Generating high-purity cardiac and endothelial derivatives from patterned mesoderm using human pluripotent stem cells.
Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) provide a valuable model for the study of human development and a means to generate a scalable source of cells for therapeutic applications. This protocol specifies cell fate efficiently into cardiac and endothelial lineages from hPSCs. The protocol takes 2 weeks to complete and requires experience in hPSC culture and differentiation techniques. Building on lessons taken from early development,this monolayer-directed differentiation protocol uses different concentrations of activin A and bone morphogenetic protein 4 (BMP4) to polarize cells into mesodermal subtypes that reflect mid-primitive-streak cardiogenic mesoderm and posterior-primitive-streak hemogenic mesoderm. This differentiation platform provides a basis for generating distinct cardiovascular progenitor populations that enable the derivation of cardiomyocytes and functionally distinct endothelial cell (EC) subtypes from cardiogenic versus hemogenic mesoderm with high efficiency without cell sorting. ECs derived from cardiogenic and hemogenic mesoderm can be matured into textgreater90% CD31(+)/VE-cadherin(+) definitive ECs. To test the functionality of ECs at different stages of differentiation,we provide methods for assaying the blood-forming potential and de novo lumen-forming activity of ECs. To our knowledge,this is the first protocol that provides a common platform for directed differentiation of cardiomyocytes and endothelial subtypes from hPSCs. This protocol yields endothelial differentiation efficiencies exceeding those of previously published protocols. Derivation of these cell types is a critical step toward understanding the basis of disease and generating cells with therapeutic potential.
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Generating human intestinal tissue from pluripotent stem cells in vitro.
Here we describe a protocol for generating 3D human intestinal tissues (called organoids) in vitro from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs). To generate intestinal organoids,pluripotent stem cells are first differentiated into FOXA2(+)SOX17(+) endoderm by treating the cells with activin A for 3 d. After endoderm induction,the pluripotent stem cells are patterned into CDX2(+) mid- and hindgut tissue using FGF4 and WNT3a. During this patterning step,3D mid- or hindgut spheroids bud from the monolayer epithelium attached to the tissue culture dish. The 3D spheroids are further cultured in Matrigel along with prointestinal growth factors,and they proliferate and expand over 1-3 months to give rise to intestinal tissue,complete with intestinal mesenchyme and epithelium comprising all of the major intestinal cell types. To date,this is the only method for efficiently directing the differentiation of hPSCs into 3D human intestinal tissue in vitro.
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Son MY et al. (MAY 2016)
Exp Mol Med 48 5 e232
Generation and characterization of integration-free induced pluripotent stem cells from patients with autoimmune disease
Autoimmune diseases (AIDs),a heterogeneous group of immune-mediated disorders,are a major and growing health problem. Although AIDs are currently treated primarily with anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive drugs,the use of stem cell transplantation in patients with AIDs is becoming increasingly common. However,stem cell transplantation therapy has limitations,including a shortage of available stem cells and immune rejection of cells from nonautologous sources. Induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology,which allows the generation of patient-specific pluripotent stem cells,could offer an alternative source for clinical applications of stem cell therapies in AID patients. We used nonintegrating oriP/EBNA-1-based episomal vectors to reprogram dermal fibroblasts from patients with AIDs such as ankylosing spondylitis (AS),Sjogren's syndrome (SS) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The pluripotency and multilineage differentiation capacity of each patient-specific iPSC line was validated. The safety of these iPSCs for use in stem cell transplantation is indicated by the fact that all AID-specific iPSCs are integrated transgene free. Finally,all AID-specific iPSCs derived in this study could be differentiated into cells of hematopoietic and mesenchymal lineages in vitro as shown by flow cytometric analysis and induction of terminal differentiation potential. Our results demonstrate the successful generation of integration-free iPSCs from patients with AS,SS and SLE. These findings support the possibility of using iPSC technology in autologous and allogeneic cell replacement therapy for various AIDs,including AS,SS and SLE.
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Lee YK et al. ( 2016)
1353 191--213
Generation and characterization of patient-specific iPSC model for cardiovascular disease
Advances in differentiation of cardiomyocytes from human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) were emerged as a tool for modeling of cardiovascular disease that recapitulates the phenotype for the purpose of drug screening,biomarker discovery,and testing of single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) as a modifier for disease stratification. Here,we describe the (1) retroviral reprogramming strategies in the generation of human iPSC,(2) methodology in characterization of iPSC in order to identify the stem cell clones with the best quality,and (3) protocol of cardiac differentiation by modulation of Wnt signaling and $\$-catenin pathway.
