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作者:Satoru Yoshidaa,b, Shigeto Shimmuraa,b, Narihito Nagoshic, Keiichi Fukudad, Yumi Matsuzakic, Hideyuki Okanoc, Kazuo Tsubotaa,b作者单位:aCornea Center, Tokyo Dental College, Ichikawa, Chiba, Japan;bDepartment of Ophthalmology, Keio University School of Medicine, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan;cDepartment of Physiology, Keio University School of Medicine, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo, Japan;dDepartment of Regenerative Medicine and Advanced Cardiac 0 u; l, ~5 p; E& E' L+ P0 f, ~
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$ y2 p- y; r$ `5 U& L) l# U( P 【摘要】8 `5 v8 L, t9 f( H
We report the presence of neural crest-derived corneal precursors (COPs) that initiate spheres by clonal expansion from a single cell. COPs expressed the stem cell markers nestin, Notch1, Musashi-1, and ABCG2 and showed the side population cell phenotype. COPs were multipotent with the ability to differentiate into adipocytes, chondrocytes, as well as neural cells, as shown by the expression of ß-III-tubulin, glial fibrillary acidic protein, and neurofilament-M. COP spheres prepared from E/nestin-enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) mice showed induction of EGFP expression that was not originally observed in the cornea, indicating activation of the neural-specific nestin second intronic enhancer in culture. COPs were Sca-1 , CD34 , CD45¨C, and c-kit¨C. Numerous GFP cells were observed in the corneas of mice transplanted with whole bone marrow of transgenic mice ubiquitously expressing GFP; however, no GFP COP spheres were initiated from these mice. On the other hand, COP spheres from transgenic mice encoding P0-Cre/Floxed-EGFP as well as Wnt1-Cre/Floxed-EGFP were GFP , indicating the neural crest origin of COPs, which was confirmed by the expression of the embryonic neural crest markers Twist, Snail, Slug, and Sox9. Taken together, these data indicate the existence of neural crest-derived, multipotent stem cells in the adult cornea. " l* Y* p, ?# [8 G/ E: d) ~
【关键词】 Corneal stroma Keratocyte Stem cells Bone marrow cells Neural crest- h2 C# b# ~! O7 G
INTRODUCTION; I3 e! K# g' v/ v, c4 E! S* P$ _
3 m# q$ n- S0 V$ D! YThe cornea is an avascular, structurally unique tissue that functions as the primary refracting medium of the eye. Although anatomically continuous with the vascularized sclera and conjunctiva, all three major components of the cornea function together to maintain optically clear tissue. Therefore, homeostasis of the corneal epithelium, stroma, and endothelium¡ªthe cellular components of the cornea¡ªis vital in preserving transparency and optical precision.
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; p1 T- X5 e3 PStem cell researchers of the cornea have identified the epithelial stem cell to be located in the vascular rim, or limbus, of the cornea , the origin of keratocytes involved in the turnover of stromal tissue is unknown.; w! T, {2 @$ w8 y; E2 U; [& Q" j
. I! O3 i) c) ^/ j3 |3 z/ o; w* hWe have previously demonstrated that the neurosphere culture technique, which was originally developed for neural stem cells (NSCs) isolated from the forebrain of mouse . We therefore hypothesized that the corneal stroma-derived spheres we have isolated also include putative keratocyte precursor cells similar to SKPs of the skin.
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Here, we show the existence of multipotent keratocyte precursor cells (termed COPs, for cornea-derived precursors) in cornea stromal spheres isolated from adult mice. Single cells dissociated from spheres initiated clonal growth of progeny spheres, and a subset of COPs exhibited the side population (SP) cell phenotype. We sought to determine whether COPs were of bone marrow (BM) origin or of neural crest lineage by initiating COP spheres in various transgenic mice.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Animals
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7 F1 P \7 a7 l: ]) _+ M1 bNormal, specific pathogen-free, adult C57BL/6J mice were purchased from CLEA Japan, Inc., Tokyo, http://www.clea-japan.com/index.html). Green fluorescent protein (GFP) transgenic mice (C57BL/6 TgN to obtain Wnt1-Cre/CAG-CAT-EGFP (Wnt1-Cre/Floxed-EGFP) and P0-Cre/CAG-CAT-EGFP (P0-Cre/Floxed-EGFP) transgenic mice, respectively. P0-Cre transgenic mice and CAG-CATloxP/loxP-EGFP transgenic mice were obtained from Dr. Ken-ichi Yamamura and Dr. Jun-ichi Miyazaki, respectively. All animal procedures were performed in accordance with institutional guidelines.
