GABA Regulates Stem Cell Proliferation before Nervous System Formation

A place to share academic research on Amantias.
Post Reply
User avatar
Amanita Research
Site Admin
Posts: 197
Joined: Tue Oct 01, 2019 7:44 pm
Has thanked: 143 times
Been thanked: 106 times

GABA Regulates Stem Cell Proliferation before Nervous System Formation

Post by Amanita Research » Mon Oct 07, 2019 10:01 am

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2566617/

Abstract: Stem cell self-renewal implies proliferation under continued maintenance of multipotency. Small changes in numbers of stem cells may lead to large differences in differentiated cell numbers, resulting in significant physiological consequences. Proliferation is typically regulated in the G1 phase, which is associated with differentiation and cell cycle arrest. However, embryonic stem (ES) cells may lack a G1 checkpoint. Regulaton of proliferation in the “DNA damage” S/G2 cell cycle checkpoint pathway is known for its role in the maintenance of chromatin structural integrity. Here we show that autocrine/paracrine γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) signalling by means of GABAA receptors negatively controls ES cell and peripheral neural crest stem (NCS) cell proliferation, preimplantation embryonic growth and proliferation in the boundary-cap stem cell niche, resulting in an attenuation of neuronal progenies from this stem cell niche. Activation of GABAA receptors leads to hyperpolarization, increased cell volume and accumulation of stem cells in S phase, thereby causing a rapid decrease in cell proliferation. GABAA receptors signal through S-phase checkpoint kinases of the phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase-related kinase family and the histone variant H2AX. This signalling pathway critically regulates proliferation independently of differentiation, apoptosis and overt damage to DNA. These results indicate the presence of a fundamentally different mechanism of proliferation control in these stem cells, in comparison with most somatic cells, involving proteins in the DNA damage checkpoint pathway.

Related pop-sci article: https://www.drugtargetreview.com/news/2 ... on-retina/

Post Reply