Search results for "Stem Cell"

showing 10 items of 2354 documents

In vivo Imaging of Fully Active Brain Tissue in Awake Zebrafish Larvae and Juveniles by Skull and Skin Removal.

2021

Understanding the ephemeral changes that occur during brain development and maturation requires detailed high-resolution imaging in space and time at cellular and subcellular resolution. Advances in molecular and imaging technologies have allowed us to gain numerous detailed insights into cellular and molecular mechanisms of brain development in the transparent zebrafish embryo. Recently, processes of refinement of neuronal connectivity that occur at later larval stages several weeks after fertilization, which are for example control of social behavior, decision making or motivation-driven behavior, have moved into focus of research. At these stages, pigmentation of the zebrafish skin inter…

CerebellumGeneral Chemical EngineeringOptogeneticsBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyImaging Three-DimensionalNeuroimagingmedicineAnimalsAnesthesiaWakefulnessZebrafishZebrafishSkinNeuronsGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyGeneral NeuroscienceSkullBrainbiology.organism_classificationEmbryonic stem cellElectrophysiologymedicine.anatomical_structureDendritic transportLarvaNeurosciencePreclinical imagingJournal of visualized experiments : JoVE
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Primary cilia are required for cerebellar development and Shh-dependent expansion of progenitor pool

2008

Cerebellar granule cell precursors (GCPs), which give rise to the most abundant neuronal type in the mammalian brain, arise from a restricted pool of primary progenitors in the rhombic lip (RL). Sonic hedgehog (Shh) secreted by developing Purkinje cells is essential for the expansion of GCPs and for cerebellar morphogenesis. Recent studies have shown that the primary cilium concentrates components of Shh signaling and that this structure is required for Shh signaling. GCPs have a primary cilium on their surface [Del Cerro, M.P., Snider, R.S. (1972). Studies on the developing cerebellum. II. The ultrastructure of the external granular layer. J Comp Neurol 144, 131-64.]. Here, we show that 1)…

CerebellumKinesinsReceptors G-Protein-CoupledMicePurkinje Cells0302 clinical medicinePrimary ciliaCerebellumSonic hedgehogPromoter Regions GeneticRhombic lipGenetics0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyCiliumStem CellsSonic hedgehogjoubert syndromeCerebellar developmentSmoothened ReceptorCell biologyneurogenesismedicine.anatomical_structurecerebellar developmentembryonic structuresanimal structuresNeurogenesisPopulationMice TransgenicBiologyKif3aArticle03 medical and health sciencessonic hedgehogprimary ciliaJoubert syndromeGlial Fibrillary Acidic ProteinmedicineAnimalsHumansKIF3AHedgehog ProteinsCiliaeducationMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyCell BiologyGranule cellMice Inbred C57BLbiology.proteinSmoothened030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDevelopmental Biology
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In‐TOX‐icating neurogenesis

2015

Major efforts are invested to characterize the factors controlling the proliferation of neural stem cells. During mammalian corticogenesis, our group has identified a small pool of genes that are transiently downregulated in the switch of neural stem cells to neurogenic division and reinduced in newborn neurons. Among these switch genes, we found Tox, a transcription factor with hitherto uncharacterized roles in the nervous system. Here, we investigated the role of Tox in corticogenesis by characterizing its expression at the tissue, cellular and temporal level. We found that Tox is regulated by calcineurin/Nfat signalling. Moreover, we combined DNA adenine methyltransferase identification …

Cerebral CortexHomeodomain ProteinsNFATC Transcription FactorsGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyCalcineurinGeneral NeuroscienceLymphocyteNeurogenesisGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalArticlesBiologyNFATC Transcription FactorsGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyNeural stem cellCell biologyfluids and secretionsmedicine.anatomical_structureCerebral cortexmedicinebacteriaAnimalsSignal transductionMolecular BiologyTranscription factorSignal TransductionThe EMBO Journal
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The subplate and early cortical circuits.

2010

The developing mammalian cerebral cortex contains a distinct class of cells, subplate neurons (SPns), that play an important role during early development. SPns are the first neurons to be generated in the cerebral cortex, they reside in the cortical white matter, and they are the first to mature physiologically. SPns receive thalamic and neuromodulatory inputs and project into the developing cortical plate, mostly to layer 4. Thus SPns form one of the first functional cortical circuits and are required to relay early oscillatory activity into the developing cortical plate. Pathophysiological impairment or removal of SPns profoundly affects functional cortical development. SPn removal in v…

Cerebral CortexNeuronsNeuronal PlasticityGeneral NeuroscienceStem CellsCentral nervous systemOcular dominancemedicine.anatomical_structureVisual cortexCerebral cortexSubplateNeural PathwaysmedicineBiological neural networkAnimalsHumansPsychologyNeuroscienceCortical columnOcular dominance columnAnnual review of neuroscience
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Evidences of cervical cancer stem cells derived from established cell lines.

