Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2094539 Stem Cell Research 2014 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•ATF3 is expressed in rat ependymal stem/progenitor cells from neonatal to adult age.•In quiescent ependymal cells ATF3 immunostaining overlaps with nestin and vimentin.•Migrating spinal stem cells show nuclear ATF3 immunostaining.•Migrating cells make chain formation termed funicular migratory stream.•MAPK-p38 and JNK/c-Jun inhibitors prevent nuclear translocation of ATF3.

The present study identified ATF3 as a novel dynamic marker for ependymal stem/progenitor cells (nestin, vimentin and SOX2 positive) around the central canal of the neonatal or adult rat spinal cord. While quiescent ependymal cells showed cytoplasmic ATF3 expression, during 6–24 h in vitro these cells mobilized and acquired intense nuclear ATF3 staining. Their migratory pattern followed a centrifugal pathway toward the dorsal and ventral funiculi, reminiscent of the rostral migratory stream of the brain subventricular stem cells. Thus, the chain cell formation was, by analogy, termed funicular migratory stream (FMS). The FMS process preceded the strong proliferation of ependymal cells occurring only after 24 h in vitro. Pharmacological inhibition of MAPK-p38 and JNK/c-Jun (upstream effectors of ATF3 activation) prevented the FMS mobilization of ATF3 nuclear-positive cells. Excitotoxicity or ischemia-like conditions, reported to evoke neuronal and glial injury, did not further enhance migration of ependymal cells at 24 h, suggesting that, at this early stage of damage, the FMS phenomenon had peaked and that more extensive repair processes are delayed beyond this time point. ATF3 is, therefore, useful to identify activation and migration of endogenous stem cells of the rat spinal cord in vitro.

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