Richardson T et al. (DEC 2013)
Tissue Engineering: Part A 20 23-24 Epub ahead of print
Alginate encapsulation of human embryonic stem cells to enhance directed differentiation to pancreatic islet-like cells
The pluripotent property of hESCs makes them attractive for treatment of degenerative diseases such as diabetes. We have developed a stage-wise directed differentiation protocol to produce alginate-encapsulated islet-like cells derived from hESCs,which can be directly implanted for diabetes therapy. The advantage of alginate encapsulation lies in its capability to immunoisolate,along with the added possibility of scalable culture. We have evaluated the possibility of encapsulating hESCs at different stages of differentiation. Encapsulation of predifferentiated cells resulted in insufficient cellular yield and differentiation. On the other hand,encapsulation of undifferentiated hESCs followed by differentiation induction upon encapsulation,resulted in the highest viability and differentiation. More striking was that alginate encapsulation resulted in a much stronger differentiation compared to parallel 2D cultures,resulting in 20-fold increase in c-peptide protein synthesis. To elucidate the mechanism contributing to encapsulation-mediated enhancement in hESC maturation,investigation of the signaling pathways revealed interesting insight. While the phospho-protein levels of all the tested signaling molecules were lower under encapsulation,the ratio of pSMAD/pAKT was significantly higher,indicating a more efficient signal transduction under encapsulation. These results clearly demonstrate that alginate encapsulation of hESCs and differentiation to islet-cells types provides a potentially translatable treatment option for type1 diabetes.
View Publication
Durruthy-Durruthy J et al. (APR 2014)
PLoS ONE 9 4 e94231
Rapid and efficient conversion of integration-free human induced pluripotent stem cells to GMP-grade culture conditions
Data suggest that clinical applications of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) will be realized. Nonetheless,clinical applications will require hiPSCs that are free of exogenous DNA and that can be manufactured through Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP). Optimally,derivation of hiPSCs should be rapid and efficient in order to minimize manipulations,reduce potential for accumulation of mutations and minimize financial costs. Previous studies reported the use of modified synthetic mRNAs to reprogram fibroblasts to a pluripotent state. Here,we provide an optimized,fully chemically defined and feeder-free protocol for the derivation of hiPSCs using synthetic mRNAs. The protocol results in derivation of fully reprogrammed hiPSC lines from adult dermal fibroblasts in less than two weeks. The hiPSC lines were successfully tested for their identity,purity,stability and safety at a GMP facility and cryopreserved. To our knowledge,as a proof of principle,these are the first integration-free iPSCs lines that were reproducibly generated through synthetic mRNA reprogramming that could be putatively used for clinical purposes.
View Publication
Tan H-K et al. (MAY 2014)
Stem cells translational medicine 3 5 586--98
Human finger-prick induced pluripotent stem cells facilitate the development of stem cell banking.
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from somatic cells of patients can be a good model for studying human diseases and for future therapeutic regenerative medicine. Current initiatives to establish human iPSC (hiPSC) banking face challenges in recruiting large numbers of donors with diverse diseased,genetic,and phenotypic representations. In this study,we describe the efficient derivation of transgene-free hiPSCs from human finger-prick blood. Finger-prick sample collection can be performed on a do-it-yourself" basis by donors and sent to the hiPSC facility for reprogramming. We show that single-drop volumes of finger-prick samples are sufficient for performing cellular reprogramming�
View Publication
ndrea de Oliveira Georges JA et al. (AUG 2014)
Stem cell reviews 10 4 472--479
Aberrant patterns of X chromosome inactivation in a new line of human embryonic stem cells established in physiological oxygen concentrations
One of the differences between murine and human embryonic stem cells (ESCs) is the epigenetic state of the X chromosomes in female lines. Murine ESCs (mESCs) present two transcriptionally active Xs that will undergo the dosage compensation process of XCI upon differentiation,whereas most human ESCs (hESCs) spontaneously inactivate one X while keeping their pluripotency. Whether this reflects differences in embryonic development of mice and humans,or distinct culture requirements for the two kinds of pluripotent cells is not known. Recently it has been shown that hESCs established in physiological oxygen levels are in a stable pre-XCI state equivalent to that of mESCs,suggesting that culture in low oxygen concentration is enough to preserve that epigenetic state of the X chromosomes. Here we describe the establishment of two new lines of hESCs under physiological oxygen level and the characterization of the XCI state in the 46,XX line BR-5. We show that a fraction of undifferentiated cells present XIST RNA accumulation and single H3K27me foci,characteristic of the inactive X. Moreover,analysis of allele specific gene expression suggests that pluripotent BR-5 cells present completely skewed XCI. Our data indicate that physiological levels of oxygen are not sufficient for the stabilization of the pre-XCI state in hESCs.
