Woolnough JL et al. ( 2016)
PLoS ONE 11 6 e0157276
The regulation of rRNA gene transcription during directed differentiation of human embryonic stem cells
It has become increasingly clear that proper cellular control of pluripotency and differentiation is related to the regulation of rRNA synthesis. To further our understanding of the role that the regulation of rRNA synthesis has in pluripotency we monitored rRNA synthesis during the directed differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). We discovered that the rRNA synthesis rate is reduced ˜50% within 6 hours of ACTIVIN A treatment. This precedes reductions in expression of specific stem cell markers and increases in expression of specific germ layer markers. The reduction in rRNA synthesis is concomitant with dissociation of the Pol I transcription factor,UBTF,from the rRNA gene promoter and precedes any increase to heterochromatin throughout the rRNA gene. To directly investigate the role of rRNA synthesis in pluripotency,hESCs were treated with the Pol I inhibitor,CX-5461. The direct reduction of rRNA synthesis by CX-5461 induces the expression of markers for all three germ layers,reduces the expression of pluripotency markers,and is overall similar to the ACTIVIN A induced changes. This work indicates that the dissociation of UBTF from the rRNA gene,and corresponding reduction in transcription,represent early regulatory events during the directed differentiation of pluripotent stem cells.
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Du C et al. (JUN 2016)
Advanced healthcare materials 5 16 2080--2091
Functional Kidney Bioengineering with Pluripotent Stem-Cell-Derived Renal Progenitor Cells and Decellularized Kidney Scaffolds
Recent advances in developmental biology and stem cell technology have led to the engineering of functional organs in a dish. However,the limited size of these organoids and absence of a large circulatory system poses limits to its clinical translation. To overcome these issues,decellularized whole kidney scaffolds with native microstructure and extracellular matrix (ECM) are employed for kidney bioengineering,using human-induced pluripotent-stem-cell-derived renal progenitor cells and endothelial cells. To demonstrate ECM-guided cellular assembly,the present work is focused on generating the functional unit of the kidney,the glomerulus. In the repopulated organ,the presence of endothelial cells broadly upregulates the expression level of genes related to renal development. When the cellularized native scaffolds are implanted in SCID mice,glomeruli assembly can be achieved by co-culture of the renal progenitors and endothelial cells. These individual glomerular units are shown to be functional in the context of the whole organ using a simulated bio-reactor set-up with urea and creatinine excretion and albumin reabsorption. Our results indicate that the repopulation of decellularized native kidney using clinically relevant,expandable patient-specific renal progenitors and endothelial cells may be a viable approach for the generation of a functional whole kidney.
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Niu X et al. (JUN 2016)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 291 32 16576--16585
Combining single strand oligodeoxynucleotides and CRISPR/Cas9 to correct gene mutations in ??-thalassemia-induced pluripotent stem sells
$$-Thalassemia ($$-Thal) is one of the most common genetic diseases in the world. The generation of patient-specific $$-Thal-induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs),correction of the disease-causing mutations in those cells,and then differentiation into hematopoietic stem cells offers a new therapeutic strategy for this disease. Here,we designed a CRISPR/Cas9 to specifically target the Homo sapiens hemoglobin $$ (HBB) gene CD41/42(-CTTT) mutation. We demonstrated that the combination of single strand oligodeoxynucleotides with CRISPR/Cas9 was capable of correcting the HBB gene CD41/42 mutation in $$-Thal iPSCs. After applying a correction-specific PCR assay to purify the corrected clones followed by sequencing to confirm mutation correction,we verified that the purified clones retained full pluripotency and exhibited normal karyotyping. Additionally,whole-exome sequencing showed that the mutation load to the exomes was minimal after CRISPR/Cas9 targeting. Furthermore,the corrected iPSCs were selected for erythroblast differentiation and restored the expression of HBB protein compared with the parental iPSCs. This method provides an efficient and safe strategy to correct the HBB gene mutation in $$-Thal iPSCs.
