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1.
BMC Clin Pathol ; 16: 12, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27478409

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Calcifications of atherosclerotic plaques represent a controversial issue as they either lead to the stabilization or rupture of the lesion. However, the cellular key players involved in the progression of the calcified plaques have not yet been described. The primary reason for this lacuna is that decalcification procedures impair protein and nucleic acids contained in the calcified tissue. The aim of our study was to preserve the cellular content of heavily calcified plaques with a new rapid fixation in order to simplify the study of calcifications. METHODS: Here we applied a fixation method for fresh calcified tissue using the Carnoy's solution followed by an enzymatic tissue digestion with type II collagenase. Immunohistochemistry was performed to verify the preservation of nuclear and cytoplasmic antigens. DNA content and RNA preservation was evaluated respectively with Feulgen staining and RT-PCR. A checklist of steps for successful image analysis was provided. To present the basic features of the F-DNA analysis we used descriptive statistics, skewness and kurtosis. Differences in DNA content were analysed with Kruskal-Wallis and Dunn's post tests. The value of P < 0.05 was considered significant. RESULTS: Twenty-four vascular adult tissues, sorted as calcified (14) or uncalcified (10), were processed and 17 fetal tissues were used as controls (9 soft and 8 hard). Cells composing the calcified carotid plaques were positive to Desmin, Vimentin, Osteocalcin or Ki-67; the cellular population included smooth muscle cells, osteoblasts and osteoclasts-like cells and metakaryotic cells. The DNA content of each cell type found in the calcified carotid artery was successfully quantified in 7 selected samples. Notably the protocol revealed that DNA content in osteoblasts in fetal control tissues exhibits about half (3.0 ng) of the normal nuclear DNA content (6.0 ng). CONCLUSION: Together with standard histology, this technique could give additional information on the cellular content of calcified plaques and help clarify the calcification process during atherosclerosis.

2.
Cell Rep ; 39(2): 110685, 2022 04 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35417712

ABSTRACT

Cellular heterogeneity of aortic valves complicates the mechanistic evaluation of the calcification processes in calcific aortic valve disease (CAVD), and animal disease models are lacking. In this study, we identify a disease-driver population (DDP) within valvular interstitial cells (VICs). Through stepwise single-cell analysis, phenotype-guided omic profiling, and network-based analysis, we characterize the DDP fingerprint as CD44highCD29+CD59+CD73+CD45low and discover potential key regulators of human CAVD. These DDP-VICs demonstrate multi-lineage differentiation and osteogenic properties. Temporal proteomic profiling of DDP-VICs identifies potential targets for therapy, including MAOA and CTHRC1. In vitro loss-of-function experiments confirm our targets. Such a stepwise strategy may be advantageous for therapeutic target discovery in other disease contexts.


Subject(s)
Aortic Valve Stenosis , Calcinosis , Animals , Aortic Valve/pathology , Cells, Cultured , Extracellular Matrix Proteins , Humans , Osteogenesis , Proteomics
3.
Oncotarget ; 11(31): 2973-2981, 2020 Aug 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32821343

ABSTRACT

We evaluated the long-term effects of sirolimus on three different cell in vitro models, cultured in physiological conditions mimicking sirolimus-eluted stent, in order to clarify the effectiveness of sirolimus in blocking cell proliferation and survival. Three cells lines (WPMY-1 myofibroblasts, HT-29 colorectal adenocarcinoma, and U2OS osteosarcoma) were selected and growth in 10 ml of Minimum Essential Medium for 5 weeks with serial dilutions of sirolimus. The number of colonies and the number of cells per colony were counted. As main result, the number of WPMY-1 surviving colonies increased in a dose-dependent manner when treated with sirolimus (p = 0.0011), while the number of U2OS colonies progressively decreased (p = 0.0011). The clonal capacity of HT-29 was not modified by the exposure to sirolimus (p = 0.6679). In conclusion sirolimus showed the well-known cytostatic effect, but with an effect on clonogenic potential different among the different cell types. In the practice, the plaque typology and composition may influence the response to sirolimus and thus the effectiveness of eluted stent.