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Awe JP et al. (JUL 2013)
Stem cell research & therapy 4 4 87
Generation and characterization of transgene-free human induced pluripotent stem cells and conversion to putative clinical-grade status
INTRODUCTION: The reprogramming of a patient's somatic cells back into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) holds significant promise for future autologous cellular therapeutics. The continued presence of potentially oncogenic transgenic elements following reprogramming,however,represents a safety concern that should be addressed prior to clinical applications. The polycistronic stem cell cassette (STEMCCA),an excisable lentiviral reprogramming vector,provides,in our hands,the most consistent reprogramming approach that addresses this safety concern. Nevertheless,most viral integrations occur in genes,and exactly how the integration,epigenetic reprogramming,and excision of the STEMCCA reprogramming vector influences those genes and whether these cells still have clinical potential are not yet known. METHODS: In this study,we used both microarray and sensitive real-time PCR to investigate gene expression changes following both intron-based reprogramming and excision of the STEMCCA cassette during the generation of human iPSCs from adult human dermal fibroblasts. Integration site analysis was conducted using nonrestrictive linear amplification PCR. Transgene-free iPSCs were fully characterized via immunocytochemistry,karyotyping and teratoma formation,and current protocols were implemented for guided differentiation. We also utilized current good manufacturing practice guidelines and manufacturing facilities for conversion of our iPSCs into putative clinical grade conditions. RESULTS: We found that a STEMCCA-derived iPSC line that contains a single integration,found to be located in an intronic location in an actively transcribed gene,PRPF39,displays significantly increased expression when compared with post-excised stem cells. STEMCCA excision via Cre recombinase returned basal expression levels of PRPF39. These cells were also shown to have proper splicing patterns and PRPF39 gene sequences. We also fully characterized the post-excision iPSCs,differentiated them into multiple clinically relevant cell types (including oligodendrocytes,hepatocytes,and cardiomyocytes),and converted them to putative clinical-grade conditions using the same approach previously approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the conversion of human embryonic stem cells from research-grade to clinical-grade status. CONCLUSION: For the first time,these studies provide a proof-of-principle for the generation of fully characterized transgene-free human iPSCs and,in light of the limited availability of current good manufacturing practice cellular manufacturing facilities,highlight an attractive potential mechanism for converting research-grade cell lines into putatively clinical-grade biologics for personalized cellular therapeutics.
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Ishikawa T et al. (JAN 2012)
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton,N.J.) 826 103--114
Generation and hepatic differentiation of human iPS cells.
A method for the generation of human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells was established. This method employs adenovirus carrying the ecotropic retrovirus receptor mCAT1 and Moloney murine leukemia virus (MMLV)-based retroviral vectors carrying the four transcription factors POU5F1 (OCT3/4),KLF4,SOX2,and MYC (c-Myc) (Masaki H & Ishikawa T Stem Cell Res 1:105-15,2007). The differentiation of human iPS cells into hepatic cells was performed by a stepwise protocol (Song Z et al. Cell Res 19:1233-42,2009). These cells have potential as patient-specific in vitro models for studying disease etiology and could be used in drug discovery programs tailored to deal with genetic variations in drug efficacy and toxicity.
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Douvaras P and Fossati V (AUG 2015)
Nature protocols 10 8 1143--1154
Generation and isolation of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells from human pluripotent stem cells.
In the CNS,oligodendrocytes act as the myelinating cells. Oligodendrocytes have been identified to be key players in several neurodegenerative disorders. This protocol describes a robust,fast and reproducible differentiation protocol to generate human oligodendrocytes from pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) using a chemically defined,growth factor-rich medium. Within 8 d,PSCs differentiate into paired box 6-positive (PAX6(+)) neural stem cells,which give rise to OLIG2(+) progenitors by day 12. Oligodendrocyte lineage transcription factor 2-positive (OLIG2(+)) cells begin to express the transcription factor NKX2.2 around day 18,followed by SRY-box 10 (SOX10) around day 40. Oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) that are positive for the cell surface antigen recognized by the O4 antibody (O4(+)) appear around day 50 and reach,on average,43% of the cell population after 75 d of differentiation. O4(+) OPCs can be isolated by cell sorting for myelination studies,or they can be terminally differentiated to myelin basic protein-positive (MBP(+)) oligodendrocytes. This protocol also describes an alternative strategy for markedly reducing the length and the costs of the differentiation and generating ∼30% O4(+) cells after only 55 d of culture.