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Kang S-JJ et al. (JUN 2016)
Cell Biology and Toxicology 1--15
Chemically induced hepatotoxicity in human stem cell-induced hepatocytes compared with primary hepatocytes and HepG2
Stem cell-induced hepatocytes (SC-iHeps) have been suggested as a valuable model for evaluating drug toxicology. Here,human-induced pluripotent stem cells (QIA7) and embryonic stem cells (WA01) were differentiated into hepatocytes,and the hepatotoxic effects of acetaminophen (AAP) and aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) were compared with primary hepatocytes (p-Heps) and HepG2. In a cytotoxicity assay,the IC50 of SC-iHeps was similar to that in p-Heps and HepG2 in the AAP groups but different from that in p-Heps of the AFB1 groups. In a multi-parameter assay,phenotypic changes in mitochondrial membrane potential,calcium influx and oxidative stress were similar between QIA7-iHeps and p-Heps following AAP and AFB1 treatment but relatively low in WA01-iHeps and HepG2. Most hepatic functional markers (hepatocyte-specific genes,albumin/urea secretion,and the CYP450 enzyme activity) were decreased in a dose-dependent manner following AAP and AFB1 treatment in SC-iHeps and p-Heps but not in HepG2. Regarding CYP450 inhibition,the cell viability of SC-iHeps and p-Heps was increased by ketoconazole,a CYP3A4 inhibitor. Collectively,SC-iHeps and p-Heps showed similar cytotoxicity and hepatocyte functional effects for AAP and AFB1 compared with HepG2. Therefore,SC-iHeps have phenotypic characteristics and sensitivity to cytotoxic chemicals that are more similar to p-Heps than to HepG2 cells.
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Bhadriraju K et al. (JUL 2016)
Stem Cell Research 17 1 122--129
Large-scale time-lapse microscopy of Oct4 expression in human embryonic stem cell colonies
Identification and quantification of the characteristics of stem cell preparations is critical for understanding stem cell biology and for the development and manufacturing of stem cell based therapies. We have developed image analysis and visualization software that allows effective use of time-lapse microscopy to provide spatial and dynamic information from large numbers of human embryonic stem cell colonies. To achieve statistically relevant sampling,we examined textgreater 680 colonies from 3 different preparations of cells over 5 days each,generating a total experimental dataset of 0.9 terabyte (TB). The 0.5 Giga-pixel images at each time point were represented by multi-resolution pyramids and visualized using the Deep Zoom Javascript library extended to support viewing Giga-pixel images over time and extracting data on individual colonies. We present a methodology that enables quantification of variations in nominally-identical preparations and between colonies,correlation of colony characteristics with Oct4 expression,and identification of rare events.
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Zheng X et al. (JUN 2016)
eLife 5 JUN2016
Metabolic reprogramming during neuronal differentiation from aerobic glycolysis to neuronal oxidative phosphorylation.
How metabolism is reprogrammed during neuronal differentiation is unknown. We found that the loss of hexokinase (HK2) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDHA) expression,together with a switch in pyruvate kinase gene splicing from PKM2 to PKM1,marks the transition from aerobic glycolysis in neural progenitor cells (NPC) to neuronal oxidative phosphorylation. The protein levels of c-MYC and N-MYC,transcriptional activators of the HK2 and LDHA genes,decrease dramatically. Constitutive expression of HK2 and LDHA during differentiation leads to neuronal cell death,indicating that the shut-off aerobic glycolysis is essential for neuronal survival. The metabolic regulators PGC-1α and ERRγ increase significantly upon neuronal differentiation to sustain the transcription of metabolic and mitochondrial genes,whose levels are unchanged compared to NPCs,revealing distinct transcriptional regulation of metabolic genes in the proliferation and post-mitotic differentiation states. Mitochondrial mass increases proportionally with neuronal mass growth,indicating an unknown mechanism linking mitochondrial biogenesis to cell size.
