1. Academic Validation
  2. Nestin is required for the proper self-renewal of neural stem cells

Nestin is required for the proper self-renewal of neural stem cells

  • Stem Cells. 2010 Dec;28(12):2162-71. doi: 10.1002/stem.541.
Donghyun Park 1 Andy Peng Xiang Frank Fuxiang Mao Li Zhang Chun-Guang Di Xiao-Mei Liu Yuan Shao Bao-Feng Ma Jae-Hyun Lee Kwon-Soo Ha Noah Walton Bruce T Lahn
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Human Genetics, University of Chicago, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Chicago, Illinois, USA. donghyun@uchicago.edu
Abstract

The intermediate filament protein, nestin, is a widely employed marker of multipotent neural stem cells (NSCs). Recent in vitro studies have implicated nestin in a number of cellular processes, but there is no data yet on its in vivo function. Here, we report the construction and functional characterization of Nestin knockout mice. We found that these mice show embryonic lethality, with neuroepithelium of the developing neural tube exhibiting significantly fewer NSCs and much higher levels of Apoptosis. Consistent with this in vivo observation, NSC cultures derived from knockout embryos show dramatically reduced self-renewal ability that is associated with elevated Apoptosis but no overt defects in cell proliferation or differentiation. Unexpectedly, nestin deficiency has no detectable effect on the integrity of the Cytoskeleton. Furthermore, the knockout of Vimentin, which abolishes nestin's ability to polymerize into intermediate filaments in NSCs, does not lead to any apoptotic phenotype. These data demonstrate that nestin is important for the proper survival and self-renewal of NSCs, and that this function is surprisingly uncoupled from nestin's structural involvement in the Cytoskeleton.

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