Stat1 is an inducible transcriptional repressor of neural stem cells self-renewal program during neuroinflammation
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Frontiers Media SA
Abstract
A central issue in regenerative medicine is understanding the mechanisms that regulate the self-renewal of endogenous stem cells in response to injury and disease. Interferons increase hematopoietic stem cells during infection by activating STAT1, but the mechanisms by which STAT1 regulates intrinsic programs in neural stem cells (NSCs) during neuroinflammation is less known. Here we explored the role of STAT1 on NSC self-renewal. We show that overexpressing Stat1 in NSCs derived from the subventricular zone (SVZ) decreases NSC self-renewal capacity while Stat1 deletion increases NSC self-renewal, neurogenesis, and oligodendrogenesis in isolated NSCs. Importantly, we find upregulation of STAT1 in NSCs in a mouse model of multiple sclerosis (MS) and an increase in pathological T cells expressing IFN-γ rather than interleukin 17 (IL-17) in the cerebrospinal fluid of affected mice. We find IFN-γ is superior to IL-17 in reducing proliferation and precipitating an abnormal NSC phenotype featuring increased STAT1 phosphorylation and Stat1 and p16ink4a gene expression. Notably, Stat1–/– NSCs were resistant to the effect of IFN-γ. Lastly, we identified a Stat1-dependent gene expression profile associated with an increase in the Sox9 transcription factor, a regulator of self-renewal. Stat1 binds and transcriptionally represses Sox9 in a transcriptional luciferase assay. We conclude that Stat1 serves as an inducible checkpoint for NSC self-renewal that is upregulated during chronic brain inflammation leading to decreased self-renewal. As such, Stat1 may be a potential target to modulate for next generation therapies to prevent progression and loss of repair function in NSCs/neural progenitors in MS. Copyright © 2023 Imitola, Hollingsworth, Watanabe, Olah, Elyaman, Starossom, Kivisäkk and Khoury.
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Experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, Interferons, Multiple sclerosis, Neural stem cells, Sox9, Stat1, Subventricular zone, Broxuridine, Gamma interferon, Interleukin 10, Interleukin 17, Interleukin 4, Ketamine, Pertussis toxin, Platelet derived growth factor beta receptor, Stat1 protein, Tapasin, Transcription factor sox9, Xylazine, Animal experiment, Animal model, Animal tissue, Article, Autofluorescence, Cell proliferation, Cerebrospinal fluid, Chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing, Confocal microscopy, Controlled study, Corpus callosum, Cryoprotection, Female, Flow cytometry, Gene expression, Gene expression profiling, Hematopoietic stem cell, High performance liquid chromatography, Immunohistochemistry, Incubation time, Moloney murine leukemia virus, Mouse, Nervous system development, Nervous system inflammation, Neural stem cell, Nonhuman, Oligodendroglia, Protein phosphorylation, Protein protein interaction, Real time polymerase chain reaction, Regenerative medicine, Rna isolation, Single cell rna seq, Spectrophotometry, Stem cell self-renewal, Vesiculovirus, Western blotting