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H$ N9 z8 M- l7 a% oCell Culture
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Cells were dissociated from adult C57BL6/J mice and then cultured as described previously . All animals were handled in full accordance with the ARVO (Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology) Statement for the Use of Animals in Ophthalmic and Vision Research. In brief, corneal stromal discs were cut into small pieces and digested in 0.05% trypsin (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, http://www.sigmaaldrich.com) for 30 minutes at 37¡ãC, followed by 78 U/ml collagenase (Sigma-Aldrich) and 38 U/ml hyaluronidase (Sigma-Aldrich) treatment for 30 minutes at 37¡ãC. Stromal cells were mechanically dissociated into single cells and cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM)/F-12 (1:1) supplemented with 20 ng/ml epidermal growth factor (EGF) (Sigma-Aldrich), 10 ng/ml fibroblastic growth factor 2 (FGF2) (Sigma-Aldrich), B27 supplement (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, http://www.invitrogen.com), and 103 U/ml leukemia inhibitory factor (Chemicon International, Temecula, CA, http://www.chemicon.com) at a density of 1 x 105 cells per milliliter at 37¡ãC, 5% CO2.# {' x1 W4 y3 K0 t5 {( V
; ]2 P) F& M, y& R; ^For clonal sphere expansion, COPs were initiated from corneas of wild-type C57BL/6 strain and transgenic strain expressing GFP ubiquitously .
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To examine the expression of nestin in COPs, cells were prepared from transgenic mice carrying EGFP (Clontech, Mountain View, CA, http://www.clontech.com) under the control of the second intronic enhancer of the nestin gene, which acts selectively in neural stem/precursor cells (E/nestin-EGFP) . To confirm the neural crest origin of COPs, corneal stromal cells were prepared from six corneas of neonatal (13 days) and three corneas of adult (8 weeks) P0-Cre/Floxed-EGFP mice, as well as from one cornea of an adult (10 weeks) Wnt1-Cre/Floxed-EGFP mouse and cultured as described above.) n& h+ x7 Q" G! z" p1 `( @. S) F2 H
4 R: A6 |* i& j: f: y) WIn Vitro Differentiation
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To examine neural differentiation, COPs were dissociated into single cells and suspended at a cell density of 10 cells per milliliter. One-hundred microliters of the cell suspension was divided into 48-well culture plates, and only clonal spheres from single cells were subcultured and expanded. Clonal COPs were plated and cultured on poly(L-ornithine)/laminin-coated Lab-Tek chamber slides (Nalge Nunc International, Rochester, NY, http://www.nalgenunc.com). For -smooth muscle actin (-SMA) expression, clonal cells were also plated on Lab-Tek chamber slides in transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß-containing medium. For adipogenic or chondrogenic differentiation, dissociated COPs were cultured in differentiation-inducing medium (Cambrex Bio Science Walkersville, Inc., Walkersville, MD, http://www.cambrex.com) according to instructions provided by the manufacturer. To visualize adipogenic differentiation, cells were stained with oil red O (Sigma-Aldrich). Chondrogenic differentiation was observed by the expression of the specific markers collagen II and aggrecan analyzed by immunocytochemistry of cell pellets (see above). Results were expressed as mean ¡À SD.
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Immunohistochemistry. {; t& w6 W, K, P3 h7 o, y
4 S) l- L6 l) {" A$ aCultured cells and frozen-tissue sections were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) for 10 minutes at room temperature and then stained with the following antibodies: anti-Bcrp1 (1:250; R&D Systems, Minneapolis, http://www.rndsystems.com), anti--SMA (1:200; NeoMarkers, Fremont, CA, http://www.labvision.com), anti-collagen type II (1:40; Chemicon International), anti-aggrecan (1:40; Chemicon International), anti-Musashi-1 (Msi1) (1:500, clone 14H1) , anti-class III ß-tubulin (1:100, R&D Systems), anti-glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) (1:200; Chemicon International), and anti-neurofilament-M (NF-M) (1:500; Abcam, Cambridge, U.K., http://www.abcam.com). Immunohistochemistry for GFP was performed using an anti-GFP antibody (1:500; MBL, Nagoya, Japan, http://www.mbl.co.jp) in 10-µm frozen sections from eyes fixed in 2% PFA overnight at 4¡ãC. Immunoreactivity of primary antibodies was visualized using secondary antibodies conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate or cyanine 3 (Jackson ImmunoResearch Laboratories, West Grove, PA, http://www.jacksonimmuno.com).
