the brain
tissue. There is now widespread consensus that the adult mammalian
brain does contain stem cells. However, there is no consensus about how
many populations of CNS stem cells exist, how they may be related, and
how they function in vivo. Because there are no markers currently
available to identify the cells in vivo, the only method for testing
whether a given population of CNS cells contains stem cells is to
isolate the cells and manipulate them In Vitro, a process that may
change their intrinsic properties [67].
Despite these barriers, three groups of CNS stem cells have been
reported to date. All occur in the adult rodent brain and preliminary
evidence indicates they also occur in the adult human brain. One group
occupies the brain tissue next to the ventricles, regions known as the
ventricular zone and the sub-ventricular zone (see discussion below).
The ventricles are spaces in the brain filled with cerebrospinal fluid.
During fetal development, the tissue adjacent to the ventricles is a
prominent region of actively dividing cells. By adulthood, however,
this tissue is much smaller, although it still appears to contain stem
cells [70].
A second group of adult CNS stem cells, described in mice but not in
humans, occurs in a streak of tissue that connects the lateral
ventricle and the olfactory bulb, which receives odor Signals from the
nose. In rodents, olfactory bulb neurons are constantly being
replenished via this pathway [59, 61]. A third possible location for
stem cells in adult mouse and human brain occurs in the hippocampus, a
part of the brain thought to play a role in the formation of certain
kinds of memory [27, 34].
Central Nervous System Stem Cells in the Subventricular Zone. CNS stem
cells found in the forebrain that surrounds the lateral ventricles are
heterogeneous and can be distinguished morphologically. Ependymal
cells, which are ciliated, line the ventricles. Adjacent to the
ependymal cell layer, in a region sometimes designated as the
subependymal or subventricular zone, is a mixed cell population that
consists of neuroblasts (immature neurons) that migrate to the
olfactory bulb, precursor cells, and astrocytes. Some of the cells
divide rapidly, while others divide slowly. The Astrocyte-like
cells can be identified because they contain glial fibrillary acidic
protein (GFAP), whereas the ependymal cells stain positive for nestin,
which is regarded as a marker of neural stem cells. Which of these
cells best qualifies as a CNS stem cell is a matter of debate [76].
A recent report indicates that the astrocytes that occur in the
subventricular zone of the rodent brain act as neural stem cells. The
cells with Astrocyte markers appear to generate neurons in vivo, as
identified by their expression of specific neuronal markers. The in
vitro assay to demonstrate that these astrocytes are, in fact, stem
cells involves their ability to form neurospheres—groupings of Undifferentiated
cells that can be dissociated and coaxed to differentiate into neurons
or glial cells [25]. Traditionally, these astrocytes have been regarded
as differentiated cells, not as stem cells and so their designation as
stem cells is not universally accepted.
A series of similar in vitro studies based on the formation of
neurospheres was used to identify the subependymal zone as a source of
adult rodent CNS stem cells. In these experiments, single, candidate
stem cells derived from the subependymal zone are induced to give rise
to neurospheres in the presence of mitogens—either epidermal growth
factor (EGF) or fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2). The neurospheres
are dissociated and passaged. As long as a mitogen is present in the Culture Medium,
the cells continue forming neurospheres without differentiating. Some
populations of CNS cells are more responsive to EGF, others to FGF
[100]. To induce Differentiation into neurons or glia, cells are
dissociated from the neurospheres and grown on an adherent surface in
serum-free medium that contains specific growth factors. Collectively,
the studies demonstrate that a population of cells derived from the
adult rodent brain can self-renew and differentiate to yield the three
major cell types of the CNS cells [41, 69, 74, 102].
Central Nervous System Stem Cells in the Ventricular Zone. Another
group of potential CNS stem cells in the adult rodent brain may consist
of the ependymal cells themselves [47]. Ependymal cells, which are
ciliated, line the lateral ventricles. They have been described as
non-dividing cells [24] that function as part of the blood-brain
barrier [22]. The suggestion that ependymal cells from the ventricular
zone of the adult rodent CNS may be stem cells is therefore unexpected.
However, in a recent study, in which two molecular tags—the fluorescent
marker Dil, and an adenovirus vector carrying lacZ tags—were used to
label the ependymal cells that line the entire CNS ventricular system
of adult rats, it was shown that these cells could, indeed, act as stem
cells. A few days after labeling, fluorescent or lacZ+ cells were
observed in the rostral migratory stream (which leads from the lateral
ventricle to the olfactory bulb), and then in the olfactory bulb
itself. The labeled cells in the olfactory bulb also stained for the
neuronal markers βIII tubulin and Map2, which indicated that ependymal
cells from the ventricular zone of the adult rat brain had migrated
along the rostral migratory stream to generate olfactory bulb neurons
in vivo [47].
To show that Dil+ cells were neural stem cells and could generate
astrocytes and oligodendrocytes as well as neurons, a neurosphere assay
was performed in vitro. Dil-labeled cells were dissociated from the
ventricular system and cultured in the presence of mitogen to generate
neurospheres. Most of the neurospheres were Dil+; they could self-renew
and generate neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes when induced to
differentiate. Single, Dil+ ependymal cells isolated from the
ventricular zone could also generate self-renewing neurospheres and
differentiate into neurons and glia.
