scholarly journals Toxicity mechanism of sevoflurane in neural stem cells of rats through DNA methylation

Author(s):  
Ka Wang ◽  
Yi Tian ◽  
Yingai Zhang ◽  
Xuying Li ◽  
Xiao Wei ◽  
...  
mSystems ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sylvie Janssens ◽  
Michael Schotsaert ◽  
Rahul Karnik ◽  
Vinod Balasubramaniam ◽  
Marion Dejosez ◽  
...  

Scientific research on human neural stem cells and cerebral organoids has confirmed the congenital neurotropic and neurodestructive nature of the Zika virus. However, the extent to which prenatal ZIKV infection is associated with more subtle brain alterations, such as epigenetic changes, remains ill defined. Here, we address the question of whether ZIKV infection induces DNA methylation changes with the potential to cause brain disorders later in life.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Paula Pierozan ◽  
Daiane Cattani ◽  
Oskar Karlsson

Abstract Developmental exposure to the environmental neurotoxin β-N-methylamino-l-alanine (BMAA), a proposed risk factor for neurodegenerative disease, can induce long-term cognitive impairments and neurodegeneration in rats. While rodent studies have demonstrated a low transfer of BMAA to the adult brain, this toxin is capable to cross the placental barrier and accumulate in the fetal brain. Here, we investigated the differential susceptibility of primary neuronal cells and neural stem cells from fetal rat hippocampus to BMAA toxicity. Exposure to 250 µM BMAA induced cell death in neural stem cells through caspase-independent apoptosis, while the proliferation of primary neurons was reduced only at 3 mM BMAA. At the lowest concentrations tested (50 and 100 µM), BMAA disrupted neural stem cell differentiation and impaired neurite development in neural stem cell-derived neurons (e.g., reduced neurite length, the number of processes and branches per cell). BMAA induced no alterations of the neurite outgrowth in primary neurons. This demonstrates that neural stem cells are more susceptible to BMAA exposure than primary neurons. Importantly, the changes induced by BMAA in neural stem cells were mitotically inherited to daughter cells. The persistent nature of the BMAA-induced effects may be related to epigenetic alterations that interfere with the neural stem cell programming, as BMAA exposure reduced the global DNA methylation in the cells. These findings provide mechanistic understanding of how early-life exposure to BMAA may lead to adverse long-term consequences, and potentially predispose for neurodevelopmental disorders or neurodegenerative disease later in life.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii412-iii412
Author(s):  
Satoshi Nakata ◽  
Ming Yuan ◽  
Eric Raabe ◽  
Charles Eberhart

Abstract Central nervous system high-grade neuroepithelial tumor with BCL6-corepressor alteration (CNS HGNET-BCOR) is a recently identified entity characterized by internal tandem duplication (ITD) of BCOR, a core component of polycomb repressive complex (PRC) 1.1. BCOR-ITD exclusively occurs within an essential binding domain, suggesting aberrant epigenetic activities as a possible mechanism of gliomagenesis; however, the effect of this alteration on the transcriptome and DNA methylation are poorly understood. We have generated new CNS HGNET-BCOR models by lentiviral transduction of the BCOR-ITD into human and murine neural stem cells. In the human model, qRT-PCR and subsequent RNA-seq identified a transient derepression of PRC2-target genes comparing to an isogenic model with overexpression of wildtype-BCOR. A similar effect was found in clinical specimens from previous studies. In the murine-cell model, we confirmed increased clonogenicity in soft-agar assays, and tumors developed in mice flanks. Global DNA methylation levels evaluated by ELISA were significantly lower than those of parent cells, and 177 genes were differentially expressed on RNA-seq analysis comparing to BCOR-overexpressing control cells, including upregulation of known oncogenes. These results suggest that BCOR-ITD and associated alterations in the function of PRC1.1 affect methylation patterns in neural stem cells, driving transcriptional changes and oncogenic transformation into CNS HGNET-BCOR. More detailed analyses, including methylation arrays comparisons with clinical samples and in-silico drug sensitivity testing, are being performed.


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