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First published online May 25, 2006
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2006-0018v1
24/9/2110    most recent
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Submitted on January 9, 2006
Accepted on May 16, 2006

Tissue-Specific Stem Cells

Increased "vigilance" of antioxidant mechanisms in neural stem cells potentiates their capability to resist oxidative stress

Lalitha Madhavan 1, Václav Ourednik 1, Jitka Ourednik 1*

1 Department of Biomedical Sciences, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: joured{at}iastate.edu.


   Abstract

Although the potential value of transplanted and endogenous neural stem cells (NSCs) for the treatment of the impaired central nervous system (CNS) has widely been accepted, almost nothing is known about their sensitivity to the hostile microenvironment in comparison to surrounding, more mature cell populations. Since many neuropathological insults are accompanied by oxidative stress, this report compared the alertness of antioxidant defense mechanisms and cell survival in NSCs and postmitotic neural cells (PNCs). Both, primary and immortalized cells were analyzed. At steady-state, NSCs distinguished themselves in their basal mitochondrial metabolism from PNCs by their lower reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels and higher expression of the key antioxidant enzymes UCP2 and GPx. Following exposure to the mitochondrial toxin 3-nitropropionic acid (3-NP), PNC cultures were marked by rapidly decreasing mitochondrial activity and increasing ROS content, both entailing complete cell loss. NSCs, in contrast, reacted by fast up-regulation of UCP2, GPx, and SOD2 and successfully recovered from an initial deterioration. This recovery could be abolished by specific antioxidant inhibition. Similar differences between NSCs and PNCs regarding redox control efficiency were detected in both primary and immortalized cells. Our first in vivo data from the subventricular stem cell niche of the adult mouse forebrain corroborated the above observations and revealed strong baseline expression of UCP2 and GPx in the resident, proliferating NSCs. Thus, an increased "vigilance" of antioxidant mechanisms might represent an innate characteristic of NSCs, which not only defines their cell fate, but also helps them to encounter oxidative stress in diseased CNS.

Key Words. Antioxidants, CNS, 3-NP, Mitochondrial activity, ROS, Redox, Neuroprotection, NSCs, cell interaction, in vitro, in vivo, SOD2, UCP2, GPx, CAT




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