4.
Arthritis Rheumatol ; 72(8): 1361-1374, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32237059

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: In systemic sclerosis (SSc), a persistent tissue repair process leads to progressive fibrosis of the skin and internal organs. The role of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs), which characteristically initiate and regulate tissue repair, has not been fully evaluated. We undertook this study to investigate whether dividing metakaryotic MSCs are present in SSc skin and to examine whether exposure to the disease microenvironment activates MSCs and leads to transdifferentiation. METHODS: Skin biopsy material from patients with recent-onset diffuse SSc was examined by collagenase spread of 1-mm-thick surface-parallel sections, in order to identify dividing metakaryotic stem cells in each tissue plane. Adipose-derived MSCs from healthy controls were treated with dermal blister fluid (BF) from patients with diffuse SSc and profiled by next-generation sequencing, or they were evaluated for phenotypic changes relevant to SSc. Differential responses of dermal fibroblasts were studied in parallel. RESULTS: MSC-like cells undergoing active metakaryotic division were identified in SSc sections (but not control sections) most prominently in the deep dermis and adjacent to damaged microvessels, in both clinically involved and uninvolved skin. Furthermore, exposure to SSc BF caused selective MSC activation, inducing a myofibroblast signature, while reducing signatures of vascular repair and adipogenesis and enhancing migration and contractility. Microenvironmental factors implicated in inducing transdifferentiation included the profibrotic transforming growth factor ß, the presence of lactate, and mechanosensing, while the microenvironment Th2 cytokine, interleukin-31, enhanced osteogenic commitment (calcinosis). CONCLUSION: Dividing MSC-like cells are present in the SSc disease microenvironment where multiple factors, likely acting in concert, promote transdifferentiation and lead to a complex and resistant disease state.


Subject(s)
Cell Transdifferentiation/physiology , Cellular Microenvironment/physiology , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/pathology , Scleroderma, Diffuse/pathology , Scleroderma, Systemic/pathology , Adult , Biopsy , Cell Culture Techniques , Female , Fibroblasts/physiology , Humans , Male , Skin/cytology , Skin/pathology
5.
Mutat Res ; 646(1-2): 25-40, 2008 Nov 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18824180

ABSTRACT

Allele-specific mismatch amplification mutation assays (MAMA) of anatomically distinct sectors of the upper bronchial tracts of nine nonsmokers revealed many numerically dispersed clusters of the point mutations C742T, G746T, G747T of the TP53 gene, G35T of the KRAS gene and G508A of the HPRT1 gene. Assays of these five mutations in six smokers have yielded quantitatively similar results. One hundred and eighty four micro-anatomical sectors of 0.5-6x10(6) tracheal-bronchial epithelial cells represented en toto the equivalent of approximately 1.7 human smokers' bronchial trees to the fifth bifurcation. Statistically significant mutant copy numbers above the 95% upper confidence limits of historical background controls were found in 198 of 425 sector assays. No significant differences (P=0.1) for negative sector fractions, mutant fractions, distributions of mutant cluster size or anatomical positions were observed for smoking status, gender or age (38-76 year). Based on the modal cluster size of mitochondrial point mutants, the size of the adult bronchial epithelial maintenance turnover unit was estimated to be about 32 cells. When data from all 15 lungs were combined the log2 of nuclear mutant cluster size plotted against log2 of the number of clusters of a given cluster size displayed a slope of approximately 1.1 over a range of cluster sizes from approximately 2(6) to 2(15) mutant copies. A parsimonious interpretation of these nuclear and previously reported data for lung epithelial mitochondrial point mutant clusters is that they arose from mutations in stem cells at a high but constant rate per stem cell doubling during at least ten stem cell doublings of the later fetal-juvenile period. The upper and lower decile range of summed point mutant fractions among lungs was about 7.5-fold, suggesting an important source of stratification in the population with regard to risk of tumor initiation.