2010

According to the longstanding “clonal evolution” model of carcinogenesis, cervical carcinoma has long been described as a consequence of unlimited and uncontrolled cellular proliferation conferred by multiple genetic and/or epigenetic mutations that can hit any somatic cells within the tissue. However, in the last few years, accumulating evidence has suggested that the capacity of initiating a tumor, including cervical carcinoma, is rather a unique feature of a small subset of stemlike cells called “cancer stem cells” (CSCs) or “tumor-initiating cells.” CSCs have the exclusive ability to self-renew expanding the CSCs pool, and to maintain the tumor differentiating into the heterogeneous non…

Cervical cancercervical cancer stem CD44 EMTbiologyCell cultureCD44medicinebiology.proteinCancer researchCell BiologyStem cellmedicine.diseaseMolecular BiologyDevelopmental Biology
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3D spectral imaging with synchrotron Fourier transform infrared spectro-microtomography

2013

We report Fourier transform infrared spectro-microtomography, a nondestructive three-dimensional imaging approach that reveals the distribution of distinctive chemical compositions throughout an intact biological or materials sample. The method combines mid-infrared absorption contrast with computed tomographic data acquisition and reconstruction to enhance chemical and morphological localization by determining a complete infrared spectrum for every voxel (millions of spectra determined per sample).

Chemical imagingmedicine.medical_specialtyMaterials scienceInfrared spectroscopyBiochemistryFourier transform spectroscopyPhysics::GeophysicsMicesymbols.namesakeImaging Three-DimensionalOpticsSpectroscopy Fourier Transform InfraredMicroscopyImage Processing Computer-AssistedmedicineAnimalsHumansFourier transform infrared spectroscopyMolecular BiologyEmbryonic Stem Cellsbusiness.industryX-Ray MicrotomographyCell BiologyWoodSpectral imagingPopulusFourier transformsymbolsbusinessChemical fingerprintingSynchrotronsHairBiotechnologyNature Methods
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Hyper-IL-6 (H-IL-6), a Fusion Protein of Soluble IL-6 Receptor (Sil-6R), and Interleukin-6 (IL-6), Acts Synergistic with Thrombopoietin (TPO) and Ste…

1999

It has been shown that signalings from c-kit and gpl30, the signal-transducing receptor component of the IL6 receptor, act synergistic for the ex-vivo expansion of multipotential hematopoietic progenitors. A similar synergistic effect has been demonstrated for signalings from c-kit, c-mpl, and flt3. While c-kit is activated by stem cell factor (SCF), gpl30 can be activated by the complex of soluble IL-6 receptor (sIL-6R) and interleukin-6 (IL-6). Recently, a bioactive designer cytokine, H-IL-6, a fusion protein consisting of SIL-6R and IL-6 linked by a flexible peptide chain has been shown to expand human hematopoietic colony-forming cells. We tested the activity of H-IL-6 alone and in comb…

ChemistryCD34Stem cell factorCell biologyHaematopoiesismedicine.anatomical_structureMegakaryocyteembryonic structuresImmunologyInterleukin-6 receptormedicineProgenitor cellReceptorThrombopoietin
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Influence of partial O 2 pressure on the adhesion, proliferation, and osteogenic differentiation of human dental pulp stem cells on β-tricalcium phos…

2018

Our purpose was to analyse the influence of O2 pressure on the adhesion, proliferation, and osteogenic differentiation of human dental pulp stem cells (DPSC) on 3-tricalcium phosphate (3-TCP) scaffold. DPSC isolated from extracted third molars were seeded on 3-TCP and cultured under 3% or 21% O2 pressure. Cell adhesion, proliferation, and differentiation over the biomaterial were evaluated at 7, 13, 18, and 23 days of culture. Cell adhesion was determined by light microscopy, proliferation by DNA quantification, and osteogenic differentiation by alkaline phosphatase activity analysis. All DPSC adhered to 3-TCP with both O2 conditions. Cell proliferation values were higher at 3% O2 in each t…

ChemistryCell growthBiomaterialAdhesionmedicine.disease_causePhosphateBiochemistryMolecular biologychemistry.chemical_compoundstomatognathic systemPhysiology (medical)Dental pulp stem cellsmedicineAlkaline phosphataseCell adhesionOxidative stressFree Radical Biology and Medicine
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Silk fibroin scaffolds enhance cell commitment of adult rat cardiac progenitor cells

2013

The use of three-dimensional (3D) cultures may induce cardiac progenitor cells to synthesize their own extracellular matrix (ECM) and sarcomeric proteins to initiate cardiac differentiation. 3D cultures grown on synthetic scaffolds may favour the implantation and survival of stem cells for cell therapy when pharmacological therapies are not efficient in curing cardiovascular diseases and when organ transplantation remains the only treatment able to rescue the patient's life. Silk fibroin-based scaffolds may be used to increase cell affinity to biomaterials and may be chemically modified to improve cell adhesion. In the present study, porous, partially orientated and electrospun nanometric n…

ChemistryCellBiomedical EngineeringMedicine (miscellaneous)FibroinCell biologyBiomaterialsCell therapyExtracellular matrixmedicine.anatomical_structureTissue engineeringmedicineProgenitor cellStem cellCell adhesionBiomedical engineeringJournal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
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Heat shock proteins in embryonic and adult submandibular salivary glands in healthy and tumorigenic tissues

2020

ChemistryHeat shock proteinGeneticsMolecular BiologyBiochemistryEmbryonic stem cellBiotechnologyCell biologyThe FASEB Journal
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