Stable reprogrammed heterokaryons form spontaneously in Purkinje neurons after bone marrow transplant

JM Weimann, CB Johansson, A Trejo, HM Blau - Nature cell biology, 2003 - nature.com
JM Weimann, CB Johansson, A Trejo, HM Blau
Nature cell biology, 2003nature.com
Heterokaryons are the product of cell fusion without subsequent nuclear or chromosome
loss. Decades of research using Sendai-virus or polyethylene glycol (PEG)-mediated fusion
in tissue culture showed that the terminally differentiated state of a cell could be altered. But
whether stable non-dividing heterokaryons could occur in animals has remained unclear.
Here, we show that green fluorescent protein (GFP)-positive bone-marrow-derived cells
(BMDCs) contribute to adult mouse Purkinje neurons through cell fusion. The formation of …
Abstract
Heterokaryons are the product of cell fusion without subsequent nuclear or chromosome loss. Decades of research using Sendai-virus or polyethylene glycol (PEG)-mediated fusion in tissue culture showed that the terminally differentiated state of a cell could be altered. But whether stable non-dividing heterokaryons could occur in animals has remained unclear. Here, we show that green fluorescent protein (GFP)-positive bone-marrow-derived cells (BMDCs) contribute to adult mouse Purkinje neurons through cell fusion. The formation of heterokaryons increases in a linear manner over 1.5 years and seems to be stable. The dominant Purkinje neurons caused the BMDC nuclei within the resulting heterokaryons to enlarge, exhibit dispersed chromatin and activate a Purkinje neuron-specific transgene, L7-GFP. The observed reprogrammed heterokaryons that form in brain may provide insights into gene regulation associated with cell-fate plasticity.
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