Subject(s)
Bronchi/cytology , Point Mutation , Respiratory Mucosa/cytology , Smoking , Trachea/cytology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Cell Line , Female , Fetus , Genes, p53 , Genes, ras , Humans , Hypoxanthine Phosphoribosyltransferase/genetics , Male , Middle Aged
6.
Contrib Nephrol ; 190: 96-107, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28535522

ABSTRACT

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) exacerbating vascular disease poses a major challenge to nephrology. Surgically placed vascular fistulas, as an aid to hemodialysis prior to kidney transplant, have extended many lives, while post-surgical restenosis closure of the fistula by smooth muscle cells affects many lives. When post-surgical restenosis is developed, palliative measures are almost always surgical: there are no effective drug treatments. In this study, we offer a testable hypothesis that effects of CKD on widely distributed vascular diseases and the phenomenon of fistula restenosis are both driven by the pathologic creation of non-dividing smooth muscle cells via asymmetric division of exponentially increasing metakaryotic stem cells. In slow growing atherosclerotic plaques, the Benditts demonstrated clonality of smooth muscle cells that we posit originate in a single mutated metakaryotic stem cell of fetal/juvenile vasculogenesis. In the fast process of fistula restenosis, we posit quiescent metakaryotic stem cells "on call" for wound healing among which are rare stem cells that have lost the ability to cease division. These hypotheses and suggestions for specific research paths toward development of effective drug therapies are built on (a) our shared discoveries of the role of metakaryotic stem cells in organogenesis, carcinogenesis, and atherosclerotic plaque formation and (b) the recent finding that metakaryotic cancer stem cells are constitutively resistant to radio- and chemotherapies yet sensitive to killing by a wide range of existing drugs. We propose to test these hypotheses in discarded fistulas and stem cells derived therefrom, and, if supported, to test drug-eluting devices to block fistula restenosis.


Subject(s)
Graft Occlusion, Vascular , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/complications , Stem Cells/cytology , Vascular Diseases/complications , Constriction, Pathologic , Humans , Renal Dialysis
7.
Stem Cell Rev ; 1(3): 243-51, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17142861

ABSTRACT

Analysis of historical age-specific colorectal cancer rates, present day age-specific colonic adenoma prevalence and the few reports of direct measurements of genetic change in human tissues as a function of age in adults have led to a new set of hypotheses about carcinogenesis. A key observation, that the calculated rate of growth of preneoplasia is equal to the calculated growth rate of the juvenile colon, suggested that tumor initiation blocks the developmental step by which growing juvenile stem cells are transformed into or replaced by adult maintenance stem cells. In this hypothesis the slowly growing adenomatous polyps would simply be patches of highly organized juvenile tissue modified by the mechanical constraints of surrounding nongrowing adult tissue. As juvenile tissue presumably grows by net increase in stem cells creating crypts, tumor promotion could be achieved by transformation of an initiated stem cell into a fetal stem cell that would express the program of rapid net growth and differentiation into the heterogeneous cell types of fetal colonic organogenesis. (One additional interpretation of data from observations of point mutations in adult lung epithelium is that rates of genetic change in juvenile stem cells are markedly higher than in adult maintenance stem cells.) Unfortunately, the concept of a "stem cell" undergoing staged transitions in organ development and blocked or reverse transitions in carcinogenesis has lacked the physical embodiment of a cell that could be recognized, isolated, and analyzed. In an attempt to overcome this impediment we set reexamined fetal and adult colonic tissue, adenomas, and adenocarcinomas using a novel histological preparation method. Gostjeva then discovered that fetal and neoplastic tissues share a set of cells distinguished by specific nuclear morphotypes that appear to cooperate in creating the elements of the fetal organ, preneoplastic, and neoplastic lesions. In particular, microscopic examination of fetal gut at 5-7 wk gestation reveals tubular syncytia containing opened-mouthed, bell-shaped nuclei that account for some 30% of the nuclei in the protoorgan. These peculiar nuclei undergo both symmetric and asymmetric nuclear fissions, the latter creating all of the other nuclear morphotypes. These nuclear fissions are "amitotic" insofar as no general chromosome condensation is observed. Bell-shaped nuclei are rarely found in adult colonic crypt bases but are found in preneoplasia and neoplasia.


