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Dive into the research topics where Philip H. Schwartz is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip H. Schwartz.


Nature | 2001

Cell culture: Progenitor cells from human brain after death

Theo D. Palmer; Philip H. Schwartz; Philippe Taupin; Brian K. Kaspar; Stuart A. Stein; Fred H. Gage

Culturing neural progenitor cells from the adult rodent brain has become routine and is also possible from human fetal tissue, but expansion of these cells from postnatal and adult human tissue, although preferred for ethical reasons, has encountered problems. Here we describe the isolation and successful propagation of neural progenitor cells from human postmortem tissues and surgical specimens. Although the relative therapeutic merits of adult and fetal progenitor cells still need to be assessed, our results may extend the application of these progenitor cells in the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases.


Nature | 2008

Regulatory networks define phenotypic classes of human stem cell lines

Franz-Josef Müller; Louise C. Laurent; Dennis Kostka; Igor Ulitsky; Roy Williams; Christina Lu; In-Hyun Park; Mahendra Rao; Ron Shamir; Philip H. Schwartz; Nils Ole Schmidt; Jeanne F. Loring

Stem cells are defined as self-renewing cell populations that can differentiate into multiple distinct cell types. However, hundreds of different human cell lines from embryonic, fetal and adult sources have been called stem cells, even though they range from pluripotent cells—typified by embryonic stem cells, which are capable of virtually unlimited proliferation and differentiation—to adult stem cell lines, which can generate a far more limited repertoire of differentiated cell types. The rapid increase in reports of new sources of stem cells and their anticipated value to regenerative medicine has highlighted the need for a general, reproducible method for classification of these cells. We report here the creation and analysis of a database of global gene expression profiles (which we call the ‘stem cell matrix’) that enables the classification of cultured human stem cells in the context of a wide variety of pluripotent, multipotent and differentiated cell types. Using an unsupervised clustering method to categorize a collection of ∼150 cell samples, we discovered that pluripotent stem cell lines group together, whereas other cell types, including brain-derived neural stem cell lines, are very diverse. Using further bioinformatic analysis we uncovered a protein–protein network (PluriNet) that is shared by the pluripotent cells (embryonic stem cells, embryonal carcinomas and induced pluripotent cells). Analysis of published data showed that the PluriNet seems to be a common characteristic of pluripotent cells, including mouse embryonic stem and induced pluripotent cells and human oocytes. Our results offer a new strategy for classifying stem cells and support the idea that pluripotency and self-renewal are under tight control by specific molecular networks.


Nature Medicine | 2007

Stem cells act through multiple mechanisms to benefit mice with neurodegenerative metabolic disease.

Jean Pyo Lee; Mylvaganam Jeyakumar; Rodolfo Gonzalez; Hiroto Takahashi; Pei Jen Lee; Rena C. Baek; Dan Clark; Heather Rose; Gerald Fu; Jonathan Clarke; Scott R. McKercher; Jennifer Meerloo; Franz Josef Müller; Kook In Park; Terry D. Butters; Raymond A. Dwek; Philip H. Schwartz; Gang Tong; David A. Wenger; Stuart A. Lipton; Thomas N. Seyfried; Frances M. Platt; Evan Y. Snyder

Intracranial transplantation of neural stem cells (NSCs) delayed disease onset, preserved motor function, reduced pathology and prolonged survival in a mouse model of Sandhoff disease, a lethal gangliosidosis. Although donor-derived neurons were electrophysiologically active within chimeric regions, the small degree of neuronal replacement alone could not account for the improvement. NSCs also increased brain β-hexosaminidase levels, reduced ganglioside storage and diminished activated microgliosis. Additionally, when oral glycosphingolipid biosynthesis inhibitors (β-hexosaminidase substrate inhibitors) were combined with NSC transplantation, substantial synergy resulted. Efficacy extended to human NSCs, both to those isolated directly from the central nervous system (CNS) and to those derived secondarily from embryonic stem cells. Appreciating that NSCs exhibit a broad repertoire of potentially therapeutic actions, of which neuronal replacement is but one, may help in formulating rational multimodal strategies for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2003

Isolation and characterization of neural progenitor cells from post-mortem human cortex

Philip H. Schwartz; Peter J. Bryant; Tannin J. Fuja; Hailing Su; Diane K. O'Dowd; Henry Klassen

Post‐mortem human brain tissue represents a vast potential source of neural progenitor cells for use in basic research as well as therapeutic applications. Here we describe five human neural progenitor cell cultures derived from cortical tissue harvested from premature infants. Time‐lapse videomicrography of the passaged cultures revealed them to be highly dynamic, with high motility and extensive, evanescent intercellular contacts. Karyotyping revealed normal chromosomal complements. Prior to differentiation, most of the cells were nestin, Sox2, vimentin, and/or GFAP positive, and a subpopulation was doublecortin positive. Multilineage potential of these cells was demonstrated after differentiation, with some subpopulations of cells expressing the neuronal markers β‐tubulin, MAP2ab, NeuN, FMRP, and Tau and others expressing the oligodendroglial marker O1. Still other cells expressed the classic glial marker glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). RT‐PCR confirmed nestin, SOX2, GFAP, and doublecortin expression and also showed epidermal growth factor receptor and nucleostemin expression during the expansion phase. Flow cytometry showed high levels of the neural stem cell markers CD133, CD44, CD81, CD184, CD90, and CD29. CD133 markedly decreased in high‐passage, lineage‐restricted cultures. Electrophysiological analysis after differentiation demonstrated that the majority of cells with neuronal morphology expressed voltage‐gated sodium and potassium currents. These data suggest that post‐mortem human brain tissue is an important source of neural progenitor cells that will be useful for analysis of neural differentiation and for transplantation studies.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2006

Regulation of Human Neural Precursor Cells by Laminin and Integrins

Lisa A. Flanagan; Liza M. Rebaza; Stanislava Derzic; Philip H. Schwartz; Edwin S. Monuki

Deciphering the factors that regulate human neural stem cells will greatly aid in their use as models of development and as therapeutic agents. The extracellular matrix (ECM) is a component of stem cell niches in vivo and regulates multiple functions in diverse cell types, yet little is known about its effects on human neural stem/precursor cells (NSPCs). We therefore plated human NSPCs on four different substrates (poly‐L‐ornithine, fibronectin, laminin, and matrigel) and compared their responses with those of mouse NSPCs. Compared with the other substrates, laminin matrices enhanced NSPC migration, expansion, differentiation into neurons and astrocytes, and elongation of neurites from NSPC‐derived neurons. Laminin had a similar spectrum of effects on both human and mouse cells, highlighting the evolutionary conservation of NSPC regulation by this component of the ECM. Flow cytometry revealed that human NSPCs express on their cell surfaces the laminin‐binding integrins α3, α6, α7, β1, and β4, and function‐blocking antibodies to the α6 subunit confirmed a role for integrins in laminin‐dependent migration of human NSPCs. These results define laminin and its integrin receptors as key regulators of human NSPCs.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2007

Oxygen tension controls the expansion of human CNS precursors and the generation of astrocytes and oligodendrocytes

Francesca Pistollato; Hui‐Ling Chen; Philip H. Schwartz; Giuseppe Basso; David M. Panchision

Human neural precursor proliferation and potency is limited by senescence and loss of oligodendrocyte potential. We found that in vitro expansion of human postnatal brain CD133(+) nestin(+) precursors is enhanced at 5% oxygen, while raising oxygen tension to 20% depletes precursors and promotes astrocyte differentiation even in the presence of mitogens. Higher cell densities yielded more astrocytes regardless of oxygen tension. This was reversed by noggin at 5%, but not 20%, oxygen due to a novel repressive effect of low oxygen on bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling. When induced to differentiate by mitogen withdrawal, 5% oxygen-expanded precursors generated 17-fold more oligodendrocytes than cells expanded in 20% oxygen. When precursors were expanded at 5% oxygen and then differentiated at 20% oxygen, oligodendrocyte maturation was further enhanced 2.5-fold. These results indicate that dynamic control of oxygen tension regulates different steps in fate and maturation and may be crucial for treating neurodegenerative diseases.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2004

