Transient Maternal IL-6 Mediates Long-Lasting Changes in Neural Stem Cell Pools by Deregulating an Endogenous Self-Renewal Pathway

Gallagher, D; Norman, AA; Woodard, CL; Yang, G; Gauthier-Fisher, A; Fujitani, M; Vessey, JP; Cancino, GI; Sachewsky, N; Woltjen, K; Fatt, MP; Morshead, CM; Kaplan, DR; Miller, FD

Abstract

The mechanisms that regulate the establishment of adult stem cell pools during normal and perturbed mammalian development are still largely unknown. Here, we asked whether a maternal cytokine surge, which occurs during human maternal infections and has been implicated in cognitive disorders, might have long-lasting consequences for neural stem cell pools in adult progeny. We show that transient, maternally administered interleukin-6 (IL-6) resulted in an expanded adult forebrain neural precursor pool and perturbed olfactory neurogenesis in offspring months after fetal exposure. This increase is likely the long-term consequence of acute hyper-activation of an endogenous autocrine/paracrine IL-6-dependent self-renewal pathway that normally regulates the number of forebrain neural precursors. These studies therefore identify an IL-6-dependent neural stem cell self-renewal pathway in vivo, and support a model in which transiently increased maternal cytokines can act through this pathway in offspring to deregulate neural precursor biology from embryogenesis throughout life.

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Título según WOS: Transient Maternal IL-6 Mediates Long-Lasting Changes in Neural Stem Cell Pools by Deregulating an Endogenous Self-Renewal Pathway
Título de la Revista: CELL STEM CELL
Volumen: 13
Número: 5
Editorial: Cell Press
Fecha de publicación: 2013
Página de inicio: 564
Página final: 576
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/j.stem.2013.10.002

Notas: ISI