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/ L$ F' i$ D) s6 M" v% p( IReverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction
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& ]1 p \ V }# ICOPs and cells freshly dissociated from mouse corneal stroma were collected and immediately frozen in liquid N2. cDNA was synthesized using a commercially available kit (Life Sciences, Inc., St. Petersburg, FL, http://www.lifesci.com) from total RNA prepared using RNeasy kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany, http://www1.qiagen.com). Primers used for Abcg2, Notch1, nestin, Msi1, Twist, Snail, Slug, Sox9, and Gapd are shown in Table 1 (supplemental online data). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed using GeneAmp 9700 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, http://www.appliedbiosystems.com).
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9 D; e6 a0 P zTable 1. Polymerase chain reaction primers! Q" D- P: \7 D+ X5 P2 z
6 z* Z2 V) O9 ~2 u" D! n: rFlow Cytometry
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9 \& w1 G; V5 E- N- d" u2 oFor Hoechst dye efflux assays, single cells dissociated from COP spheres were incubated with Hoechst 33342 dye (Dojindo Laboratories, Kumamoto, Japan, http://www.dojindo.com) for 60 minutes at 37¡ãC in the presence or absence of 50 µM reserpine (Daiichi Pharmaceutical, Tokyo, http://www.daiichius.com). SP cells were gated using FACS Vantage (BD Biosciences Immunocytometry Systems, San Jose, CA, http://www.bdbiosciences.com) as described previously . Surface marker expression was also analyzed by flow cytometry using antibodies for CD45, CD34, Sca-1, c-kit, and CD133 (eBioscience, San Diego, http://www.ebioscience.com). Isotype-matched immunoglobulin G was used as negative control.6 Y% H' P) m9 F, X! X( D/ T
- J8 E1 i) N, b3 ZBM Transplantation M1 b# R! a$ l9 g& h& E$ ^
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Whole BM (WBM) cells (1 x 106 cells) were prepared from GFP-transgenic mice and transplanted into the retro-orbital space of C57BL6/J recipient mice treated with a lethal dose (10.3 Gy) of irradiation. Eight weeks after transplantation, recipient mice were sacrificed, and corneal stromal cells were prepared for sphere culture. Cells from the transplanted animals and nonirradiated animals were then mixed and cultured as described above to assess WBM-derived cell contribution to COP sphere formation.5 q( q i5 P1 T# P
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RESULTS
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COPs Initiate Clonal Sphere Formation+ R7 m2 f1 e. f$ Q
) T V2 {, r9 J; g/ J0 F, AMouse corneal stromal-derived spheres were first prepared and cultured as described previously , who reported that SKPs may aggregate at an initial cell density of 1 x 103 cells per milliliter during sphere cultures. Clonal sphere formation was observed for several passages (P5), suggesting that COPs possess high "self-renewing" potential.
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3 m. U9 }7 N! w# Q h# @. YFigure 1. Single cornea-derived precursors form clonal spheres. Green fluorescent protein (GFP)-positive and -negative cells were mixed and cultured in methylcellulose-containing medium at a cell density of 5 x 103 cells per milliliter. Right and left panels show fluorescent images and phase-contrast images merged with fluorescent images, respectively. Upper panels show images of the cells 1 day after plating. After 6 days of culture, clonal spheres that consist entirely of GFP-positive or -negative cells were observed (lower panels). Scale bars = 200 µm (upper panel) and 100 µm (lower panel)./ N I1 ~6 g' P* ?% y( s1 l& j
4 a' }- I8 ~: u" q/ I _COPs Differentiate into Neural and Mesenchymal Lineage Cells
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2 ? p' P9 ^. UCOPs differentiate into keratocytes when cultured on plastic (Fig. 2A), into fibroblasts when cultured with serum, and into myofibroblasts under TGF-ß stimulation (Fig. 2B) in the pellets (Fig. 2E, 2F).
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Figure 2. Cornea-derived precursors differentiate into mesenchymal cells. (A): Keratocyte phenotype in serum-free culture. (B): Anti--smooth muscle actin staining of myofibroblasts induced by transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß. (C): Adipogenic cells stained with oil red O. Cells cultured in medium containing TGF-ß3 formed chondrogenic pellets (D) (arrow) expressing collagen II (E) and aggrecan (F). Scale bars = 50 µm (A), 20 µm (B, C), and 100 µm (E, F)./ o9 G3 d, L1 T5 e/ v
/ V9 t) J ]% i0 X6 XThe NSC marker Msi1, an RNA-binding protein involved in the maintenance of NSCs and activation of Notch signaling . As expected, EGFP-positive spheres were formed (Fig. 3B) from these mice, which originally did not show EGFP-related fluorescence in the cornea.! h3 T6 S$ Z: Q3 A
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Figure 3. COP spheres express neural stem/precursor and differentiation markers. (A): Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis of neural stem cell markers Notch1, Musashi1, and nestin expressed in COPs. Gapd was loaded as an internal control. (B): Fluorescent image merged with transmitted-light image of a COP sphere prepared from an E/nestin-EGFP mouse. EGFP expression confirms the activation of neuronal nestin. (C): Immunocytochemical analysis showed high levels of Musashi-1 expressed in COP spheres. Differentiated cells from COP spheres express the neuronal markers GFAP (D), class III-ß-tubulin (E), and NF-M (F). Cells were counterstained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (blue) to show nuclei. Scale bars = 20 µm (B, C) and 50 µm (D¨CF). Abbreviations: COP, cornea-derived precursor; EGFP, enhanced green fluorescent protein; GFAP, glial fibrillary acidic protein; NF-M, neurofilament-M; RT, reverse transcription.: \5 Q' K& S/ z3 F
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Neural differentiation of COPs was shown by the expression of class III ß-tubulin, GFAP, and NF-M in cells cultured on poly(L-ornithine)-coated slides in differentiation-inducing medium (Fig. 3E, 3F). Approximately 1.4% of cells stained with anti-NF-M antibody (n = 3), 36.9% ¡À 17.7% expressed GFAP (n = 3), and 32.8% ¡À 15.8% expressed ß-III-tubulin (n = 3).
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* Z/ `) c- u. ], K0 Y5 |4 @COP Spheres Are Rich in SP Cells+ o l* ]1 c. y+ Y1 B
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Several studies have shown that the ability to exclude Hoechst dye is a property of stem cells commonly referred to as SP cells , which are distinguished from the "main population" by flow cytometric analysis. The SP cell phenotype is defined by the dye exclusion ability of an ABC transporter, ABCG2, which is inhibited by ABC-transporter inhibitors such as reserpine. We found that COP spheres expressed ABCG2 when examined by reverse transcription (RT)-PCR and immunocytochemistry (Fig. 4A, 4B). Reserpine-sensitive SP cells were detected in dissociated sphere cells, representing 3.3% ¡À 1.2% (n = 8) of viable cells analyzed by flow cytometry (Fig. 4C).
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; j6 M- B0 f; E. [Figure 4. Murine COPs show ABCG2 expression and the SP cell phenotype. (A): RT-polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed Abcg2 expression in COP spheres and in cells freshly dissociated from mouse corneal stroma. (B): Immunofluorescent staining of ABCG2 in COP spheres. Nuclei were counterstained with 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole. Scale bar = 100 µm. (C): Approximately 3.3% of sphere cells were SP cells as shown by flow cytometry. Hypofluorescent SP cells are distinct from MP cells and disappear when treated with reserpine, an inhibitor of ABCG2. Cells in the S/G2 phase were not gated as SP cells, even though they disappeared with reserpine treatment. Abbreviations: COP, cornea-derived precursor; MP, main population; RT, reverse transcription; SP, side population.! D n/ I/ u* A6 g( ?
7 }2 N8 B! E8 @$ y; `8 l& N/ M4 \We also analyzed several stem cell-related surface markers by flow cytometry. COP spheres expressed CD34 (Fig. 5A, 5B), a cell surface marker reported in rodent epithelial stem cells in the bulge area , was also not detected by flow cytometric analysis (Fig. 5) and RT-PCR (not shown).
