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From the Departments of Neurology and Neurological Sciences* and Neurosurgery,
Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford; and the Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center,
Veterans Administration Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, California
| Abstract |
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The transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß family of proteins includes the TGF-ßs, bone morphogenic proteins, activins, growth and differentiation factors (GDF), and nodal. TGF-ß family members act in a highly contextual manner and, depending on cell type and environment, may promote cell survival or induce apoptosis, stimulate cell proliferation or induce differentiation, and initiate or resolve inflammation.22-25 Members of the TGF-ß superfamily are known to regulate both proliferation and differentiation of neural progenitor cells26-28 and TGF-ß1 itself can inhibit proliferation in many cell types,23 including neural crest stem cells27 and subventricular zone cells in embryonic brain slice cultures.29
There are three isoforms of TGF-ß; 1, 2, and 3. In the brain, TGF-ß2, TGF-ß3, and TGF-ß receptors are widely distributed,30 whereas TGF-ß1 is expressed mostly in response to injury and/or aging.31-33 TGF-ß1 is increased acutely after brain injury, including trauma, infection, ischemia, encephalitis, and autoimmune diseases, and is chronically elevated in numerous neurodegenerative diseases.34 In these settings it has been shown to have both beneficial and harmful effects, including neuroprotection,30,35-38 gliosis,34 hydrocephalus,39-41 and vascular fibrosis.42 TGF-ß1 can also be both pro- and anti-inflammatory25 and mediates tolerance to lipopolysaccharide.36,43,44
We show here that a chronic increase in TGF-ß1 production profoundly inhibits neurogenesis in vivo. Aged transgenic mice overexpressing TGF-ß1 produced virtually no new neurons in the hippocampus, and even at 9 weeks of age, TGF-ß1 overexpression caused a 60% decrease in the total number of immature neurons, hippocampal bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation, and production of neurons and astrocytes. We show that TGF-ß1 activates its signaling cascade in neural progenitor cells in culture, decreasing proliferation of these undifferentiated neural progenitor cells by prolonging their cell cycles. Together, these data show that TGF-ß1 is a potent inhibitor of hippocampal neural progenitor cell proliferation and suggest that this cytokine may contribute significantly to age- and inflammation-related decreases in adult neurogenesis.
| Materials and Methods |
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TGF-ß1 mice, expressing a constitutively active mutant of porcine TGF-ß1 under control of a GFAP promoter, have been described (line 64).39 T64 TGF-ß1 mice express transgenic TGF-ß1 mRNA twofold greater than endogenous mRNA.42 The mature porcine peptide differs only in one amino acid from its murine counterpart, and the mutated pTGF-ß1 cDNA has previously been shown to be bioactive when expressed in transgenic animals.39,45,46 High-level overexpression of TGF-ß1 results in the development of communicating hydrocephalus; however, low-expressor mice such as those used here do not develop this complication. All mice are maintained on an inbred, C57BL/6J genetic background (The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME). Before sacrifice, mice were deeply anesthetized with chloral hydrate, transcardially punctured, and saline-perfused. Brains were postfixed 24 hours in 4% paraformaldehyde in 1x phosphate buffer, pH 7.4 and then cryoprotected in 30% sucrose in phosphate-buffered saline. Forty-µm coronal sections were cut using a sliding microtome with a freezing stage. All animal care and use was in accordance with institutional guidelines and approved by the Palo Alto VA Committee on Animal Research.
Immunohistochemistry
Immunohistochemistry was performed using standard techniques. 3,3'-Diaminobenzidine (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) stains were performed using an ABC labeling kit (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). For fluorescent stains, secondary antibodies were purchased from either Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR) or Jackson Immunoresearch (West Grove, PA). The sources for primary antibodies included rat anti-bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU, 1:500; Accurate Chemical and Scientific Corp., Westbury, NY), goat anti-doublecortin (Dcx, 1:500; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc., Santa Cruz, CA), rabbit or mouse anti-glial fibrillary acidic protein [GFAP, 1:1500 (DAKO, Carpinteria, CA) and 1:1000 (Chemicon International, Temecula, CA), respectively], rabbit anti-Ki67 (1:1000; Novocastra, Newcastle on Tyne, UK), rabbit anti-ionized calcium-binding associated protein-1 (Iba-1, 1:2500; Wako Bioproducts, Richmond, VA), rabbit anti-capase-3 (1:500, anti-Asp-175 of cleaved caspase-3; Cell Signaling Technologies, Beverly, MA), mouse anti-nestin (1:8; Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA), and mouse anti-neuronal nuclear antigen (NeuN, 1:1000; Chemicon International, Temecula, CA). Antigen retrieval with 3 mol/L HCl or sodium citrate was used for BrdU and nestin, respectively.
