Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience (May 2017)

Protein S Negatively Regulates Neural Stem Cell Self-Renewal through Bmi-1 Signaling

  • Tal Burstyn-Cohen,
  • Katya Zelentsova-Levytskyi,
  • Ziv Talmi,
  • Ghada Abboud-Jarrous,
  • Tal Capucha,
  • Tamar Sapir

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnmol.2017.00124
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Revealing the molecular mechanisms underlying neural stem cell self-renewal is a major goal toward understanding adult brain homeostasis. The self-renewing potential of neural stem and progenitor cells (NSPCs) must be tightly regulated to maintain brain homeostasis. We recently reported the expression of Protein S (PROS1) in adult hippocampal NSPCs, and revealed its role in regulation of NSPC quiescence and neuronal differentiation. Here, we investigate the effect of PROS1 on NSPC self-renewal and show that genetic ablation of Pros1 in neural progenitors increased NSPC self-renewal by 50%. Mechanistically, we identified the upregulation of the polycomb complex protein Bmi-1 and repression of its downstream effectors p16Ink4a and p19Arf to promote NSPC self-renewal in Pros1-ablated cells. Rescuing Pros1 expression restores normal levels of Bmi-1 signaling, and reverts the proliferation and enhanced self-renewal phenotypes observed in Pros1-deleted cells. Our study identifies PROS1 as a novel negative regulator of NSPC self-renewal. We conclude PROS1 is instructive for NSPC differentiation by negatively regulating Bmi-1 signaling in adult and embryonic neural stem cells.

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