4.6 Article

NG2 Cells Are Not a Major Source of Reactive Astrocytes After Neocortical Stab Wound Injury

Journal

GLIA
Volume 59, Issue 5, Pages 800-809

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/glia.21152

Keywords

NG2; reactive astrocyte; oligodendrocyte

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Funding

  1. NIH
  2. Swedish Brain Foundation (Hjarnfonden)
  3. Swedish Medical Association

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NG2 cells are an abundant glial cell type in the adult brain. They are distinct from astrocytes, mature oligodendrocytes, and microglia. NG2 cells generate oligodendrocytes and a subpopulation of protoplasmic astrocytes in the ventral forebrain during development. To determine whether NG2 cells generate reactive astrocytes in the lesioned brain, stab wound injury was created in adult NG2creBAC:ZEG double transgenic mice, in which enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) is expressed in NG2 cells and their progeny, and the phenotype of the EGFP(+) cells was analyzed at 10 and 30 days post lesion (dpl). The majority (> 90%) of the reactive astrocytes surrounding the lesion that expressed glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) lacked EGFP expression, and conversely the majority (> 90%) of EGFP(+) cells were GFAP-negative. However, 8% of EGFP(+) cells co-expressed GFAP at 10 dpl. Most of these EGFP(+)GFAP(+) cells were morphologically distinct from hypertrophic reactive astrocytes and exhibited weak GFAP expression. NG2 was detected in a fraction of the EGFP(+)GFAP(+) cells found at 10 dpl. By 30 dpl the number of EGFP(+)GFAP(+) cells had decreased more than four-fold from 10 dpl. A similar transient appearance of EGFP(+)GFAP(+) cells with simple morphology was observed in NG2creER (TM):ZEG double transgenic mice in which EGFP expression had been induced in NG2 cells prior to injury. NG2 cell-specific deletion of the oligodendrocyte lineage transcription factor Olig2 using NG2creER (TM):Olig2(fl/fl): ZEG triple transgenic mice did not increase the number of EGFP(+) reactive astrocytes. These findings suggest that NG2 cells are not a major source of reactive astrocytes in the neocortex. (c) 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.;

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