BrdU-Injected Mice
To study the production of new neurons and glia, we injected 8-week-old female TGF-ß1 mice and their C57BL/6J littermates with 50 mg/kg of BrdU intraperitoneally once a day for 6 days, and sacrificed them either 1 or 28 days later. To estimate the number of BrdU-positive cells, we performed immunohistochemistry for BrdU on every sixth section. A blinded observer counted every BrdU-positive cell in the granule cell and subgranular cell layer of the dentate gyrus on one, randomly selected, side of each section. The total number of BrdU-positive cells in these hippocampal regions was then estimated by multiplying the number of cells counted by 12. Overestimation was corrected using the Abercrombie method for nuclei with an empirically determined average diameter of 6.5 µm within a 40-µm section. No significant differences were observed in average nuclear diameter between TGF-ß1 mice and their wild-type littermates. As performed, this method is a true unbiased stereological method. The number of BrdU-positive cells that assumed a neuronal fate was estimated by triple staining for BrdU and doublecortin to mark immature neurons, and NeuN to mark mature neurons. Confocal microscopy (MRC 1024ES; Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) was used to examine 100 to 150 BrdU-positive cells from each mouse for each stain and determine whether they co-labeled with Dcx, NeuN, or both. The estimated total number of BrdU-positive neurons was calculated by multiplying the resultant percentage of double-positive cells by the estimated total number of BrdU-positive cells. Estimates of absolute number of BrdU-positive hippocampal cells that became microglia or astrocytes were performed in the same manner, using GFAP as an astrocytic marker and Iba1 as a microglial marker. A second paradigm was used to examine the effect of TGF-ß1 on cell proliferation. Eight-week-old TGF-ß1 mice and their littermates were intraperitoneally injected with one 50-mg/kg dose of BrdU and sacrificed 2 hours later. BrdU+ and Ki67+ cells were quantified in every sixth section as above.
Quantification of Immunohistochemistry
To quantify doublecortin staining in young adult TGF-ß1 mice and their littermates, we used Metamorph imaging software (version 6.1r1; Universal Imaging Corporation, Downington, PA). We quantified the percentage of pixels above background staining within a region drawn around the dentate granule cell layer and subgranular zone. In 22-month-old mice, doublecortin-positive cells in the same region were counted in every twelfth coronal section through the hippocampus and total numbers estimated by multiplying this number by 12. Only cells with a clearly visible nucleus were counted, not doublecortin-positive processes alone. Counts were corrected using the Abercrombie method for nuclei, as above. Caspase-3 staining was counted in neurogenic regions of the hippocampus (dentate gyrus granule cell layer and subgranular zone) in three sets of every twelfth section through the dentate gyrus obtained from 13-week-old female TGF-ß1 and wild-type mice. Nestin staining was quantified by counting stained processes that spanned at least 50% of the dentate granule cell layer in one coronal section per mouse, matched for level. If processes were branched, only the major branch was counted.
To estimate dentate gyrus granule cell layer volume, we stained every sixth coronal section through the hippocampus with cresyl violet and then used Metamorph imaging software to quantify the area on each section. We then roughly estimated total volume by multiplying these areas by 6 and 40 µm. Neuronal density was separately estimated using confocal microscopy. One-µm-thick confocal images were obtained from NeuN-stained sections from at least five areas per dentate gyrus granule cell layer per mouse. The NeuN-positive nuclei in each image were counted, and this number divided by the area of each image containing granule cell layer.
Neural Progenitor Cell Cultures
Rat neural progenitor cells were isolated from Fisher 344 adult rats and propagated in culture using standard monolayer culture methods.8
Cells were transduced with a retrovirus that encodes for GFP8
and used for these experiments at propagation doubling numbers of
40 to 50. Primary cultures from C57BL/6J-Act-GFP P0 mice were also used at passages 5 to 7. Rat neural progenitor cells were grown in 1:1 Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium:F12 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) supplemented with N2 and 20 ng/ml of fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2; Peprotech, Rocky Hill, NJ). N2 components were purchased from Sigma and included 30 nmol/L Na selenite, 20 nmol/L progesterone, 30 µg/ml transferrin, 100 µmol/L putrescine, and 5 µg/ml insulin (all purchased from Sigma). For various assays, insulin and FGF-2 were altered as described. Primary mouse neural progenitor cells were grown in Neurobasal A media supplemented with glutamine, B27 without retinoic acid, penicillin, and streptomycin (all from Invitrogen). For normal growth, cells were also supplemented with 20 ng/ml of both epidermal growth factor (EGF) and FGF-2 (Peprotech).
