The Ink4a/Arf locus is a barrier to direct neuronal transdifferentiation.

J Neurosci

Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research, Developmental and Stem Cell Biology Graduate Program, Department of Neurological Surgery, San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California 94143 Limd@neurosur

Published: September 2014


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Non-neurogenic cell types, such as cortical astroglia and fibroblasts, can be directly converted into neurons by the overexpression of defined transcription factors. Normally, the cellular phenotype of such differentiated cells is remarkably stable and resists direct cell transdifferentiation. Here we show that the Ink4a/Arf (also known as Cdkn2a) locus is a developmental barrier to direct neuronal transdifferentiation induced by transcription factor overexpression. With serial passage in vitro, wild-type postnatal cortical astroglia become progressively resistant to Dlx2-induced neuronal transdifferentiation. In contrast, the neurogenic competence of Ink4a/Arf-deficient astroglia is both greatly increased and does not diminish through serial cell culture passage. Electrophysiological analysis further demonstrates the neuronal identity of cells induced from Ink4a/Arf-null astroglia, and short hairpin RNA-mediated acute knockdown of p16Ink4a and p19Arf p16(Ink4a) and p19(Arf) indicates that these gene products function postnatally as a barrier to cellular transdifferentiation. Finally, we found that mouse fibroblasts deficient for Ink4a/Arf also exhibit greatly enhanced transcription factor-induced neuronal induction. These data indicate that Ink4a/Arf is a potent barrier to direct neuronal transdifferentiation and further suggest that this locus functions normally in the progressive developmental restriction of postnatal astrocytes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4160784PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3159-13.2014DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

neuronal transdifferentiation
16
barrier direct
12
direct neuronal
12
cortical astroglia
8
p16ink4a p19arf
8
neuronal
6
transdifferentiation
6
ink4a/arf
4
ink4a/arf locus
4
barrier
4

Similar Publications

Chemogenetic tuning reveals optimal MAPK signaling for cell-fate programming.

Cell Rep

September 2025

Department of Chemical Engineering, MIT, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. Electronic address:

Cell states evolve through the combined activity of signaling pathways and gene networks. While transcription factors can direct cell fate, these factors rely on a receptive cell state. How signaling levels contribute to the emergence of receptive cell states remains poorly defined.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

RNA triggers chronic stress during neuronal aging.

bioRxiv

August 2025

Department of Cellular & Molecular Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA.

Neurodegenerative diseases are linked with dysregulation of the integrated stress response (ISR), which coordinates cellular homeostasis during and after stress events. Cellular stress can arise from several sources, but there is significant disagreement about which stress might contribute to aging and neurodegeneration. Here, we leverage directed transdifferentiation of human fibroblasts into aged neurons to determine the source of ISR activation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Retinal degenerative diseases, such as retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and age‑related macular degeneration (AMD), lead to progressive vision loss through photoreceptor degeneration; RP begins with the gradual loss of peripheral rods, whereas AMD causes central‑vision loss mainly because macular cones and parafoveal rods degenerate. The neural retina leucine zipper (NRL) directs rod photoreceptor differentiation, and its disruption has been linked to upregulated cone-specific markers in rods. This study investigates the therapeutic potential of a cell-penetrating asymmetric small interfering RNA targeting NRL (cp-asiNRL) to induce rod-to-cone conversion and mitigate retinal degeneration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Melanoma is an aggressive skin cancer and highly lethal at advanced stages due to its high tumorigenicity and metastatic capacity. Changing the phenotype of cancer cells from one lineage to another, a process called transdifferentiation, leads to tumor cell reversion, which goes along with a drastic reduction of their tumorigenicity. Via ectopic overexpression of four neuronal transcription factors, we transdifferentiated melanoma cells into neuron-like cells expressing neuronal markers and showing a neuron-like morphology.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In vivo conversion of nonneuronal cells into neurons is a proposed strategy to replace neurons lost to CNS injury or disease. Glia-to-neuron trans-differentiation by viral vector-mediated GFAP mini-promoter-driven NeuroD1 remains hotly debated. Developing inducible, lineage-traceable transgenic mice, we find that astrocyte-to-neuron conversion is restricted to a specific time window within the lesion core of injured spinal cord and brain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF