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      Effects of hTERT immortalization on osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation of dental pulp stem cells

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      Elsevier BV

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          Characterization of neurons from immortalized dental pulp stem cells for the study of neurogenetic disorders.

          A major challenge to the study and treatment of neurogenetic syndromes is accessing live neurons for study from affected individuals. Although several sources of stem cells are currently available, acquiring these involve invasive procedures, may be difficult or expensive to generate and are limited in number. Dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) are multipotent stem cells that reside deep the pulp of shed teeth. To investigate the characteristics of DPSCs that make them a valuable resource for translational research, we performed a set of viability, senescence, immortalization and gene expression studies on control DPSC and derived neurons. We investigated the basic transport conditions and maximum passage number for primary DPSCs. We immortalized control DPSCs using human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) and evaluated neuronal differentiation potential and global gene expression changes by RNA-seq. We show that neurons from immortalized DPSCs share morphological and electrophysiological properties with non-immortalized DPSCs. We also show that differentiation of DPSCs into neurons significantly alters gene expression for 1305 transcripts. Here we show that these changes in gene expression are concurrent with changes in protein levels of the transcriptional repressor REST/NRSF, which is known to be involved in neuronal differentiation. Immortalization significantly altered the expression of 183 genes after neuronal differentiation, 94 of which also changed during differentiation. Our studies indicate that viable DPSCs can be obtained from teeth stored for ≥72 h, these can then be immortalized and still produce functional neurons for in vitro studies, but that constitutive hTERT immortalization is not be the best approach for long term use of patient derived DPSCs for the study of disease.
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            ERα regulates lipid metabolism in bone through ATGL and perilipin.

            A decrease in bone mineral density during menopause is accompanied by an increase in adipocytes in the bone marrow space. Ovariectomy also leads to accumulation of fat in the bone marrow. Herein we show increased lipid accumulation in bone marrow from estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) knockout (ERαKO) mice compared to wild-type (WT) mice or estrogen receptor beta (ERβ) knockout (ERβKO) mice. Similarly, bone marrow cells from ERαKO mice differentiated to adipocytes in culture also have increased lipid accumulation compared to cells from WT mice or ERβKO mice. Analysis of individual adipocytes shows that WT mice have fewer, but larger, lipid droplets per cell than adipocytes from ERαKO or ERβKO animals. Furthermore, higher levels of adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) protein in WT adipocytes correlate with increased lipolysis and fewer lipid droplets per cell and treatment with 17β-estradiol (E2) potentiates this response. In contrast, cells from ERαKO mice display higher perilipin protein levels, promoting lipogenesis. Together these results demonstrate that E2 signals via ERα to regulate lipid droplet size and total lipid accumulation in the bone marrow space in vivo. Copyright © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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              GATA4 is essential for bone mineralization via ERalpha and TGFbeta/BMP pathways

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                10.1016/j.dib.2016.01.009
                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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