To show that ependymal cells can also divide in vivo, bromodeoxyuridine
(BrdU) was administered in the drinking water to rats for a 2- to
6-week period. Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) is a DNA precursor that is only
incorporated into dividing cells. Through a series of experiments, it
was shown that ependymal cells divide slowly in vivo and give rise to a
population of progenitor cells in the subventricular zone [47]. A
different pattern of scattered BrdU-labeled cells was observed in the
spinal cord, which suggested that ependymal cells along the central
canal of the cord occasionally divide and give rise to nearby ependymal
cells, but do not migrate away from the canal.
Collectively, the data suggest that CNS ependymal cells in adult
rodents can function as stem cells. The cells can self-renew, and most
proliferate via asymmetrical division. Many of the CNS ependymal cells
are not actively dividing (quiescent), but they can be stimulated to do
so in vitro (with mitogens) or in vivo (in response to injury). After
injury, the ependymal cells in the spinal cord only give rise to
astrocytes, not to neurons. How and whether ependymal cells from the
ventricular zone are related to other candidate populations of CNS stem
cells, such as those identified in the hippocampus [34], is not known.
Are ventricular and subventricular zone CNS stem cells the same
population? These studies and other leave open the question of whether
cells that directly line the ventricles—those in the ventricular
zone—or cells that are at least a layer removed from this zone—in the
subventricular zone are the same population of CNS stem cells. A new
study, based on the finding that they express different genes, confirms
earlier reports that the ventricular and subventricular zone cell
populations are distinct. The new research utilizes a technique called
representational difference analysis, together with cDNA microarray
analysis, to monitor the patterns of Gene
expression in the complex tissue of the developing and postnatal mouse
brain. The study revealed the expression of a panel of genes known to
be important in CNS development, such as L3-PSP (which encodes a
phosphoserine phosphatase important in cell signaling), cyclin D2 (a
cell cycle Gene), and ERCC-1 (which is important in DNA excision
repair). All of these genes in the recent study were expressed in
cultured neurospheres, as well as the ventricular zone, the
subventricular zone, and a brain area outside those germinal zones.
This analysis also revealed the expression of novel genes such as
A16F10, which is similar to a gene in an embryonic cancer cell line.
A16F10 was expressed in neurospheres and at high levels in the
subventricular zone, but not significantly in the ventricular zone.
Interestingly, several of the genes identified in cultured neurospheres
were also expressed in hematopoietic cells, suggesting that neural stem
cells and blood-forming cells may share aspects of their genetic
programs or signaling systems [38]. This finding may help explain
recent reports that CNS stem cells derived from mouse brain can give
rise to hematopoietic cells after injection into irradiated mice [13].
Central Nervous System Stem Cells in the Hippocampus. The hippocampus
is one of the oldest parts of the cerebral cortex, in evolutionary
terms, and is thought to play an important role in certain forms of
memory. The region of the hippocampus in which stem cells apparently
exist in mouse and human brains is the subgranular zone of the dentate
gyrus. In mice, when BrdU is used to label dividing cells in this
region, about 50% of the labeled cells differentiate into cells that
appear to be dentate gyrus granule neurons, and 15% become glial cells.
The rest of the BrdU-labeled cells do not have a recognizable phenotype
[90]. Interestingly, many, if not all the BrdU-labeled cells in the
adult rodent hippocampus occur next to blood vessels [33].
In the human dentate gyrus, some BrdU-labeled cells express NeuN,
neuron-specific enolase, or calbindin, all of which are neuronal
markers. The labeled neuron-like cells resemble dentate gyrus granule
cells, in terms of their morphology (as they did in mice). Other
BrdU-labeled cells express glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) an
astrocyte marker. The study involved autopsy material, obtained with
family consent, from five cancer patients who had been injected with
BrdU dissolved in saline prior to their death for diagnostic purposes.
The patients ranged in age from 57 to 72 years. The greatest number of
BrdU-labeled cells were identified in the oldest patient, suggesting
that new neuron formation in the hippocampus can continue late in life
[27].
Fetal Central Nervous System Stem Cells. Not surprisingly, fetal stem
cells are numerous in fetal tissues, where they are assumed to play an
important role in the expansion and differentiation of all tissues of
the developing organism. Depending on the developmental stage of an
animal, fetal stem cells and precursor cells—which arise from stem
cells—may make up the bulk of a tissue. This is certainly true in the
brain [48], although it has not been demonstrated experimentally in
many tissues.
It may seem obvious that the fetal brain contains stem cells that can
generate all the types of neurons in the brain as well as astrocytes
and oligodendrocytes, but it was not until fairly recently that the
concept was proven experimentally. There has been a long-standing
question as to whether or not the same cell type gives rise to both
neurons and glia. In studies of the developing rodent brain, it has now
been shown that all the major cell types in the fetal brain arise from
a common population of progenitor cells [20, 34, 48, 80, 108].
