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Linked Open Data - Creating Knowledge Out of Interlinked Data: Results of the LOD2 Project

Parte de: Lecture Notes in Computer Science

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Database Management; Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics); Information Systems and Communication Service

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No requiere 2016 Directory of Open access Books acceso abierto
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Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-319-41602-1

ISBN electrónico

978-3-319-41603-8

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Tabla de contenidos

A Brief Overview of Techniques for Modulating Neuroendocrine and Other Neural Systems

Maryem Manzoor; Donald Pfaff

The history of experimental approaches to the nervous system forms the backdrop for new opportunities of using stem cell technologies in neuroendocrine systems. The emphasis of this chapter is on attempts at therapeutic maneuvers.

Pp. 1-10

Basics of Stem Cell Biology as Applied to the Brain

Inna Tabansky; Joel N. H. Stern

Stem cell technology can allow us to produce human neuronal cell types outside the body, but what exactly are stem cells, and what challenges are associated with their use? Stem cells are a kind of cell that has the capacity to self-renew to produce additional stem cells by mitosis, and also to differentiate into other—more mature—cell types. Stem cells are usually categorized as multipotent (able to give rise to multiple cells within a lineage), pluripotent (able to give rise to all cell types in an adult) and totipotent (able to give rise to all embryonic and adult lineages). Multipotent adult stem cells are found throughout the body, and they include neural stem cells. The challenge in utilizing adult stem cells for disease research is obtaining cells that are genetically matched to people with disease phenotypes, and being able to differentiate them into the appropriate cell types of interest. As adult neural stem cells reside in the brain, their isolation would require considerably invasive and dangerous procedures. In contrast, pluripotent stem cells are easy to obtain, due to the paradigm-shifting work on direct reprogramming of human skin fibroblasts into induced pluripotent stem cells. This work has enabled us to produce neurons that are genetically matched to individual patients. While we are able to isolate pluripotent stem cells from patients in a minimally invasive manner, we do not yet fully understand how to direct these cells to many of the medically important neuroendocrine fates. Progress in this direction continues to be made, on multiple fronts, and it involves using small molecules and proteins to mimic developmentally important signals, as well as building on advances in “reprogramming” to directly convert one cell type into another by forced expression of sets of transcription factors. An additional challenge involves providing these cells with the appropriate environment to induce their normal behavior outside the body. Despite these challenges, the promise of producing human neuroendocrine cell types in vitro gives opportunities for unique insights and is therefore worthwhile.

Pp. 11-24

Human Pluripotent-Derived Lineages for Repairing Hypopituitarism

Lorenz Studer; Viviane Tabar

Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) present a potentially unlimited source of specialized cell types for regenerative medicine. Over the last few years there has been rapid progress in realizing this potential by developing protocols to generate disease-relevant cell types in vitro on demand. The approach was particularly successful for the nervous system, where the field is at the verge of human translation for several indications, including the treatment of eye disorders, Parkinson’s disease and spinal cord injury. More recently, there has also been success in deriving anterior pituitary lineages from both mouse and human pluripotent stem cells. In vitro-derived pituitary hormone-producing cell types present an attractive source for repair in patients with hypopituitarism. However, several hurdles remain towards realizing this goal. In particular, there is a need to further improve the efficiency and precision with which specific hormone-producing lineages can be derived. Furthermore, it will be important to assess the potential of both ectopic and orthotopic transplantation strategies to achieve meaningful hormone replacement. The ultimate challenge will be repair that moves beyond hormone replacement towards the full functional integration of the grafted cells into the complex regulatory endocrine network controlled by the human pituitary gland.

Pp. 25-34

Recapitulating Hypothalamus and Pituitary Development Using Embryonic Stem/Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

Hidetaka Suga

The hypothalamic-pituitary system is essential for maintaining life and controlling systemic homeostasis. However, it can be negatively affected by various diseases, resulting in life-long serious symptoms.

Pluripotent stem cells, such as embryonic stem (ES) cells and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, differentiate into neuroectodermal progenitors when cultured as floating aggregates under serum-free conditions.

Recent results have shown that strict removal of exogenous patterning factors during the early differentiation period induces efficient generation of rostral hypothalamic-like progenitors from mouse ES cell-derived neuroectodermal cells. The use of growth factor-free, chemically defined medium was critical for this induction. The ES cell-derived hypothalamic-like progenitors generated rostral-dorsal hypothalamic neurons, in particular magnocellular vasopressinergic neurons, which release hormones upon stimulation.