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Gualandi C et al. (JUN 2016)
Macromolecular Bioscience
Poly-l-Lactic Acid Nanofiber-Polyamidoamine Hydrogel Composites: Preparation, Properties, and Preliminary Evaluation as Scaffolds for Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Culturing
Electrospun poly-l-lactic acid (PLLA) nanofiber mats carrying surface amine groups,previously introduced by nitrogen atmospheric pressure nonequilibrium plasma,are embedded into aqueous solutions of oligomeric acrylamide-end capped AGMA1,a biocompatible polyamidoamine with arg-gly-asp (RGD)-reminiscent repeating units. The resultant mixture is finally cured giving PLLA-AGMA1 hydrogel composites that absorb large amounts of water and,in the swollen state,are translucent,soft,and pliable,yet as strong as the parent PLLA mat. They do not split apart from each other when swollen in water and remain highly flexible and resistant,since the hydrogel portion is covalently grafted onto the PLLA nanofibers via the addition reaction of the surface amine groups to a part of the terminal acrylic double bonds of AGMA1 oligomers. Preliminary tested as scaffolds,the composites prove capable of maintaining short-term undifferentiated cultures of human pluripotent stem cells in feeder-free conditions.
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Hyslop LA et al. (JUN 2016)
Nature 534 7607 383--386
Towards clinical application of pronuclear transfer to prevent mitochondrial DNA disease.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations are maternally inherited and are associated with a broad range of debilitating and fatal diseases. Reproductive technologies designed to uncouple the inheritance of mtDNA from nuclear DNA may enable affected women to have a genetically related child with a greatly reduced risk of mtDNA disease. Here we report the first preclinical studies on pronuclear transplantation (PNT). Surprisingly,techniques used in proof-of-concept studies involving abnormally fertilized human zygotes were not well tolerated by normally fertilized zygotes. We have therefore developed an alternative approach based on transplanting pronuclei shortly after completion of meiosis rather than shortly before the first mitotic division. This promotes efficient development to the blastocyst stage with no detectable effect on aneuploidy or gene expression. After optimization,mtDNA carryover was reduced to textless2% in the majority (79%) of PNT blastocysts. The importance of reducing carryover to the lowest possible levels is highlighted by a progressive increase in heteroplasmy in a stem cell line derived from a PNT blastocyst with 4% mtDNA carryover. We conclude that PNT has the potential to reduce the risk of mtDNA disease,but it may not guarantee prevention.
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Lin L et al. (JUN 2016)
Cell Reports 15 11 2411--2426
Molecular Features Underlying Neurodegeneration Identified through In Vitro Modeling of Genetically Diverse Parkinson's Disease Patients
The fact that Parkinson's disease (PD) can arise from numerous genetic mutations suggests a unifying molecular pathology underlying the various genetic backgrounds. To address this hypothesis,we took an integrated approach utilizing in vitro disease modeling and comprehensive transcriptome profiling to advance our understanding of PD progression and the concordant downstream signaling pathways across divergent genetic predispositions. To model PD in vitro,we generated neurons harboring disease-causing mutations from patient-specific,induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). We observed signs of degeneration in midbrain dopaminergic neurons,reflecting the cardinal feature of PD. Gene expression signatures of PD neurons provided molecular insights into disease phenotypes observed in vitro,including oxidative stress vulnerability and altered neuronal activity. Notably,PD neurons show that elevated RBFOX1,a gene previously linked to neurodevelopmental diseases,underlies a pattern of alternative RNA-processing associated with PD-specific phenotypes.
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Kim B-Y et al. ( 2016)
Experimental & molecular medicine 48 6 e237
Concurrent progress of reprogramming and gene correction to overcome therapeutic limitation of mutant ALK2-iPSC.
Fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP) syndrome is caused by mutation of the gene ACVR1,encoding a constitutive active bone morphogenetic protein type I receptor (also called ALK2) to induce heterotopic ossification in the patient. To genetically correct it,we attempted to generate the mutant ALK2-iPSCs (mALK2-iPSCs) from FOP-human dermal fibroblasts. However,the mALK2 leads to inhibitory pluripotency maintenance,or impaired clonogenic potential after single-cell dissociation as an inevitable step,which applies gene-correction tools to induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). Thus,current iPSC-based gene therapy approach reveals a limitation that is not readily applicable to iPSCs with ALK2 mutation. Here we developed a simplified one-step procedure by simultaneously introducing reprogramming and gene-editing components into human fibroblasts derived from patient with FOP syndrome,and genetically treated it. The mixtures of reprogramming and gene-editing components are composed of reprogramming episomal vectors,CRISPR/Cas9-expressing vectors and single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotide harboring normal base to correct ALK2 c.617GtextgreaterA. The one-step-mediated ALK2 gene-corrected iPSCs restored global gene expression pattern,as well as mineralization to the extent of normal iPSCs. This procedure not only helps save time,labor and costs but also opens up a new paradigm that is beyond the current application of gene-editing methodologies,which is hampered by inhibitory pluripotency-maintenance requirements,or vulnerability of single-cell-dissociated iPSCs.
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Bahl V et al. (JUN 2016)
Toxicological sciences : an official journal of the Society of Toxicology 153 1 kfw102
From the Cover: Thirdhand Cigarette Smoke Causes Stress-Induced Mitochondrial Hyperfusion and Alters the Transcriptional Profile of Stem Cells.
Thirdhand cigarette smoke (THS) was recently recognized as an environmental health hazard; however,little is known about it effects on cells. Mitochondria are sensitive monitors of cell health and report on environmentally-induced stress. We tested the effects of low levels of THS extracted from terry cloth on mitochondrial morphology and function using stem cells with well-defined mitochondria. Concentrations of THS that did not kill cells caused stress-induced mitochondrial hyperfusion (SIMH),which was characterized by changes in mitochondrial morphology indicative of fusion,increased mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP),increased ATP levels,increased superoxide production,and increased oxidation of mitochondrial proteins. SIMH was accompanied by a decrease in Fis1 expression,a gene responsible for mitochondrial fission,and a decrease in apoptosis-related genes,including Aifm2,Bbc3 and Bid There was also down regulation of Ucp2,Ucp4 and Ucp5,genes that decrease MMP thereby reducing oxidative phosphorylation,while promoting glycolysis. These effects,which collectively accompany SIMH,are a pro-survival mechanism to rescue damaged mitochondria and protect cells from apoptosis. Prolonged exposure to THS caused a reduction in MMP and decreased cell proliferation,which likely leads to apoptosis.
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Pfaender S et al. ( 2016)
Neural plasticity 2016 ID 3760702 1--15
Cellular Zinc Homeostasis Contributes to Neuronal Differentiation in Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells.
Disturbances in neuronal differentiation and function are an underlying factor of many brain disorders. Zinc homeostasis and signaling are important mediators for a normal brain development and function,given that zinc deficiency was shown to result in cognitive and emotional deficits in animal models that might be associated with neurodevelopmental disorders. One underlying mechanism of the observed detrimental effects of zinc deficiency on the brain might be impaired proliferation and differentiation of stem cells participating in neurogenesis. Thus,to examine the molecular mechanisms regulating zinc metabolism and signaling in differentiating neurons,using a protocol for motor neuron differentiation,we characterized the expression of zinc homeostasis genes during neurogenesis using human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and evaluated the influence of altered zinc levels on the expression of zinc homeostasis genes,cell survival,cell fate,and neuronal function. Our results show that zinc transporters are highly regulated genes during neuronal differentiation and that low zinc levels are associated with decreased cell survival,altered neuronal differentiation,and,in particular,synaptic function. We conclude that zinc deficiency in a critical time window during brain development might influence brain function by modulating neuronal differentiation.
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