A Human Stem Cell-Based Model for Identifying Adverse Effects of Organic and Inorganic Chemicals on the Developing Nervous System

Author:

Buzanska Leonora12,Sypecka Joanna1,Nerini-Molteni Silvia2,Compagnoni Anna2,Hogberg Helena T.2,del Torchio Riccardo2,Domanska-Janik Krystyna1,Zimmer Jens3,Coecke Sandra2

Affiliation:

1. NeuroRepair Department, Medical Research Centre, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland

2. In-Vitro Methods Unit/ECVAM, Institute for Health and Consumer Protection, European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Ispra, Italy

3. Anatomy and Neurobiology Department, Institute of Medical Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark

Abstract

Abstract The aim of our study was to investigate whether a human neural stem cell line derived from umbilical cord blood (HUCB-NSC) can serve as a reliable test model for developmental neurotoxicity (DNT). We assessed the sensitivity of HUCB-NSCs at different developmental stages to a panel of neurotoxic (sodium tellurite, methylmercury chloride, cadmium chloride, chlorpyrifos, and L-glutamate) and non-neurotoxic (acetaminophen, theophylline, and D-glutamate) compounds. In addition, we investigated the effect of some compounds on key neurodevelopmental processes like cell proliferation, apoptotic cell death, and neuronal and glial differentiation. Less differentiated HUCB-NSCs were generally more sensitive to neurotoxicants, with the notable exception of L-glutamate, which showed a higher toxicity to later stages. The relative potencies of the compounds were: cadmium chloride > methylmercury chloride ≫ chlorpyrifos ≫ L-glutamate. Fifty nanomolar methylmercury chloride (MeHgCl) inhibited proliferation and induced apoptosis in early-stage cells. At the differentiated stage, 1 μM MeHgCl induced selective loss of S100β-expressing astrocytic cells. One millimolar L-glutamate did not influence the early stages of HUCB-NSC development, but it affected late stages of neuronal differentiation. A valuable system for in vitro DNT assessment should be able to discriminate between neurotoxic and non-neurotoxic compounds and show different susceptibilities to chemicals according to developmental stage and cell lineage. Although not exhaustive, this work shows that the HUCB-NSC model fulfils these criteria and may serve as a human in vitro model for DNT priority setting.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

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