Subject(s)
Adenomatous Polyps/embryology , Cell Differentiation , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/metabolism , Colon/embryology , Colonic Neoplasms/embryology , Neoplastic Stem Cells/metabolism , Adenomatous Polyps/genetics , Adenomatous Polyps/pathology , Animals , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Cell Division/genetics , Cell Nucleus/genetics , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Cell Nucleus/pathology , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/genetics , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic/pathology , Chromosomes, Human/genetics , Chromosomes, Human/metabolism , Colon/pathology , Colonic Neoplasms/pathology , Humans , Neoplastic Stem Cells/pathology , Organogenesis/genetics
9.
Front Cell Dev Biol ; 3: 36, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26090364

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) with multilineage potential and anti-inflammatory property can be isolated from different human tissues, representing promising candidates in regenerative medicine. Despite the common criteria of characterization, many factors contribute to MSC heterogeneity (i.e., tissue origin, coexistence of cell subsets at different stage of differentiation, epigenetic) and no standard methods have been approved to characterize MSCs in cell culture. AIM: The present study aimed to test whether MSCs resist adverse chemical and physical culture conditions, surviving MSC subpopulations are endowed with the stemness abilities; to characterize MMP expression in AAA-MSCs under the adverse experimental conditions. METHODS AND RESULTS: MSCs enzymatically isolated from human abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA-MSCs) were exposed to media acidification, hypoxia, starving, drying and hypothermia through the following strategies: (1) low-density seeding in closed flasks; (2) exposure to a chemical hypoxia inducer, cobalt chloride; (3) exposure to a dry environment with growing medium deprivation and culture at 4°C. None of these conditions affected MSC viability and stemness profile, as evidenced by NANOG, OCT-4, and SOX-2 mRNA expression in surviving cells. A significant MMP-9 decrease, especially when AAA-MSCs were exposed to hypothermia, was associated with stress resistant stem cells. CONCLUSIONS: AAA-MSCs survive to extremely adverse culture conditions, keeping their morphology and stemness features. Besides MMP-9 role in pathological tissue remodeling, this protease may be related to MSC survival. Future studies on MSCs derived from other tissues will be necessary to refine our culture protocol, which can represent an empirical method to demonstrate MSC stemness, with potential implications for their clinical use.

10.
Organogenesis ; 10(1): 44-52, 2014 Jan 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24418910

ABSTRACT

Bell shaped nuclei of metakaryotic cells double their DNA content during and after symmetric and asymmetric amitotic fissions rather than in the separate, pre-mitotic S-phase of eukaryotic cells. A parsimonious hypothesis was tested that the two anti-parallel strands of each chromatid DNA helix were first segregated as ssDNA-containing complexes into sister nuclei then copied to recreate a dsDNA genome. Metakaryotic nuclei that were treated during amitosis with RNase A and stained with acridine orange or fluorescent antibody to ssDNA revealed large amounts of ssDNA. Without RNase treatment metakaryotic nuclei in amitosis stained strongly with an antibody complex specific to dsRNA/DNA. Images of amitotic figures co-stained with dsRNA/DNA antibody and DAPI indicated that the entire interphase dsDNA genome (B-form helices) was transformed into two dsRNA/DNA genomes (A-form helices) that were segregated in the daughter cell nuclei then retransformed into dsDNA. As this process segregates DNA strands of opposite polarity in sister cells it hypothetically offers a sequential switching mechanism within the diverging stem cell lineages of development.


Subject(s)
Cell Nucleus/genetics , Chromosome Segregation , DNA Replication , DNA/metabolism , Genome , RNA/metabolism , Cell Line, Tumor , Fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate/chemistry , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Karyotype , Stem Cells/cytology
12.
Front Oncol ; 3: 267, 2013 Oct 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24195059

