Angiogenesis is the generation of mature vascular networks from pre-existing vessels. Angiogenesis is crucial during the organism' development, for wound healing and for the female reproductive cycle. Several murine experimental systems are well suited for studying developmental and pathological angiogenesis. They include the embryonic hindbrain, the post-natal retina and allantois explants. In these systems vascular networks are visualised by appropriate staining procedures followed by microscopical analysis. Nevertheless, quantitative assessment of angiogenesis is hampered by the lack of readily available, standardized metrics and software analysis tools. Non-automated protocols are being used widely and they are, in general, time - and labour intensive, prone to human error and do not permit computation of complex spatial metrics. We have developed a light-weight, user friendly software, AngioTool, which allows for quick, hands-off and reproducible quantification of vascular networks in microscopic images. AngioTool computes several morphological and spatial parameters including the area covered by a vascular network, the number of vessels, vessel length, vascular density and lacunarity. In addition, AngioTool calculates the so-called “branching index” (branch points / unit area), providing a measurement of the sprouting activity of a specimen of interest. We have validated AngioTool using images of embryonic murine hindbrains, post-natal retinas and allantois explants. AngioTool is open source and can be downloaded free of charge.
Organoid technology holds great promise for regenerative medicine but has not yet been applied to humans. We address this challenge using cholangiocyte organoids in the context of cholangiopathies, which represent a key reason for liver transplantation. Using single-cell RNA sequencing, we show that primary human cholangiocytes display transcriptional diversity that is lost in organoid culture. However, cholangiocyte organoids remain plastic and resume their in vivo signatures when transplanted back in the biliary tree. We then utilize a model of cell engraftment in human livers undergoing ex vivo normothermic perfusion to demonstrate that this property allows extrahepatic organoids to repair human intrahepatic ducts after transplantation. Our results provide proof of principle that cholangiocyte organoids can be used to repair human biliary epithelium.
Members of the vertebrate hedgehog family (Sonic, Indian, and Desert) have been shown to be essential for the development of various organ systems, including neural, somite, limb, skeletal, and for male gonad morphogenesis. Sonic hedgehog and its cognate receptor Patched are expressed in the epithelial and/or mesenchymal cell components of the hair follicle. Recent studies have demonstrated an essential role for this pathway in hair development in the skin of Sonic hedgehog null embryos. We have further explored the role of the hedgehog pathway using anti-hedgehog blocking monoclonal antibodies to treat pregnant mice at different stages of gestation and have generated viable offspring that lack body coat hair. Histologic analysis revealed the presence of ectodermal placode and primodium of dermal papilla in these mice, yet the subsequent hair shaft formation was inhibited. In contrast, the vibrissae (whisker) development appears to be unaffected upon anti-hedgehog blocking monoclonal antibody treatment. Strikingly, inhibition of body coat hair morphogenesis also was observed in mice treated postnatally with anti-hedgehog monoclonal antibody during the growing (anagen) phase of the hair cycle. The hairless phenotype was reversible upon suspension of monoclonal antibody treatment. Taken together, our results underscore a direct role of the Sonic hedgehog signaling pathway in embryonic hair follicle development as well as in subsequent hair cycles in young and adult mice. Our system of generating an inducible and reversible hairless phenotype by anti-hedgehog monoclonal antibody treatment will be valuable for studying the regulation and mechanism of hair regeneration.
The mammalian Cutl1 gene codes for the CCAAT displacement protein (CDP), which has been implicated as a transcriptional repressor in diverse processes such as terminal differentiation, cell cycle progression, and the control of nuclear matrix attachment regions. To investigate the in vivo function of Cutl1, we have replaced the C-terminal Cut repeat 3 and homeodomain exons with an in-frame lacZ gene by targeted mutagenesis in the mouse. The CDP-lacZ fusion protein is retained in the cytoplasm and fails to repress gene transcription, indicating that the Cutl1 lacZ allele corresponds to a null mutation. Cutl1 mutant mice on inbred genetic backgrounds are born at Mendelian frequency, but die shortly after birth because of retarded differentiation of the lung epithelia, which indicates an essential role of CDP in lung maturation. A less pronounced delay in lung development allows Cutl1 mutant mice on an outbred background to survive beyond birth. These mice are growth-retarded and develop an abnormal pelage because of disrupted hair follicle morphogenesis. The inner root sheath (IRS) is reduced, and the transcription of Sonic hedgehog and IRS-specific genes is deregulated in Cutl1 mutant hair follicles, consistent with the specific expression of Cutl1 in the progenitors and cell lineages of the IRS. These data implicate CDP in cell-lineage specification during hair follicle morphogenesis, which resembles the role of the related Cut protein in specifying cell fates during Drosophila development.[Key Words: CCAAT displacement protein; Cux; Cutl1; lung; hair follicle development] The CCAAT displacement protein (CDP) was discovered as a sea urchin transcription factor that restricts expression of the sperm H2B gene to spermatocytes by binding to the CCAAT promoter element in somatic tissues and thereby preventing access of transcriptional activators to the H2B promoter (Barberis et al. 1987). The human CDP (Superti-Furga et al. 1988) was next shown to act as a repressor of the myelomonocytic gp91 phox gene (Skalnik et al. 1991) and, upon biochemical purification, was identified as a homolog of the Drosophila homeodomain protein Cut (Neufeld et al. 1992). CDP, which is also known as Cux1 (Cut homeobox-1), and its related Cux2 protein were subsequently isolated from several different vertebrate species (for review, see Nepveu 2001). The Drosophila Cut protein and its vertebrate homologs share a conserved coiled-coil region at the N terminus, three internal 60-amino-acid repeats (known as Cut repeats), and a divergent homeodomain located near the C terminus ( Fig. 1B; Blochlinger et al. 1988;Neufeld et al. 1992). The mammalian CDP/Cux1 locus is large and complex, giving rise to at least six different splice products as a result of alternative transcription initiation, splicing, and polyadenylation Lievens et al. 1997;Zeng et al. 2000). One of these splice products corresponds to the nuclear protein CASP (CDP alternative splice product), which shares with CDP only the N-terminal coiled-coil sequences ( Fig. 1B; Lievens et a...
The epicardium and its derivatives provide trophic and structural support for the developing and adult heart. Here we tested the ability of human embryonic stem cell (hESC)-derived epicardium to augment the structure and function of engineered heart tissue (EHT) in vitro and to improve efficacy of hESC-cardiomyocyte grafts in infarcted athymic rat hearts. Epicardial cells markedly Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:
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