Primitive neural stem cells from the mammalian epiblast differentiate to definitive neural stem cells under the control of Notch signaling

Seiji Hitoshi(University of Toronto), Raewyn M. Seaberg(University of Toronto), Cheryl Koscik(University of Toronto), Tania O. Alexson(University of Toronto), Susumu Kusunoki(University of Toronto), Ichiro KANAZAWA(University of Toronto), Shoji Tsuji(University of Toronto), Derek van der Kooy(University of Toronto)
Genes & Development
August 1, 2004
Cited by 188Open Access
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Abstract

Basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF2)-responsive definitive neural stem cells first appear in embryonic day 8.5 (E8.5) mouse embryos, but not in earlier embryos, although neural tissue exists at E7.5. Here, we demonstrate that leukemia inhibitory factor-dependent (but not FGF2-dependent) sphere-forming cells are present in the earlier (E5.5-E7.5) mouse embryo. The resultant clonal sphere cells possess self-renewal capacity and neural multipotentiality, cardinal features of the neural stem cell. However, they also retain some nonneural properties, suggesting that they are the in vivo cells' equivalent of the primitive neural stem cells that form in vitro from embryonic stem cells. The generation of the in vivo primitive neural stem cell was independent of Notch signaling, but the activation of the Notch pathway was important for the transition from the primitive to full definitive neural stem cell properties and for the maintenance of the definitive neural stem cell state.


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