ABSTRACT

Adult age-specific colorectal cancer incidence rates increase exponentially from maturity, reach a maximum, then decline in extreme old age. Armitage and Doll (1) postulated that the exponential increase resulted from "n" mutations occurring throughout adult life in normal "cells at risk" that initiated the growth of a preneoplastic colony in which subsequent "m" mutations promoted one of the preneoplastic "cells at risk" to form a lethal neoplasia. We have reported cytologic evidence that these "cells at risk" are fetal/juvenile organogenic, then preneoplastic metakaryotic stem cells. Metakaryotic cells display stem-like behaviors of both symmetric and asymmetric nuclear divisions and peculiarities such as bell shaped nuclei and amitotic nuclear fission that distinguish them from embryonic, eukaryotic stem cells. Analyses of mutant colony sizes and numbers in adult lung epithelia supported the inferences that the metakaryotic organogenic stem cells are constitutively mutator/hypermutable and that their contributions to cancer initiation are limited to the fetal/juvenile period. We have amended the two-stage model of Armitage and Doll and incorporated these several inferences in a computer program CancerFit v.5.0. We compared the expectations of the amended model to adult (15-104 years) age-specific colon cancer rates for European-American males born 1890-99 and observed remarkable concordance. When estimates of normal colonic fetal/juvenile APC and OAT gene mutation rates (∼2-5 × 10(-5) per stem cell doubling) and preneoplastic colonic gene loss rates (∼8 × 10(-3)) were applied, the model was in accordance only for the values of n = 2 and m = 4 or 5.

13.
Cancer Genet Cytogenet ; 203(2): 203-8, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21156234

ABSTRACT

Metakaryotic cells and syncytia with large, hollow, bell-shaped nuclei demonstrate symmetrical and asymmetrical amitotic nuclear fissions in microanatomical positions and numbers expected of stem cell lineages in tissues of all three primordial germ layers and their derived tumors. Using fluorescence in situ hybridization, mononuclear metakaryotic interphase cells have been found with only 23 centromeric and 23 telomeric staining regions. Syncytial bell-shaped nuclei found approximately during weeks 5-12 of human gestation display 23 centromeric and either 23 or 46 telomeric staining regions. These images suggest that (1) homologous chromatids pair at centromeres and telomeres, (2) all paired telomeres join end-to-end with other paired telomeres in all mononuclear and some syncytial metakaryotic cells, and (3) telomere junctions may open and close during the syncytial phase of development. Twenty-three telomeric joining figures could be accounted by 23 rings of one chromatid pair each, a single pangenomic ring of 23 joined chromatid pairs, or any of many possible sets of oligo-chromatid pair rings. As telomeric end-joining may affect peri-telomeric gene expression, a programmed sequence of telomeric end-joining associations in metakaryotic stem cells could guide developmental arboration and errors in, or interruptions of, this program could contribute to carcinogenesis.


Subject(s)
Chromatids/ultrastructure , Cytogenetics , Fetal Stem Cells/cytology , Stem Cells/cytology , Telomere/ultrastructure , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Centromere/ultrastructure , Chromosome Mapping , Coloring Agents/chemistry , Genome , Humans , Image Cytometry/methods , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence/methods , Interphase , Time Factors
14.
Organogenesis ; 5(4): 191-200, 2009 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20539738

ABSTRACT

A non-eukaryotic, metakaryotic cell with large, open mouthed, bell shaped nuclei represents an important stem cell lineage in fetal/juvenile organogenesis in humans and rodents. each human bell shaped nucleus contains the diploid human DNA genome as tested by quantitative Feulgen DNA cytometry and fluorescent in situ hybridization with human pan-telomeric, pan-centromeric and chromosome specific probes. From weeks approximately 5-12 of human gestation the bell shaped nuclei are found in organ anlagen enclosed in sarcomeric tubular syncytia. Within syncytia bell shaped nuclear number increases binomially up to 16 or 32 nuclei; clusters of syncytia are regularly dispersed in organ anlagen. Syncytial bell shaped nuclei demonstrate two forms of symmetrical amitoses, facing or "kissing" bells and "stacking" bells resembling separation of two paper cups. Remarkably, DNA increase and nuclear fission occur coordinately. Importantly, syncytial bell shaped nuclei undergo asymmetrical amitoses creating organ specific ensembles of up to eight distinct closed nuclear forms, a characteristic required of a stem cell lineage. Closed nuclei emerging from bell shaped nuclei are eukaryotic as demonstrated by their subsequent increases by extra-syncytial mitoses populating the parenchyma of growing anlagen. From 9-14 weeks syncytia fragment forming single cells with bell shaped nuclei that continue to display both symmetrical and asymmetrical amitoses. These forms persist in the juvenile period and are specifically observed in bases of colonic crypts. Metakaryotic forms are found in organogenesis of humans, rats, mice and the plant Arabidopsis indicating an evolutionary origin prior to the divergence of plants and animals.

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