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9 h9 Y w) S2 w* v/ `* `3 yFigure 5. Cornea-derived precursors (COPs) express stem cell surface markers. (A): Single cells dissociated from COP spheres were stained with antibodies for CD45, c-kit, Sca-1, or CD34 and analyzed by flow cytometry (blue lines). Red lines represent isotype-matched negative control. COP sphere cells did not express CD45 or c-kit but did express Sca-1 and CD34. (B): Fluorescent images of cells stained with phycoerythrin-labeled anti-Sca-1 (left, red) or FITC-labeled anti-CD34 (right, green). Scale bar = 20 µm. Abbreviation: FITC, fluorescein isothiocyanate.; c2 W8 ^% ?2 S- f+ }6 h R
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COPs Are Neural Crest Lineage Cells7 G) M! K" W0 p3 @/ n5 V6 p3 F
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Although we found CD34 cells in COP spheres, Sosnova et al. . However, we found that COPs did not express CD45 (0.2% ¡À 0.2%, n = 6; Fig. 5A), indicating a nonhematopoietic origin for these cells. We further prepared COPs from mice transplanted with GFP WBM cells. GFP cells were not found in COP spheres prepared from the recipient mice 8 weeks after transplantation (Fig. 6C), although numerous GFP cells were observed in the recipient cornea (Fig. 6A, 6B). GFP cells in sphere culture preparations were found attached to the bottom of the culture dish, and immunofluorescent staining showed that the GFP cells were CD45 and some also expressed CD34 (Fig. 6D). CD34 was therefore expressed in both BM-derived GFP cells as well as GFP-COPs, indicating that WBM-derived cells are not likely to contribute to COP sphere-initiating cells.+ F3 l% o9 _) |) s8 F/ K- I/ U; ~
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Figure 6. Bone marrow cells do not form cornea-derived precursor (COP) spheres. Sphere cultures prepared from C57BL6/J mice transplanted with whole bone marrow (WBM) cells of green fluorescent protein (GFP) mice did not produce GFP spheres. (A): Fluorescent image of a cornea 8 weeks after WBM cell transplantation. Migration of numerous GFP cells into the cornea was observed. (B): High-magnification view of the boxed area in (A). (C): Phase-contrast image merged with fluorescent image of sphere culture at 7 days after plating. GFP WBM-derived cells were found attached to the culture dish (arrow), whereas GFP cells were not observed in forming spheres (arrowhead). (D): Adherent cells were stained with phycoerythrin-labeled anti-CD34 antibody (red). CD34 (arrows) was also expressed in transplanted WBM-derived cells (green). Scale bars = 200 µm (C, D).
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Given that cranial neural crest-derived mesenchymal cells contribute to corneal stroma development, we next investigated whether COPs were of neural crest origin . We also examined embryonic neural crest-associated genes by RT-PCR analysis. Twist, Slug, Snail, and Sox9 were expressed in COPs (Fig. 7F). These data confirm that COPs are neural crest-derived stem cells that are not recruited from the BM.3 E/ ]. B! s, O# w/ z* a
% ^) R( M; o$ uFigure 7. COPs are neural crest-derived cells. (A¨CC): Confocal images of Wnt1-Cre/Floxed-EGFP mouse (A, B) and WT mouse cornea (C) stained with anti-GFP antibody and cyanine 3-conjugated secondary antibody. (B): High-magnification view of the boxed region in (A). Expression of EGFP is detected in keratocytes, although the expression level is low in vivo (B) (arrowheads). Positive staining is also detected in corneal endothelium, which is also neural crest-derived (A) (arrow). Cells dissociated from corneal stroma of Wnt1-Cre/Floxed-EGFP (D) (day 14) and P0-Cre/Floxed-EGFP mice (E) (day 6) formed EGFP COP spheres. (F): Expression of embryonic neural crest markers by COPs and corneal stromal tissue. Gapd was loaded as an internal control. Expression of Snail, Slug, and Sox9 was upregulated in COP spheres, whereas Twist was found in both COPs and stroma. Mpz was detected from stromal tissue only. Scale bars = 50 µm (A, D, E) and 20 µm (B, C). Abbreviations: COP, cornea-derived precursor; EGFP, enhanced green fluorescent protein; GFP, green fluorescent protein; RT, reverse transcription; WT, wild-type.
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DISCUSSION8 v$ R8 ^; ^2 U" c! K5 V% |
* _5 [+ z1 D4 d6 I2 W; fThe expansion of stem cells in vitro while maintaining properties of progenitor cells is critical from the standpoint of using stem cells for research as well as medical purposes. Culture conditions for several adult somatic stem cells, including BM-HSCs and NSCs, have been well-established. The sphere culture technique, which was originally developed for culturing NSCs as neurosphere from the central nervous system (CNS), was recently applied to isolate sphere-initiating cells from adult tissues other than CNS , COPs can also be induced to differentiate into adipocytes, chondrocytes, and neural cells.
