Surfaceome Profiling Reveals Regulators of Neural Stem Cell Function
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2014
Publication Title
STEM CELLS
Volume
32
Issue
1
First Page
258
Last Page
268
Abstract
The composition of cell-surface proteins changes during lineage specification, altering cellular responses to their milieu. The changes that characterize maturation of early neural stem cells (NSCs) remain poorly understood. Here we use mass spectrometry-based cell surface capture technology to profile the cell surface of early NSCs and demonstrate functional requirements for several enriched molecules. Primitive NSCs arise from embryonic stem cells upon removal of Transforming growth factor-β signaling, while definitive NSCs arise from primitive NSCs upon Lif removal and FGF addition. In vivo aggregation assays revealed that N-cadherin upregulation is sufficient for the initial exclusion of definitive NSCs from pluripotent ectoderm, while c-kit signaling limits progeny of primitive NSCs. Furthermore, we implicate EphA4 in primitive NSC survival signaling and Erbb2 as being required for NSC proliferation. This work elucidates several key mediators of NSC function whose relevance is confirmed on forebrain-derived populations and identifies a host of other candidates that may regulate NSCs. Stem Cells 2014;32:258–268
DOI
10.1002/stem.1550
Recommended Citation
DeVeale, Brian; Bausch-Fluck, Damaris; Seaberg, Raewyn; Runciman, Susan; Akbarian, Vahe; Karpowicz, Phillip; Yoon, Charles; Song, Hannah; Leeder, Rachel; Zandstra, Peter W.; Wollscheid, Bernd; and van der Kooy, Derek, "Surfaceome Profiling Reveals Regulators of Neural Stem Cell Function" (2014). STEM CELLS, 32, 1, 258-268.
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/biologypub/889