Neural stem cells in the mammalian fetal brain are concentrated in
seven major areas: olfactory bulb, ependymal (ventricular) zone of the
lateral ventricles (which lie in the forebrain), subventricular zone
(next to the ependymal zone), hippocampus, spinal cord, cerebellum
(part of the hindbrain), and the cerebral cortex. Their number and
pattern of development vary in different species. These cells appear to
represent different stem cell populations, rather than a single
population of stem cells that is dispersed in multiple sites. The
normal development of the brain depends not only on the Proliferation
and differentiation of these fetal stem cells, but also on a
genetically programmed process of selective cell death called apoptosis
[76].
Little is known about stem cells in the human fetal brain. In one
study, however, investigators derived clonal cell lines from CNS stem
cells isolated from the diencephalon and cortex of human fetuses, 10.5
weeks post-conception [103]. The study is unusual, not only because it
involves human CNS stem cells obtained from fetal tissue, but also
because the cells were used to generate clonal cell lines of CNS stem
cells that generated neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes, as
determined on the basis of expressed markers. In a few experiments
described as "preliminary," the human CNS stem cells were injected into
the brains of immunosuppressed rats where they apparently
differentiated into neuron-like cells or glial cells.
In a 1999 study, a serum-free growth medium that included EGF and FGF2
was devised to grow the human fetal CNS stem cells. Although most of
the cells died, occasionally, single CNS stem cells survived, divided,
and ultimately formed neurospheres after one to two weeks in culture.
The neurospheres could be dissociated and individual cells replated.
The cells resumed Proliferation and formed new neurospheres, thus
establishing an in vitro system that (like the system established for
mouse CNS neurospheres) could be maintained up to 2 years. Depending on
the culture conditions, the cells in the neurospheres could be
maintained in an Undifferentiated dividing state (in the presence of
mitogen), or dissociated and induced to differentiate (after the
removal of mitogen and the addition of specific growth factors to the
Culture Medium). The differentiated cells consisted mostly of
astrocytes (75%), some neurons (13%) and rare oligodendrocytes (1.2%).
The neurons generated under these conditions expressed markers
indicating they were GABAergic, [the major type of inhibitory neuron in
the mammalian CNS responsive to the amino acid neurotransmitter,
gammaaminobutyric acid (GABA)]. However, catecholamine-like cells that
express tyrosine hydroxylase (TH, a critical enzyme in the
dopamine-synthesis pathway) could be generated, if the culture
conditions were altered to include different medium conditioned by a
rat glioma line (BB49). Thus, the report indicates that human CNS stem
cells obtained from early fetuses can be maintained in vitro for a long
time without differentiating, induced to differentiate into the three
major lineages of the CNS (and possibly two kinds of neurons, GABAergic
and TH-positive), and engraft (in rats) in vivo [103].
Central Nervous System Neural Crest Stem Cells. Neural crest cells
differ markedly from fetal or adult neural stem cells. During fetal
development, neural crest cells migrate from the sides of the neural
tube as it closes. The cells differentiate into a range of tissues, not
all of which are part of the nervous system [56, 57, 91]. Neural crest
cells form the sympathetic and parasympathetic components of the
peripheral nervous system (PNS), including the network of nerves that
innervate the heart and the gut, all the sensory ganglia (groups of
neurons that occur in pairs along the dorsal surface of the spinal
cord), and Schwann cells, which (like oligodendrocytes in the CNS) make
myelin in the PNS. The non-neural tissues that arise from the neural
crest are diverse. They populate certain hormone-secreting
glands—including the adrenal medulla and Type I cells in the carotid
body—pigment cells of the skin (melanocytes), cartilage and bone in the
face and skull, and connective tissue in many parts of the body [76].
Thus, neural crest cells migrate far more extensively than other fetal
neural stem cells during development, form mesenchymal tissues, most of
which develop from embryonic Mesoderm as well as the components of the
CNS and PNS which arises from embryonic Ectoderm. This close link, in
neural crest development, between ectodermally derived tissues and
mesodermally derived tissues accounts in part for the interest in
neural crest cells as a kind of stem cell. In fact, neural crest cells
meet several criteria of stem cells. They can self-renew (at least in
the Fetus) and can differentiate into multiple cells types, which include cells derived from two of the three embryonic germ layers [76].
Recent studies indicate that neural crest cells persist late into
gestation and can be isolated from E14.5 rat sciatic nerve, a
peripheral nerve in the hindlimb. The cells incorporate BrdU,
indicating that they are dividing in vivo. When transplanted into chick
embryos, the rat neural crest cells develop into neurons and glia, an
indication of their stem cell-like properties [67]. However, the
ability of rat E14.5 neural crest cells taken from sciatic nerve to
generate nerve and glial cells in chick is more limited than neural
crest cells derived from younger, E10.5 rat embryos. At the earlier
stage of development, the neural tube has formed, but neural crest
cells have not yet migrated to their final destinations. Neural crest
cells from early developmental stages are more sensitive to bone
morphogenetic protein 2 (BMP2) signaling, which may help explain their
greater differentiation potential [106].
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