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( C& x' b& z% |0 z& B5 iClonal spheres in this study were initiated using methylcellulose, which is an established method to clone hematopoietic cells and, more recently, embryonic stem cells and NCSs . Cells within a sphere arising from a single cell were not necessarily homogeneous, which may be due to the position within a sphere or to autocrine and paracrine mechanisms. Dark cells in spheres (Fig. 1) were not GFP-negative but simply had low fluorescence under the conditions of our photography, which were set with exposure settings that do not cause saturation of fluorescent levels. This is vital because long exposure times can give the misleading impression of strong fluorescence in 100% of the cells, which is not the case." Z, i7 s9 O( D" ^5 u; `! x7 G
. i5 J7 I6 V$ a$ t" jWe have also demonstrated that COPs include a high ratio of SP cells with Hoechst dye exclusion activity, which are regarded as a general property of progenitor-candidate cells. Although a higher percentage of cells seem to be ABCG2-positive by immunocytochemical analysis compared with flow cytometry, not all ABCG2-positive cells are drawn into the SP gate, which was defined by the inhibition of functional ABC transporters. Indeed, reserpine-sensitive SP-like cells were found outside the SP gate, which may have been dividing cells exhibiting higher fluorescent intensity. The results of ABCG2 expression in COPs and the high fraction of SP cells suggest that the Hoechst dye exclusion assay may be used to further characterize COPs. A recent study by Du et al. also demonstrated the presence of SP cells in the human peripheral corneal stroma, which were shown to express neural and cartilage markers in addition to keratocyte markers . We have confirmed that COP SP cells re-formed spheres after cell sorting (data not shown).
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# q) f. X+ _% i+ L& UOther stem cell-related markers, including nestin, Notch1, and Msi1, were also expressed in COP spheres. Although the upregulation of Nestin is often used as evidence of a NSC phenotype, expression of this intermediate filament protein in non-neuronal cells has also been reported , making Msi1 a candidate marker of adult stem cells in a variety of tissue sources.
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There are only a limited number of reports describing putative progenitor cells for corneal keratocytes .& i$ H, D7 [% G- k9 w
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Further investigations are required to determine whether COPs are unique cells that reside in the corneal stroma or whether they represent a lineage of NSCs common with SKPs that migrate to the cornea. Although there is still controversy as to the identity of SKPs , the similarity of COPs with SKPs also has several clinical implications for the possible use of dermal cells for reconstructing the corneal stroma. If abundant dermal SKPs can be induced to differentiate into keratocytes, the development of corneal equivalents using autologous tissue may become a reality. Further studies to isolate COPs from humans for regenerative purposes are under way.& {. R$ X5 K. u) \1 K0 f" y' S
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The authors indicate no potential conflicts of interest.. e5 g- C+ _) J8 M
; k% S& l+ ?9 ?+ a/ lACKNOWLEDGMENTS+ t! {' _! B0 e. }
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We thank Kimie Kato for technical assistance, Hiroko Kouike for expert assistance with flow cytometric analysis, Fumito Morito for cell cultures, and Prof. Masaru Okabe (Genome Information Research Center) for providing the GFP-transgenic mice (C57BL/6 TgN OsbC14-Y01-FM131). This study was partly supported by a grant from the Advanced and Innovational Research Program in Life Sciences from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan (to T.K. and H.O.), a grant from Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology (CREST) of Japan Science and Technology Corporation (to H.O.), and a grant-in-aid to Keio University from the 21st Century Center of Excellence (COE) program.
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6 |* m% \6 \% sLavker RM, Tseng SC, Sun TT. Corneal epithelial stem cells at the limbus: Looking at some old problems from a new angle. Exp Eye Res 2004;78:433¨C446.# ~9 l- f w! h
+ @0 s! W9 m; e6 h4 f" Q' Z5 ~Uchida S, Yokoo S, Yanagi Y et al. Sphere formation and expression of neural proteins by human corneal stromal cells in vitro. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 2005;46:1620¨C1625.5 P& n. h$ J1 M2 p* ?, Y
3 O3 T4 ]1 M2 V) P/ P' IFunderburgh ML, Du Y, Mann MM et al. PAX6 expression identifies progenitor cells for corneal keratocytes. FASEB J 2005;19:1371¨C1373.
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- w- T# G- o4 DWilson SE, Pedroza L, Beuerman R et al. Herpes simplex virus type-1 infection of corneal epithelial cells induces apoptosis of the underlying keratocytes. Exp Eye Res 1997;64:775¨C779.
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Helena MC, Baerveldt F, Kim WJ et al. Keratocyte apoptosis after corneal surgery. Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci 1998;39:276¨C283.
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