MTT Assays
For MTT assays, 5 x 103 (rat) or 2 x 104 (mouse) cells were plated in triplicate in 96-well plates and incubated for 40 hours with varying concentrations of recombinant TGF-ß1 (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MD). Thiazolyl blue tetrazolium bromide (methylthiazolyldiphenyl-tetrazolium bromide, or MTT), 0.5 mg/ml, was added to the media for the last 2 hours of incubation. Cells were then lysed with 0.08 N HCl in isopropanol, and incubated 2 hours at 37°C. Absorbance at 570 nm was read using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay plate reader (SpectraMax 190; Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA).
Cell Cycle Analysis
Rat neural progenitor cells were plated 5 to 10 x 107 per 10-cm diameter dish and grown 12 to 14 hours in varying amounts of TGF-ß1 (R&D Systems) and FGF-2. Neurospheres were gently washed off the plates, then dispersed with Hanks balanced salt solution (Invitrogen) and ethanol-fixed. DNA was labeled with propidium iodide (Molecular Probes) and flow cytometry (Facscan or FACScalibur; Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, CA) used to gate on single cells and determine their DNA content. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting results were analyzed using MOD-Fit version 3.0 for Macintosh (Verity Software House Increase, Topsham, ME).
Western Blots
Rat neural progenitor cells were plated at 2 x 106 per 10-cm diameter dish and varying concentrations of TGF-ß1 added 16 hours later for an additional 6 hours. Cells were collected off the plates and incubated 30 minutes on ice in cell lysis buffer, containing 0.5 mol/L Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 5 mol/L NaCl, 10% Nonidet P-40, and protease inhibitor (Roche, Basel, Switzerland). After centrifugation at 10,000 x g, protein concentrations were measured using the BCA protein assay kit, (Pierce, Rockford, IL) and lysates were separated on a 4 to 12% Bis-Tris gel in MOPS sodium dodecyl sulfate running buffer, electroblotted onto nitrocellulose membranes, and analyzed with rabbit anti-phospho-Smad2 (Ser465/467, 1:1000; Upstate Cell Signaling Solutions, Lake Placid, NY) and rabbit anti-Smad2 antibodies (1:1000, Cell Signaling Technology). Signal was detected using ECL Western blotting detection reagents, (Amersham Biosciences, Uppsala, Sweden).
Statistical Analysis
All immunohistochemical experiments were analyzed by an investigator blinded to genotype or age. Statistical analysis was performed using Statview 5.0 software for the MacIntosh. A P value of
0.05 was considered significant. Unpaired Students t-tests were used to determine whether the results were significantly different between mouse groups. Analysis of variance, followed by Dunnetts posthoc test was used to compare means from two or more groups against a control group.
| Results |
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TGF-ß1 is an injury-responsive cytokine that often remains chronically elevated after injury and is increased with age.32,33
To determine the effect of chronic TGF-ß1 we studied TGF-ß1 transgenic mice that secrete constitutively active TGF-ß1 from astrocytes (GFAP-TGF-ß1 mice, line T64).39
Astrocytes are particularly suitable targets for TGF-ß1 expression, because they have been shown to produce TGF-ß1 in vivo under pathological conditions.47,48
We found that 9-week-old TGF-ß1 mice had many fewer doublecortin-labeled cells than wild-type littermates (Figure 1A)
. Doublecortin is expressed by proliferating neuroblasts and immature neurons, but not by mature neurons. Quantification of the doublecortin staining in the dentate gyrus granule cell layer and subgranular zone revealed a 60% decrease in the area stained in young TGF-ß1 mice (Figure 1B)
. By 22 months of age, we did not find any doublecortin-positive cells in TGF-ß1 transgenic hippocampi, whereas wild-type littermates still had
500 such cells on average (Figure 1, A and C)
. The reduction in doublecortin staining was accompanied by decreased nestin staining (Figure 1, D and E)
. Nestin-immunoreactive processes that radially span the dentate gyrus granule cell layer are characteristic of individual neural stem/progenitor cells.49
Such profiles were reduced by 75% in TGF-ß1 mice (Figure 1E)
. These data indicate that either the pool of nestin-positive progenitors is reduced or that nestin-positive cells exhibit shorter or less branched processes in mice overexpressing TGF-ß1.