Isolation of Retinal Progenitor Cells From Post-Mortem Human Tissue and Comparison With Autologous Brain Progenitors

Henry Klassen; Boback Ziaeian; Ivan Kirov; Michael J. Young; Philip H. Schwartz

The goal of the present study was threefold: to determine whether viable human retinal progenitor cells (hRPCs) could be obtained from cadaveric retinal tissue, to evaluate marker expression by these cells, and to compare hRPCs to human brain progenitor cells (hBPCs). Retinas were dissected from post‐mortem premature infants, enzymatically dissociated, and grown in the presence of epidermal growth factor and basic fibroblast growth factor. The cells grew as suspended spheres or adherent monolayers, depending on culture conditions. Expanded populations were banked or harvested for analysis by RT‐PCR, immunocytochemistry, and flow cytometry. hBPCs derived from forebrain specimens from the same donors were grown and used for RT‐PCR. Post‐mortem human retinal specimens yielded viable cultures that grew to confluence repeatedly, although not beyond 3 months. Cultured hRPCs expressed a range of markers consistent with CNS progenitor cells, including nestin, vimentin, Sox2, Ki‐67, GD2 ganglioside, and CD15 (Lewis X), as well as the tetraspanins CD9 and CD81, CD95 (Fas), and MHC class I antigens. No MHC class II expression was detected. hRPCs, but not hBPCs, expressed Dach1, Pax6, Six3, Six6, and recoverin. Minority subpopulations of hRPCs and hBPCs expressed doublecortin, β‐III tubulin, and glial fibrillary acidic protein, which is consistent with increased lineage restriction in subsets of cultured cells. Viable progenitor cells can be cultured from the post‐mortem retina of premature infants and exhibit a gene expression profile consistent with immature neuroepithelial cells. hRPCs can be distinguished from hBPC cultures by the expression of retinal specification genes and recoverin.


Methods | 2008

Differentiation of neural lineage cells from human pluripotent stem cells.

Philip H. Schwartz; David J. Brick; Alexander E. Stover; Jeanne F. Loring; Franz Josef Müller

Human pluripotent stem cells have the unique properties of being able to proliferate indefinitely in their undifferentiated state and to differentiate into any somatic cell type. These cells are thus posited to be extremely useful for furthering our understanding of both normal and abnormal human development, providing a human cell preparation that can be used to screen for new reagents or therapeutic agents, and generating large numbers of differentiated cells that can be used for transplantation purposes. Critical among the applications for the latter are diseases and injuries of the nervous system, medical approaches to which have been, to date, primarily palliative in nature. Differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells into cells of the neural lineage, therefore, has become a central focus of a number of laboratories. This has resulted in the description in the literature of several dozen methods for neural cell differentiation from human pluripotent stem cells. Among these are methods for the generation of such divergent neural cells as dopaminergic neurons, retinal neurons, ventral motoneurons, and oligodendroglial progenitors. In this review, we attempt to fully describe most of these methods, breaking them down into five basic subdivisions: (1) starting material, (2) induction of loss of pluripotency, (3) neural induction, (4) neural maintenance and expansion, and (5) neuronal/glial differentiation. We also show data supporting the concept that undifferentiated human pluripotent stem cells appear to have an innate neural differentiation potential. In addition, we evaluate data comparing and contrasting neural stem cells differentiated from human pluripotent stem cells with those derived directly from the human brain.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Neonatal Neural Progenitor Cells and Their Neuronal and Glial Cell Derivatives Are Fully Permissive for Human Cytomegalovirus Infection