We subsequently reported efficient self-formation of three-dimensional adenohypophysis tissues in aggregate cultures of mouse ES cells. The ES cells were stimulated to differentiate into non-neural head ectoderm and hypothalamic neuroectoderm in adjacent layers within the aggregate, followed by treatment with a Sonic Hedgehog agonist. Self-organization of Rathke’s pouch-like structures occurred at the interface of the two epithelia in vivo, and various endocrine cells, including corticotrophs and somatotrophs, were subsequently produced. The corticotrophs efficiently secreted adrenocorticotropic hormone in response to corticotropin-releasing hormone. Furthermore, when engrafted in vivo, these cells rescued systemic glucocorticoid levels in hypopituitary mice.

The present study aimed to prepare hypothalamic and pituitary tissues from human pluripotent stem cells and establish effective transplantation techniques for future clinical applications. Preliminary results indicated differentiation using human ES/iPS cells, and the culture method replicated stepwise embryonic differentiation. Therefore, these methods could potentially be used as developmental and disease models as well as for future regenerative medicine.

Pp. 35-50

Regulation of Body Weight and Metabolism by Tanycyte-Derived Neurogenesis in Young Adult Mice

Seth Blackshaw; Daniel A. Lee; Thomas Pak; Sooyeon Yoo

The hypothalamus controls many homeostatic and instinctive physiological processes, including the sleep-wake cycle, food intake, and sexually dimorphic behaviors. These behaviors are regulated by environmental and physiological cues, although the molecular and cellular mechanisms that underlie these effects are still poorly understood. Recently, it has become clear that both the juvenile and adult hypothalamus exhibit neurogenesis, which modifies homeostatic neural circuitry. In this manuscript, we report data addressing the role of sex-specific and dietary factors in controlling neurogenesis in the mediobasal hypothalamus. We report that a high fat diet (HFD) activates neurogenesis in the median eminence (ME) of young adult female, but not male mice, and that focal irradiation of the ME in HFD-fed mice reduces weight gain in females, but not males. These results suggest that some physiological effects of HFD are mediated by sexually dimorphic neurogenesis in the ME. We present these findings in the context of other studies on the cellular and molecular mechanisms that regulate neurogenesis in postnatal and adult hypothalamus.

Pp. 51-67

Genetic Dissection of the Neuroendocrine and Behavioral Responses to Stressful Challenges

Alon Chen

Dysregulation of the stress response is implicated in many psychopathologies. Data gathered over the past two decades have proposed a rather dualistic view of the central corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF)-urocortin system. Originally, it was thought that CRF/CRF receptor type 1 (CRFR1) signaling mediated stress-initiated effects and increased anxiety-like behavior, whereas activation of urocortins/CRFR2 ensured adequate recovery from stress and restoration of homeostasis. However, this view was based on data gained from genetically modified mouse models and pharmacological approaches; now, with the emergence of new and more specific biological tools, it has become clear that this is an over-simplistic proposal. It is becoming apparent that the function of the CRF-urocortin system’s components relies profoundly on the spatial and temporal patterns of activity of the CRF family members. Here, we provide an overview of recent work that proposes a more dynamic, modulatory role for the CRF system’s central pathways in the modulation of stress-linked behaviors. Recent findings suggest that the CRF system’s actions are brain-region specific and dependent on the type of neuronal cell involved.

Pp. 69-79

Pituitary Stem Cells: Quest for Hidden Functions

Hugo Vankelecom

The pituitary is the core endocrine gland, ruling fundamental processes of body growth, metabolism, reproduction and stress. Over the past decade, it has progressively become clear that the pituitary, like many adult tissues, harbors a population of stem cells. While the molecular depiction of these cells is constantly expanding, their function remains essentially hidden. From recent studies, the picture is developing that the stem cells of the adult pituitary are highly quiescent and mainly come into play during pathological conditions.

Upon transgenic cell-ablation damage in the pituitary, the stem cell compartment is promptly turned on with expansion and expression of the missing hormone. This activation is accompanied by substantial regeneration of the lost hormonal cells, a restorative competence that was unexpected in the mature gland. This regenerative skill, however, rapidly disappears with aging, together with a decline in the number and fitness of the stem cells. One function of the adult pituitary stem cells may thus be hidden in the regenerative toolbox of the gland, at least during a specified and limited time window.

