Exosome-shuttled miR-126 mediates ethanol-induced disruption of neural crest cell-placode cell interaction by targeting SDF1

Author:

Li Yihong1234,Cai Ting12,Liu Huina12,Liu Jie4,Chen Shao-Yu4,Fan Huadong1245ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ningbo No.2 Hospital , Ningbo 315099, China

2. Ningbo Institute of Life and Health Industry, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Ningbo 315000, China

3. Lab of Nanopharmacology Research for Neurodegeneration, Department of Research and Development of Science and Technology, Ningbo Institute of Life and Health Industry, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Ningbo, Zhejiang Province 315000, China

4. Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Louisville Health Sciences Center , Louisville, Kentucky 40292, USA

5. Lab of Dementia and Neurorehabilitation Research, Department of Research and Development of Science and Technology, Ningbo Institute of Life and Health Industry, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Ningbo, Zhejiang Province 315000, China

Abstract

Abstract During embryonic development, 2 populations of multipotent stem cells, cranial neural crest cells (NCCs) and epibranchial placode cells (PCs), are anatomically adjacent to each other. The coordinated migration of NCCs and PCs plays a major role in the morphogenesis of craniofacial skeletons and cranial nerves. It is known that ethanol-induced dysfunction of NCCs and PCs is a key contributor to the defects of craniofacial skeletons and cranial nerves implicated in fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD). However, how ethanol disrupts the coordinated interaction between NCCs and PCs was not elucidated. To fill in this gap, we established a well-designed cell coculture system to investigate the reciprocal interaction between human NCCs (hNCCs) and human PCs (hPCs), and also monitored the migration behavior of NCCs and PCs in zebrafish embryos. We found that ethanol exposure resulted in a disruption of coordinated hNCCs-hPCs interaction, as well as in zebrafish embryos. Treating hNCCs-hPCs with exosomes derived from ethanol-exposed hNCCs (ExoEtOH) mimicked ethanol-induced impairment of hNCCs-hPCs interaction. We also observed that SDF1, a chemoattractant, was downregulated in ethanol-treated hPCs and zebrafish embryos. Meanwhile, miR-126 level in ExoEtOH was significantly higher than that in control exosomes (ExoCon). We further validated that ExoEtOH-encapsulated miR-126 from hNCCs can be transferred to hPCs to suppress SDF1 expression in hPCs. Knockdown of SDF1 replicated ethanol-induced abnormalities either in vitro or in zebrafish embryos. On the contrary, overexpression of SDF1 or inhibiting miR-126 strongly rescued ethanol-induced impairment of hNCCs-hPCs interaction and developmental defects.

Funder

Young Innovative Talent Project of YongJiang Talent Introduction Programme

Ningbo Natural Science Foundation

Ningbo Public Service Technology Foundation

Special Funding for Microfluidic Chip of Biomedicine of Ningbo Institute of Life and Health Industry

University of Chinese Academy of Sciences

Medical Scientific Research Foundation of Zhejiang Province

National Institute of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Toxicology

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