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Diekmann U and Naujok O ( 2016)
1341 157--172
Generation and purification of definitive endoderm cells generated from pluripotent stem cells
Differentiation of pluripotent stem cells into cells of the definitive endoderm requires an in vitro gastrulation event. Differentiated somatic cells derived from this germ layer may then be used for cell replacement therapies of degenerative diseases of the liver,lung,and pancreas. Here we describe an endoderm differentiation protocol,which initiates the differentiation from a defined cell number of dispersed single cells and reliably yields in textgreater70-80 % endoderm-committed cells in a short 5-day treatment regimen.
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Carlson AL et al. ( 2016)
Nature communications 7 10862
Generation and transplantation of reprogrammed human neurons in the brain using 3D microtopographic scaffolds.
Cell replacement therapy with human pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons has the potential to ameliorate neurodegenerative dysfunction and central nervous system injuries,but reprogrammed neurons are dissociated and spatially disorganized during transplantation,rendering poor cell survival,functionality and engraftment in vivo. Here,we present the design of three-dimensional (3D) microtopographic scaffolds,using tunable electrospun microfibrous polymeric substrates that promote in situ stem cell neuronal reprogramming,neural network establishment and support neuronal engraftment into the brain. Scaffold-supported,reprogrammed neuronal networks were successfully grafted into organotypic hippocampal brain slices,showing an ∼3.5-fold improvement in neurite outgrowth and increased action potential firing relative to injected isolated cells. Transplantation of scaffold-supported neuronal networks into mouse brain striatum improved survival ∼38-fold at the injection site relative to injected isolated cells,and allowed delivery of multiple neuronal subtypes. Thus,3D microscale biomaterials represent a promising platform for the transplantation of therapeutic human neurons with broad neuro-regenerative relevance.
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Hunihan L et al. (APR 2017)
Stem cell research 20 67--69
Generation of a clonal induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) line expressing the mutant MECP2 allele from a Rett Syndrome patient fibroblast line.
Human fibroblast cells collected from a 3-year old,female Rett Syndrome patient with a 32bp deletion in the X-linked MECP2 gene were obtained from the Coriell Institute. Fibroblasts were reprogrammed to iPSC cells using a Sendai-virus delivery system expressing human KOSM transcription factors. Cell-line pluripotency was demonstrated by gene expression,immunocytochemistry,in-vitro differentiation trilineage capacity and was of normal karyotype. Interestingly,subsequent clones retained the epigenetic memory of the parent fibroblasts allowing for the segregation of wild-type and mutant expressing clones. This MECP2 mutant expressing clone may serve as a model for investigating MECP2 reactivation in Rett's Syndrome.
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Shetty R and Inamdar MS (MAR 2016)
Stem Cell Research 16 2 271--273
Generation of a constitutively expressing Tetracycline repressor (TetR) human embryonic stem cell line BJNhem20-TetR
Human embryonic stem cell line BJNhem20-TetR was generated using non-viral method. The construct pCAG-TetRnls was transfected using microporation procedure. BJNhem20-TetR can subsequently be transfected with any vector harbouring a TetO (Tet operator) sequence to generate doxycycline based inducible line. For example,in human embryonic stem cells,the pSuperior based TetO system has been transfected into a TetR containing line to generate OCT4 knockdown cell line (Zafarana et al.,2009). Thus BJNhem20-TetR can be used as a tool to perturb gene expression in human embryonic stem cells.
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Ruiz S et al. (NOV 2012)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 287 48 40767--40778
Generation of a drug-inducible reporter system to study cell reprogramming in human cells
BACKGROUND Strategies on the basis of doxycycline-inducible lentiviruses in mouse cells allowed the examination of mechanisms governing somatic cell reprogramming. RESULTS Using a doxycycline-inducible human reprogramming system,we identified unreported miRs enhancing reprogramming efficiency. CONCLUSION We generated a drug-inducible human reprogramming reporter system as an invaluable tool for genetic or chemical screenings. SIGNIFICANCE These cellular systems provide a tool to enable the advancement of reprogramming technologies in human cells. Reprogramming of somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem cells is achieved by the expression of defined transcription factors. In the last few years,reprogramming strategies on the basis of doxycycline-inducible lentiviruses in mouse cells became highly powerful for screening purposes when the expression of a GFP gene,driven by the reactivation of endogenous stem cell specific promoters,was used as a reprogramming reporter signal. However,similar reporter systems in human cells have not been generated. Here,we describe the derivation of drug-inducible human fibroblast-like cell lines that express different subsets of reprogramming factors containing a GFP gene under the expression of the endogenous OCT4 promoter. These cell lines can be used to screen functional substitutes for reprogramming factors or modifiers of reprogramming efficiency. As a proof of principle of this system,we performed a screening of a library of pluripotent-enriched microRNAs and identified hsa-miR-519a as a novel inducer of reprogramming efficiency.
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