Recent work also showed activation of the pituitary stem cell compartment during tumor formation in the (mouse) gland. Moreover, pituitary tumors (from patients and mice) contain a candidate ‘tumor stem cell’ (TSC) population. The pathogenetic steps of initiation, expansion, invasion and recurrence of pituitary tumors remain far from understood. A link between the tumor-driving TSC and the pituitary stem cells may shed new light on this tumorigenic darkness.

To conclude, decoding the hidden functions of pituitary stem cells will not only lead to better fundamental insights into their role but may also expose (novel) targets for treating pituitary tumors and for regenerative intervention in pituitary deficiency, as caused by damage, tumors or aging. Yet, the journey in the ‘hidden valley’ of pituitary stem cell functions has only just begun, and a long distance still has to be walked.

Pp. 81-101

Pituitary Stem Cells During Normal Physiology and Disease

Cynthia L. Andoniadou

The homeostatic maintenance and functional modification of tissues require a combination of regulated proliferation and differentiation by somatic stem cells and more committed progenitors. Of relevance to regenerative medicine approaches, the endogenous stimulation of cell types for replenishment of damaged tissues requires an understanding of the signals that promote proliferation and direct appropriate differentiation to specialised cell types. We recently showed that pituitary stem cells expressing the transcription factor SOX2 are able to contribute to the generation of new hormone-producing cells during postnatal life. The signals controlling proliferation in the anterior pituitary are poorly understood and little is known about the influences supporting the choices between proliferation and quiescence among stem cells. The WNT signalling pathway is a major regulator of proliferation and influences stem cells in multiple tissues throughout the body as well as cancer stem cells in tumorigenesis. Forced up-regulation of the WNT pathway specifically in SOX2-positive pituitary stem cells by transgenic approaches in mouse stimulates a transient burst of proliferation, maintaining their uncommitted phenotype. These mutated stem cells subsequently induce tumorigenesis in a non-cell autonomous manner, as they promote proliferation of surrounding cell types through the secretion of paracrine factors. The studies presented here aim to provide insights into pituitary stem cell behaviour and their possible roles during disease states.

Pp. 103-111

Epigenetic Mechanisms of Pituitary Cell Fate Specification

Jacques Drouin

Pituitary progenitor or stem cells present in the pituitary primordium during development are the source of hormone-producing cells of the adult pituitary. These stem cells are maintained in the adult tissue and they can be recruited to maintain or replenish differentiated pituitary cells. We currently have only limited insight into the mechanisms that trigger progenitor engagement into one or the other pituitary differentiation pathway. While transcription factors that drive terminal differentiation have been identified for different lineages, current evidence suggests that initial engagement of progenitors into differentiation may be due to earlier-acting factors. One such factor expressed at the transition between progenitor and differentiated state was identified in the intermediate lobe; this factor, Pax7, exerts its action through a pioneer factor activity. Pioneer transcription factors have the unique ability to bind target sequences in compacted chromatin and to initiate chromatin “opening” for recruitment of other transcription factors. Pax7 accomplishes this process on about 2500 enhancers genome-wide, allowing for Tpit recruitment at a subset for implementation of the melanotrope-specific program of gene expression. Current knowledge about this process is reviewed here, together with a discussion of future challenges in order to understand the unique properties of pioneer transcription factor action and cell reprogramming through chromatin remodelling.

Pp. 113-121

Advances in Stem Cells Biology: New Approaches to Understand Depression

A. Borsini; P. A. Zunszain

Depression is a highly prevalent complex neuropsychiatric disorder, which ranks first among all mental and neurological disorders as a contributor to the global burden of disease. However, available treatments are still far from ideal, for their specificity as well as their efficacy. This situation can now be improved by the increasing availability of stem cells, which allows the development of in vitro human neural systems to model the brain. These models complement observations from animal models and patients with depression, allowing for a better understanding of the complexity of this psychiatric illness and potential treatments. Cells derived from the olfactory neuroepithelium, multipotent fetal hippocampal progenitor cells (HPCs) and human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have shown promising leads. Using HPCs and iPSC-derived forebrain neurons, we managed to provide further insights into the action of drugs with antidepressant action as well as on molecular mechanisms underlying the effect of stress and inflammation, both linked to the pathophysiology of depression. Particular attention has been paid to the complex pathways by which the immune and stress systems differently determine the final developmental fate of HPCs and the synaptic plasticity of iPSCs. The combination of accessibility and validity of the available stem cells models will allow further work to increase our insights into the biology of depression and support the identification of novel therapeutic targets.

Pp. 123-133