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To confirm that TGF-ß1 overexpression decreased hippocampal neurogenesis, we used BrdU and neuron-specific markers. Two-month-old mice were sacrificed 1 or 28 days after BrdU administration. Under both conditions, the overall number of dividing, BrdU-incorporating cells was 60% lower in TGF-ß1 mice compared with nontransgenic controls (Figure 2, AC)
. Newly generated immature neurons, measured in the 1-day groups by immunohistochemistry for BrdU and doublecortin, were decreased by 65% in TGF-ß1 mice (Figure 2, A and D)
. Similarly, TGF-ß1 mice had a prominent reduction in hippocampal BrdU-positive cells expressing the mature neuronal marker NeuN 1 month after BrdU labeling (Figure 2, B and E)
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Chronic TGF-ß1 Does Not Alter the Total Number of Mature Dentate Gyrus Granule Cell Neurons in Aged Mice
We next evaluated whether the sharply reduced production of new hippocampal neurons in TGF-ß1 transgenic mice results in a decreased number of mature granule cell layer neurons with age. We did consistently note an increased hilar size in TGF-ß1 mice as well as irregularities in the thickness of the dorsal blade of the dentate granule cell layer (Figure 1A)
. There was no significant difference in the volume of the granule cell layer in 22-month-old TGF-ß1 mice compared to their wild-type littermates. We estimated a volume of 4.3 ± 0.1 mm3 in TGF-ß1 mice compared to 4.1 ± 0.1 mm3 in their wild-type littermates (P = 0.23, unpaired Students t-test). We then quantified the density of NeuN+ nuclei in the dentate gyrus granule cell layer in these mice, again finding no difference (5.2 ± 0.5 versus 5.4 ± 0.3 in TGF-ß1 and wild-type mice, P = 0.83, units are nuclei per mm2 x 103). Thus, chronic TGF-ß1 overproduction does not significantly decrease the total number of mature dentate granule cell layer neurons. Interestingly, when we compared the number of BrdU+ neurons 28 days after BrdU to the number 1 day after BrdU in wild-type and TGF-ß1 mice, there was no clear difference (Figure 2H)
. This argues that TGF-ß1 does not increase short-term neuronal survival, meaning between 1 to 7 days to 28 to 34 days after neurons birth. Instead, TGF-ß1 overexpression may be prolonging long-term survival of granule cell layer neurons after they have survived their first month.
TGF-ß1 Inhibits Astrogenesis but Not Microglial Proliferation
BrdU-positive astrocytes were also sharply reduced in TGF-ß1 mice 1 day after BrdU (Figure 3, A and B)
but showed a trend toward more cells than wild-type mice 28 days after BrdU labeling (Figure 3C)
. Thus, although TGF-ß1 reduced the generation of new astrocytes, a higher fraction survived relative to wild-type mice (Figure 3D)
. The number of microglia that were BrdU-positive 1 day after labeling were not different (Figure 3, E and F)
but again there was a strong trend toward more BrdU-positive microglia in TGF-ß1 mice 28 days after labeling (Figure 3G)
, implying that TGF-ß1 increases the survival of newly born microglia (Figure 3H)
as well as astrocytes. These results also demonstrate that TGF-ß1 reduces the production of neural progenitor-derived cells (neurons and astrocytes) equally (Figure 4)
, but not of myeloid lineage cells (microglia; Figure 3H
). These data are thus most consistent with TGF-ß1 affecting a precursor common to neurons and astrocytes and/or committed progenitor cells for both lineages.
