Neural Regeneration Research ›› 2024, Vol. 19 ›› Issue (2): 447-457.doi: 10.4103/1673-5374.373669

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BMPRII+ neural precursor cells isolated and characterized from organotypic neurospheres: an in vitro model of human fetal spinal cord development

Michael W. Weible II1, 2, *, Michael D. Lovelace1, 3, Hamish D. Mundell1, 4, Tsz Wai Rosita Pang1, Tailoi Chan-Ling1, *   

  1. 1Bosch Institute, Discipline of Anatomy and Histology (F13), University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia; 2School of Environment and Science, Griffith University, Nathan, QLD, Australia; 3Discipline of Medicine, Nepean Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Kingswood, NSW, Australia; 4New South Wales Brain Tissue Resource Centre, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Charles Perkins Centre (D17), Sydney, NSW, Australia
  • Online:2024-02-15 Published:2023-08-30
  • Contact: Michael W. Weible II, PhD, m.weible@griffith.edu.au; Tailoi Chan-Ling, PhD, tailoi.chan-ling@outlook.com.
  • Supported by:
    This work was supported by grants from the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia (Nos. 571100 and 1048082) and the Baxter Charitable Foundation (to TCL); Medical Research grants from the Rebecca L. Cooper Medical Research Foundation (to MWW, TCL, and MDL); MDL was supported by a Charles D. Kelman, M.D. Postdoctoral Award (2010) from the International Retinal Research Foundation (USA).

Abstract: Roof plate secretion of bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) directs the cellular fate of sensory neurons during spinal cord development, including the formation of the ascending sensory columns, though their biology is not well understood. Type-II BMP receptor (BMPRII), the cognate receptor, is expressed by neural precursor cells during embryogenesis; however, an in vitro method of enriching BMPRII+ human neural precursor cells (hNPCs) from the fetal spinal cord is absent. Immunofluorescence was undertaken on intact second-trimester human fetal spinal cord using antibodies to BMPRII and leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF). Regions of highest BMPRII+ immunofluorescence localized to sensory columns. Parenchymal and meningeal-associated BMPRII+ vascular cells were identified in both intact fetal spinal cord and cortex by co-positivity with vascular lineage markers, CD34/CD39. LIF immunostaining identified a population of somas concentrated in dorsal and ventral horn interneurons, mirroring the expression of LIF receptor/CD118. A combination of LIF supplementation and high-density culture maintained culture growth beyond 10 passages, while synergistically increasing the proportion of neurospheres with a stratified, cytoarchitecture. These neurospheres were characterized by BMPRII+/MAP2ab+/–/βIII-tubulin+/nestin–/vimentin–/GFAP–/NeuN– surface hNPCs surrounding a heterogeneous core of βIII-tubulin+/nestin+/vimentin+/GFAP+/MAP2ab–/NeuN– multipotent precursors. Dissociated cultures from tripotential neurospheres contained neuronal (βIII-tubulin+), astrocytic (GFAP+), and oligodendrocytic (O4+) lineage cells. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting-sorted BMPRII+ hNPCs were MAP2ab+/–/βIII-tubulin+/GFAP–/O4– in culture. This is the first isolation of BMPRII+ hNPCs identified and characterized in human fetal spinal cords. Our data show that LIF combines synergistically with high-density reaggregate cultures to support the organotypic reorganization of neurospheres, characterized by surface BMPRII+ hNPCs. Our study has provided a new methodology for an in vitro model capable of amplifying human fetal spinal cord cell numbers for > 10 passages. Investigations of the role BMPRII plays in spinal cord development have primarily relied upon mouse and rat models, with interpolations to human development being derived through inference. Because of significant species differences between murine biology and human, including anatomical dissimilarities in central nervous system (CNS) structure, the findings made in murine models cannot be presumed to apply to human spinal cord development. For these reasons, our human in vitro model offers a novel tool to better understand neurodevelopmental pathways, including BMP signaling, as well as spinal cord injury research and testing drug therapies.

Key words: BMPRII, bone morphogenetic protein, histotypic, human spinal cord development, leukemia inhibitory factor, neurosphere, organotypic,  , reaggregate, sensory columns