Min-Hua Luo; Philip H. Schwartz; Elizabeth A. Fortunato

ABSTRACT Congenital human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) infection causes central nervous system structural abnormalities and functional disorders, affecting both astroglia and neurons with a pathogenesis that is only marginally understood. To better understand HCMVs interactions with such clinically important cell types, we utilized neural progenitor cells (NPCs) derived from neonatal autopsy tissue, which can be differentiated down either glial or neuronal pathways. Studies were performed using two viral isolates, Towne (laboratory adapted) and TR (a clinical strain), at a multiplicity of infection of 3. NPCs were fully permissive for both strains, expressing the full range of viral antigens (Ags) and producing relatively large numbers of infectious virions. NPCs infected with TR showed delayed development of cytopathic effects (CPE) and replication centers and shed less virus. This pattern of delay for TR infections held true for all cell types tested. Differentiation of NPCs was carried out for 21 days to obtain either astroglia (>95% GFAP+) or a 1:5 mixed neuron/astroglia population (β-tubulin III+/GFAP+). We found that both of these differentiated populations were fully permissive for HCMV infection and produced substantial numbers of infectious virions. Utilizing a difference in plating efficiencies, we were able to enrich the neuron population to ∼80% β-tubulin III+ cells. These β-tubulin III+-enriched populations remained fully permissive for infection but were very slow to develop CPE. These infected enriched neurons survived longer than either NPCs or astroglia, and a small proportion were alive until at least 14 days postinfection. These surviving cells were all β-tubulin III+ and showed viral Ag expression. Surprisingly, some cells still exhibited extended processes, similar to mock-infected neurons. Our findings strongly suggest neurons as reservoirs for HCMV within the developing brain.


Stem Cells | 2009

Hypoxia and HIF1α Repress the Differentiative Effects of BMPs in High-Grade Glioma†‡§

Francesca Pistollato; Hui‐Ling Chen; Brian R. Rood; Huizhen Zhang; Domenico D'Avella; Luca Denaro; Marina Gardiman; Geertruy te Kronnie; Philip H. Schwartz; Elena Favaro; Stefano Indraccolo; Giuseppe Basso; David M. Panchision

Hypoxia commonly occurs in solid tumors of the central nervous system (CNS) and often interferes with therapies designed to stop their growth. We found that pediatric high‐grade glioma (HGG)‐derived precursors showed greater expansion under lower oxygen tension, typical of solid tumors, than normal CNS precursors. Hypoxia inhibited p53 activation and subsequent astroglial differentiation of HGG precursors. Surprisingly, although HGG precursors generated endogenous bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling that promoted mitotic arrest under high oxygen tension, this signaling was actively repressed by hypoxia. An acute increase in oxygen tension led to Smad activation within 30 minutes, even in the absence of exogenous BMP treatment. Treatment with BMPs further promoted astroglial differentiation or death of HGG precursors under high oxygen tension, but this effect was inhibited under hypoxic conditions. Silencing of hypoxia‐inducible factor 1α (HIF1α) led to Smad activation even under hypoxic conditions, indicating that HIF1α is required for BMP repression. Conversely, BMP activation at high oxygen tension led to reciprocal degradation of HIF1α; this BMP‐induced degradation was inhibited in low oxygen. These results show a novel, mutually antagonistic interaction of hypoxia‐response and neural differentiation signals in HGG proliferation, and suggest differences between normal and HGG precursors that may be exploited for pediatric brain cancer therapy. STEM CELLS 2009;27:7–17

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Henry Klassen

University of California

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Hubert E. Nethercott

Children's Hospital of Orange County

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Alexander E. Stover

Children's Hospital of Orange County

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David J. Brick

Children's Hospital of Orange County

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Boback Ziaeian

Children's Hospital of Orange County

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Michael J. Young

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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Min-Hua Luo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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