Abstract. Patients with ESRD have a high circulating calcium (Ca) ϫ phosphate (P) product and develop extensive vascular calcification that may contribute to their high cardiovascular morbidity. However, the cellular mechanisms underlying vascular calcification in this context are poorly understood. In an in vitro model, elevated Ca or P induced human vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) calcification independently and synergistically, a process that was potently inhibited by serum. Calcification was initiated by release from living VSMC of membrane-bound matrix vesicles (MV) and also by apoptotic bodies from dying cells. Vesicles released by VSMC after prolonged exposure to Ca and P contained preformed basic calcium phosphate and calcified extensively. However, vesicles released in the presence of serum did not contain basic calcium phosphate, co-purified with the mineralization inhibitor fetuin-A and calcified minimally. Importantly, MV released under normal physiologic conditions did not calcify, and VSMC were also able to inhibit the spontaneous precipitation of Ca and P in solution. The potent mineralization inhibitor matrix Gla protein was found to be present in MV, and pretreatment of VSMC with warfarin markedly enhanced vesicle calcification. These data suggest that in the context of raised Ca and P, vascular calcification is a modifiable, cell-mediated process regulated by vesicle release. These vesicles contain mineralization inhibitors derived from VSMC and serum, and perturbation of the production or function of these inhibitors would lead to accelerated vascular calcification.Patients with ESRD develop extensive medial calcification, or Monckeberg's sclerosis, that causes increased arterial stiffness and contributes to the high cardiovascular mortality (1,2). Calciphylaxis is an increasingly common and life-threatening form of calcification characterized by destructive calcification in the media of subcutaneous arterioles, leading to occlusion and subsequent widespread tissue necrosis (2,3). The precise pathophysiology of vascular calcification in ESRD is unknown, but risk factors include age, hypertension, time on dialysis, and, most significant, abnormalities in calcium (Ca) and phosphate (P) metabolism (4,5). Normal serum concentrations of Ca and inorganic P ions are metastable with respect to basic calcium phosphate (BCP; a mixture of octacalcium phosphate, dicalcium phosphate dihydrate, and apatite) precipitation but can support growth of nascent crystals. In ESRD, systemic Ca and inorganic P concentrations typically exceed 2.4 and 2.0 mM, respectively (4). Consequently, calcification in ESRD has traditionally been ascribed to supersaturation and subsequent precipitation of mineral ions. This has led to therapeutic measures to reduce the Ca/P product aimed mostly at reduction of P.Recent studies have shown that vascular calcification is a regulated process similar to bone formation (6,7). VSMC in the normal artery wall constitutively express potent inhibitors of calcification, such as matrix Gla ...
Skin-derived precursor cells (SKPs) are multipotent neural crest-related stem cells that grow as self-renewing spheres and are capable of generating neurons and myelinating glial cells. SKPs are of clinical interest because they are accessible and potentially autologous. However, although spheres can be readily isolated from embryonic and neonatal skin, SKP frequency falls away sharply in adulthood, and primary sphere generation from adult human skin is more problematic. In addition, the culture-initiating cell population is undefined and heterogeneous, limiting experimental studies addressing important aspects of these cells such as the behavior of endogenous precursors in vivo and the molecular mechanisms of neural generation. Using a combined fatemapping and microdissection approach, we identified and characterized a highly enriched niche of neural crest-derived sphere-forming cells within the dermal papilla of the hair follicle of adult skin. We demonstrated that the dermal papilla of the rodent vibrissal follicle is 1,000-fold enriched for sphere-forming neural crest-derived cells compared with whole facial skin. These "papillaspheres" share a phenotypic and developmental profile similar to that of SKPs, can be readily expanded in vitro, and are able to generate both neuronal and glial cells in response to appropriate cues. We demonstrate that papillaspheres can be efficiently generated and expanded from adult human facial skin by microdissection of a single hair follicle. This strategy of targeting a highly enriched niche of sphere-forming cells provides a novel and efficient method for generating neuronal and glial cells from an accessible adult somatic source that is both defined and minimally invasive.
Microglia, the tissue resident macrophages of the CNS, play critical roles in immune defence, development and homeostasis. However, isolating microglia from humans in large numbers is challenging. Here, we profiled gene expression variation in primary human microglia isolated from 141 patients undergoing neurosurgery. Using single cell and bulk RNA sequencing, we identify how age, sex and clinical pathology influence microglia gene expression and which genetic variants have microglia-specific functions using expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) mapping. We follow up one of our findings using an hIPSC-based macrophage model to fine-map a candidate causal variant for Alzheimer’s disease at the BIN1 locus. Our study provides the first population-scale transcriptional map of a critically important cell for human CNS development and disease.
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