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Item Author Correction: Generation of the organotypic kidney structure by integrating pluripotent stem cell-derived renal stroma(Springer Nature, 2023-04-04) Tanigawa, Shunsuke; Tanaka, Etsuko; Miike, Koichiro; Ohmori, Tomoko; Inoue, Daisuke; Cai, Chen-Leng; Taguchi, Atsuhiro; Kobayashi, Akio; Nishinakamura, Ryuichi; Pediatrics, School of MedicineCorrection to: Nature Communications 10.1038/s41467-022-28226-7, published online 01 February 2022Item Cardiac sodium channel palmitoylation regulates channel availability and myocyte excitability with implications for arrhythmia generation(Nature Publishing Group, 2016-06-23) Pei, Zifan; Xiao, Yucheng; Meng, Jingwei; Hudmon, Andy; Cummins, Theodore R.; Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, IU School of MedicineCardiac voltage-gated sodium channels (Nav1.5) play an essential role in regulating cardiac electric activity by initiating and propagating action potentials in the heart. Altered Nav1.5 function is associated with multiple cardiac diseases including long-QT3 and Brugada syndrome. Here, we show that Nav1.5 is subject to palmitoylation, a reversible post-translational lipid modification. Palmitoylation increases channel availability and late sodium current activity, leading to enhanced cardiac excitability and prolonged action potential duration. In contrast, blocking palmitoylation increases closed-state channel inactivation and reduces myocyte excitability. We identify four cysteines as possible Nav1.5 palmitoylation substrates. A mutation of one of these is associated with cardiac arrhythmia (C981F), induces a significant enhancement of channel closed-state inactivation and ablates sensitivity to depalmitoylation. Our data indicate that alterations in palmitoylation can substantially control Nav1.5 function and cardiac excitability and this form of post-translational modification is likely an important contributor to acquired and congenital arrhythmias.Item Defective BVES-mediated feedback control of cAMP in muscular dystrophy(Springer Nature, 2023-03-30) Li, Haiwen; Wang, Peipei; Zhang, Chen; Zuo, Yuanbojiao; Zhou, Yuan; Han, Renzhi; Pediatrics, School of MedicineBiological processes incorporate feedback mechanisms to enable positive and/or negative regulation. cAMP is an important second messenger involved in many aspects of muscle biology. However, the feedback mechanisms for the cAMP signaling control in skeletal muscle are largely unknown. Here we show that blood vessel epicardial substance (BVES) is a negative regulator of adenylyl cyclase 9 (ADCY9)-mediated cAMP signaling involved in maintaining muscle mass and function. BVES deletion in mice reduces muscle mass and impairs muscle performance, whereas virally delivered BVES expressed in Bves-deficient skeletal muscle reverses these defects. BVES interacts with and negatively regulates ADCY9’s activity. Disruption of BVES-mediated control of cAMP signaling leads to an increased protein kinase A (PKA) signaling cascade, thereby promoting FoxO-mediated ubiquitin proteasome degradation and autophagy initiation. Our study reveals that BVES functions as a negative feedback regulator of ADCY9-cAMP signaling in skeletal muscle, playing an important role in maintaining muscle homeostasis.Item Generation of the organotypic kidney structure by integrating pluripotent stem cell-derived renal stroma(Springer Nature, 2022-02-01) Tanigawa, Shunsuke; Tanaka, Etsuko; Miike, Koichiro; Ohmori, Tomoko; Inoue, Daisuke; Cai, Chen-Leng; Taguchi, Atsuhiro; Kobayashi, Akio; Nishinakamura, Ryuichi; Pediatrics, School of MedicineOrgans consist of the parenchyma and stroma, the latter of which coordinates the generation of organotypic structures. Despite recent advances in organoid technology, induction of organ-specific stroma and recapitulation of complex organ configurations from pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) have remained challenging. By elucidating the in vivo molecular features of the renal stromal lineage at a single-cell resolution level, we herein establish an in vitro induction protocol for stromal progenitors (SPs) from mouse PSCs. When the induced SPs are assembled with two differentially induced parenchymal progenitors (nephron progenitors and ureteric buds), the completely PSC-derived organoids reproduce the complex kidney structure, with multiple types of stromal cells distributed along differentiating nephrons and branching ureteric buds. Thus, integration of PSC-derived lineage-specific stroma into parenchymal organoids will pave the way toward recapitulation of the organotypic architecture and functions.Item Magnetic separation of peripheral nerve-resident cells underscores key molecular features of human Schwann cells and fibroblasts: an immunochemical and transcriptomics approach(Nature Publishing Group, 2020-10-28) Peng, Kaiwen; Sant, David; Andersen, Natalia; Silvera, Risset; Camarena, Vladimir; Piñero, Gonzalo; Graham, Regina; Khan, Aisha; Xu, Xiao-Ming; Wang, Gaofeng; Monje, Paula V.; Neurological Surgery, School of MedicineNerve-derived human Schwann cell (SC) cultures are irreplaceable models for basic and translational research but their use can be limited due to the risk of fibroblast overgrowth. Fibroblasts are an ill-defined population consisting of highly proliferative cells that, contrary to human SCs, do not undergo senescence in culture. We initiated this study by performing an exhaustive immunological and functional characterization of adult nerve-derived human SCs and fibroblasts to reveal their properties and optimize a protocol of magnetic-activated cell sorting (MACS) to separate them effectively both as viable and biologically competent cells. We next used immunofluorescence microscopy imaging, flow cytometry analysis and next generation RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) to unambiguously characterize the post-MACS cell products. High resolution transcriptome profiling revealed the identity of key lineage-specific transcripts and the clearly distinct neural crest and mesenchymal origin of human SCs and fibroblasts, respectively. Our analysis underscored a progenitor- or stem cell-like molecular phenotype in SCs and fibroblasts and the heterogeneity of the fibroblast populations. In addition, pathway analysis of RNA-seq data highlighted putative bidirectional networks of fibroblast-to-SC signaling that predict a complementary, yet seemingly independent contribution of SCs and fibroblasts to nerve regeneration. In sum, combining MACS with immunochemical and transcriptomics approaches provides an ideal workflow to exhaustively assess the identity, the stage of differentiation and functional features of highly purified cells from human peripheral nerve tissues.