Transcriptional and Chromatin Accessibility Profiling of Neural Stem Cells Differentiating into Astrocytes Reveal Dynamic Signatures Affected under Inflammatory Conditions

Author:

Pavlou Maria Angeliki S.12ORCID,Singh Kartikeya3,Ravichandran Srikanth3,Halder Rashi4ORCID,Nicot Nathalie56,Birck Cindy1ORCID,Grandbarbe Luc1ORCID,del Sol Antonio378ORCID,Michelucci Alessandro24ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Life Sciences and Medicine, University of Luxembourg, L-4365 Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg

2. Neuro-Immunology Group, Department of Cancer Research, Luxembourg Institute of Health, L-1210 Luxembourg, Luxembourg

3. Computational Biology Group, Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg, L-4365 Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg

4. Scientific Central Services, Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine, University of Luxembourg, L-4365 Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg

5. Translational Medicine Operations Hub, Luxembourg Institute of Health, L-3555 Dudelange, Luxembourg

6. LuxGen Genome Center, Luxembourg Institute of Health & Laboratoire National de Santé, L-3555 Dudelange, Luxembourg

7. Computational Biology Group, CIC bioGUNE-BRTA (Basque Research and Technology Alliance), 48160 Derio, Spain

8. IKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science, 48009 Bilbao, Spain

Abstract

Astrocytes arise from multipotent neural stem cells (NSCs) and represent the most abundant cell type of the central nervous system (CNS), playing key roles in the developing and adult brain. Since the differentiation of NSCs towards a gliogenic fate is a precisely timed and regulated process, its perturbation gives rise to dysfunctional astrocytic phenotypes. Inflammation, which often underlies neurological disorders, including neurodevelopmental disorders and brain tumors, disrupts the accurate developmental process of NSCs. However, the specific consequences of an inflammatory environment on the epigenetic and transcriptional programs underlying NSCs’ differentiation into astrocytes is unexplored. Here, we address this gap by profiling in mice glial precursors from neural tissue derived from early embryonic stages along their astrocytic differentiation trajectory in the presence or absence of tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a master pro-inflammatory cytokine. By using a combination of RNA- and ATAC-sequencing approaches, together with footprint and integrated gene regulatory network analyses, we here identify key differences during the differentiation of NSCs into astrocytes under physiological and inflammatory settings. In agreement with its role to turn cells resistant to inflammatory challenges, we detect Nrf2 as a master transcription factor supporting the astrocytic differentiation under TNF exposure. Further, under these conditions, we unravel additional transcriptional regulatory hubs, including Stat3, Smad3, Cebpb, and Nfkb2, highlighting the interplay among pathways underlying physiological astrocytic developmental processes and those involved in inflammatory responses, resulting in discrete astrocytic phenotypes. Overall, our study reports key transcriptional and epigenetic changes leading to the identification of molecular regulators of astrocytic differentiation. Furthermore, our analyses provide a valuable resource for understanding inflammation-induced astrocytic phenotypes that might contribute to the development and progression of CNS disorders with an inflammatory component.

Funder

University of Luxembourg

Luxembourg Institute of Health and the Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine

Luxembourg National Research Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference85 articles.

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5. Corrigendum: Oligodendrocyte, Astrocyte and Microglia Crosstalk in Myelin Development, Damage, and Repair;Domingues;Front. Cell. Dev. Biol.,2016

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