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Because TGF-ß receptors are widely expressed in the brain,30
and brain overexpression in transgenic mice results in astrogliosis, microgliosis, and vascular fibrosis,34
TGF-ß1 could have been inhibiting neurogenesis indirectly in TGF-ß1 mice. On the other hand, TGF-ß1 could be acting directly on neural progenitor cells. We therefore tested whether TGF-ß1 could directly activate its signaling cascade in neural progenitor cells isolated from postnatal brains. We used a rat neural precursor cell line isolated from an adult rat that retains its undifferentiated, neural precursor, phenotype in culture and can be easily propagated under growth conditions, or differentiated into neurons and astrocytes under differentiation conditions.7,8
We found that addition of recombinant TGF-ß1 to these neural precursor cells led to phosphorylation of Smad2, a direct downstream mediator of TGF-ß signaling (Figure 5A)
. We next evaluated whether TGF-ß1 inhibited neural progenitor cell proliferation. Rat neural progenitor cells were grown in varying amounts of the mitogens they are normally cultured in, insulin and FGF-2, in the presence or absence of TGF-ß1. TGF-ß1 reduced MTT conversion, an indicator of cell number, in a dose-dependent manner and almost completely antagonized the effect of FGF-2 (Figure 5B)
. To confirm these results in early passage primary cells, we added varying amounts of TGF-ß1 to primary mouse neural progenitor cell cultures, and obtained similar results (Figure 5C)
. To determine whether these decreases in cell number were caused by apoptosis or decreased growth, we performed flow cytometry on propidium iodide-stained rat cells. There was no evidence of apoptosis using this method, but TGF-ß1 increased the percentage of neural progenitor cells in G1/G0 by more than 20% (Figure 5D)
. Our cell culture data are thus consistent with what we observed in vivo; TGF-ß1 decreases the number of proliferating cells either by prolonging the cell cycle or by causing cell cycle exit and does not result in significant cell death.
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| Discussion |
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To our knowledge, our study represents the first time that the effects of chronically elevated TGF-ß1 on adult neurogenesis have been evaluated. TGF-ß1 is a key regulator of the brains injury response. As such, it is acutely increased after injury and is chronically increased in the brain in multiple neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimers disease, vascular dementia, and Parkinsons disease.34
The primary benefit of increased TGF-ß1 in the brain seems to be its ability to promote neuronal survival.35
We now show that when it is chronically increased TGF-ß1s effects on neuronal survival are opposed by its inhibition of neurogenesis and that it affects the cell cycle of neural progenitor cells, by prolonging G1 and/or increasing cell cycle exit (Figure 5)
. TGF-ß1 may actually increase neurogenesis acutely after brain injury50
by causing neural progenitor cells to exit the cell cycle early, which can cause a burst of neurogenesis.51,52
If TGF-ß1 remains chronically elevated, it could then inhibit neurogenesis by the same mechanism: early cell cycle exit of neural progenitor cells. An additional alternative explanation is that TGF-ß1 may exert different effects on neurogenesis, such as anti-inflammatory ones, in the presence of extensive cell death. Interestingly, there is a growing body of evidence that neuroprotection can also be conferred by inhibiting cell cycle progression or preventing re-entry into the cell cycle.53-56
TGF-ß1 has been proposed to use several other molecular mechanisms to confer neuroprotection,30,57-59
and its effect on the cell cycle may be one more.
We observed a significant reduction in astrogenesis at 1 day after the last day of BrdU dosing in TGF-ß1 mice compared to their wild-type littermates (Figure 3B)
. Despite this decrease, we observed a trend toward more new astrocytes 4 weeks after BrdU dosing in TGF-ß1 mice (Figure 3, C and D)
, so TGF-ß1 may act as a survival factor for astrocytes. We think that TGF-ß1 increases survival of mature granule cell layer neurons as well. We did not observe fewer mature dentate granule cell layer neurons in TGF-ß1 mice despite the decrease in neuronal production. Neuronal survival during the first month of individual cells lifespans was however normal in TGF-ß1 mice (Figure 2E)
, implying that the effect is on longer term neuronal survival. In wild-type mice, new neurons that are present 4 weeks after they are generated tend to survive at least 11 months,60
so it would be difficult using BrdU-based methodology to directly show that TGF-ß1 prolongs the lifespan of granule cell neurons. Despite this, the bulk of the evidence indicates that long-term neuronal loss and replacement do act in concert to maintain dentate granule cell layer size during normal aging.61
Our hypothesis is also consistent with the large body of literature on TGF-ß1 as a strong neuroprotectant.30,35-38
Increases in TGF-ß1 during aging and in neurodegenerative conditions may therefore have both detrimental and beneficial consequences, producing gliosis by prolonging glial survival, and protecting mature neurons at the expense of generating new ones.
Age-associated decreases in hippocampal neurogenesis likely result from changes in a complex regulatory network that controls neurogenesis, which is influenced by a number of mitogens and neurotrophic factors that decrease with age. Specifically, hippocampal levels of IGF-1, FGF-2, vascular endothelial growth factor, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor have been shown to fall in the aging brain and likely contribute to the age-related drop in neurogenesis.19,20,62 In contrast, few signals that inhibit neurogenesis during aging have been characterized. Glucocorticoids can decrease neurogenesis63 and have been proposed to be a reason why neurogenesis decreases with age.64 However, their major role is probably in stress-induced decreases in neurogenesis because lifelong reduction of glucocorticoid levels does not enhance hippocampal neurogenesis.65 The TGF-ß family member GDF11 negatively regulates olfactory neuronal precursor proliferation,28 but whether it plays a role in either hippocampal neurogenesis or changes with age is not known. In addition, radiation and inflammation have been shown to reduce neurogenesis.7-9 We previously reported that endotoxin-induced inflammation decreases adult neurogenesis in rats at least in part by inducing interleukin-6.8 Interestingly, interleukin-6 did not reduce gliogenesis in vitro, implying that it may influence precursor commitment and/or amplification within the neuronal lineage. In contrast, TGF-ß1 strikingly decreases the production of new hippocampal astrocytes as well as neurons, which is consistent with what occurs in normal aging,66 and may act in addition to interleukin-6 in the irradiated brain. As TGF-ß1 mRNA increases with age32,33 it may be an important inhibitory influence on neurogenesis during aging as well as in neuroinflammation.
We demonstrate that TGF-ß1 can activate its signaling cascade in neural progenitor cells and directly decrease their proliferation (Figure 5)
. Thus, although TGF-ß1 is known to affect many cell types in the brain, we found that its effect on neurogenesis can be explained by a direct effect on neural progenitor cells themselves. This does not preclude an additional indirect effect, but in our mouse model TGF-ß1s expression was under GFAP promoter regulation, so it was most likely secreted from GFAP-positive neural progenitor cells67
in the neurogenic niche as well as by traditional, nonprogenitor astrocytes. This location is physiologically relevant because neural progenitor cells cultured from human, mouse, and rat are all known to synthesize TGF-ß1 mRNA.68
TGF-ß and its family members have also been shown to inhibit proliferation in embryonic neural cell development.26
For example, TGF-ß1 blocks proliferation in neural crest stem cells, allowing differentiation.27,69
In embryonic slice cultures, exogenous TGF-ß1 increases cell cycle exit and the cell cycle inhibitor p21.29
TGF-ß is also necessary for development and survival of dopaminergic neurons.70
The TGF-ß-family member GDF11 is critical for the development of olfactory receptor neurons in the olfactory epithelium,71,72
inhibiting proliferation of intermediate neuronal precursors by increasing expression of the cell cycle inhibitor p27.28
Interestingly, although TGF-ßs can inhibit proliferation, they are likely to play overlapping roles and/or be only one of several signals that terminate proliferation and or induce differentiation. Mice with a targeted deletion of the intracellular TGF-ß signaling component, Smad4, in nestin-positive cells and their progeny have only mild deficits, displaying a decrease in cerebellar granule cell neurogenesis73
and TGF-ß1 knockout mice have grossly normal brain structures despite decreased neuronal survival.35
Our data show that TGF-ß1 can dramatically decrease adult neurogenesis in mice. It is possible that increased production of TGF-ß1 may be responsible, at least in part, for a reduction or inefficiency in generating new neurons and astrocytes in the aged brain or after injury. TGF-ß1 increases after brain injury34 and may serve mainly to protect mature neurons from death, but as our studies show here, it can also inhibit the formation of new neurons and astrocytes. Although injury stimulates neurogenesis in young animals, new neurons are produced only rarely outside of typical proliferative regions and neurogenesis after injury is not sufficient to replace injured brain.74,75 Neurogenesis after injury is markedly impaired in aged animals, especially in the hippocampus.17,18 In fact, impaired proliferation, survival, and differentiation of transplanted stem and neural precursor cells in the aged brain represents a significant barrier to using these types of therapies in older patients.76 Several groups have increased neurogenesis or survival of transplanted cells in old animals by adding back growth factors,77-79 but still have not been successful in restoring hippocampal neurogenesis to youthful levels. Because TGF-ß1 increases during aging and after injury, strategies that reduce TGF-ß1 to youthful levels may potentially improve these results. In particular, targeted strategies that inhibit TGF-ß1s actions on neural progenitor cells while preserving its neuroprotective functions may help to increase neurogenesis and improve brain function.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Supported in part by the National Institutes of Health (grants NS40994 and AG20603).
Accepted for publication April 10, 2006.
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