View Publication
Qu Q et al. (MAR 2014)
Nature communications 5 3449
High-efficiency motor neuron differentiation from human pluripotent stem cells and the function of Islet-1.
Efficient derivation of large-scale motor neurons (MNs) from human pluripotent stem cells is central to the understanding of MN development,modelling of MN disorders in vitro and development of cell-replacement therapies. Here we develop a method for rapid (20 days) and highly efficient (˜70%) differentiation of mature and functional MNs from human pluripotent stem cells by tightly modulating neural patterning temporally at a previously undefined primitive neural progenitor stage. This method also allows high-yield (textgreater250%) MN production in chemically defined adherent cultures. Furthermore,we show that Islet-1 is essential for formation of mature and functional human MNs,but,unlike its mouse counterpart,does not regulate cell survival or suppress the V2a interneuron fate. Together,our discoveries improve the strategy for MN derivation,advance our understanding of human neural specification and MN development,and provide invaluable tools for human developmental studies,drug discovery and regenerative medicine.
View Publication
Weng Z et al. (JUL 2014)
Stem cells and development 23 14 1704--1716
A simple, cost-effective but highly efficient system for deriving ventricular cardiomyocytes from human pluripotent stem cells.
Self-renewable human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) serve as a potential unlimited ex vivo source of human cardiomyocytes (CMs) for cell-based disease modeling and therapies. Although recent advances in directed differentiation protocols have enabled more efficient derivation of hPSC-derived CMs with an efficiency of ∼50%-80% CMs and a final yield of ∼1-20 CMs per starting undifferentiated hPSC,these protocols are often not readily transferrable across lines without first optimizing multiple parameters. Further,the resultant populations are undefined for chamber specificity or heterogeneous containing mixtures of atrial,ventricular (V),and pacemaker derivatives. Here we report a highly cost-effective and reproducibly efficient system for deriving hPSC-ventricular cardiomyocytes (VCMs) from all five human embryonic stem cell (HES2,H7,and H9) and human induced PSC (hiPSC) (reprogrammed from human adult peripheral blood CD34(+) cells using nonintegrating episomal vectors) lines tested. Cardiogenic embryoid bodies could be formed by the sequential addition of BMP4,Rho kinase inhibitor,activin-A,and IWR-1. Spontaneously contracting clusters appeared as early as day 8. At day 16,up to 95% of cells were cTnT(+). Of which,93%,94%,100%,92%,and 92% of cardiac derivatives from HES2,H7,H9,and two iPSC lines,respectively,were VCMs as gauged by signature ventricular action potential and ionic currents (INa(+)/ICa,L(+)/IKr(+)/IKATP(+)); Ca(2+) transients showed positive chronotropic responses to $\$-adrenergic stimulation. Our simple,cost-effective protocol required the least amounts of reagents and time compared with others. While the purity and percentage of PSC-VCMs were comparable to a recently published protocol,the present yield and efficiency with a final output of up to 70 hPSC-VCMs per hPSC was up to 5-fold higher and without the need of performing line-specific optimization. These differences were discussed. The results may lead to mass production of hPSC-VCMs in bioreactors.
View Publication
Park Y et al. (MAR 2014)
Journal of Biotechnology 174 1 39--48
Hepatic differentiation of human embryonic stem cells on microcarriers
Translation of stem cell research to industrial and clinical settings mostly requires large quantities of cells,especially those involving large organs such as the liver. A scalable reactor system is desirable to ensure a reliable supply of sufficient quantities of differentiated cells. To increase the culture efficiency in bioreactor system,high surface to volume ratio needs to be achieved. We employed a microcarrier culture system for the expansion of undifferentiated human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) as well as for directed differentiation of these cells to hepatocyte-like cells. Cells in single cell suspension were attached to the bead surface in even distribution and were expanded to 1??106cells/ml within 2 days of hESC culture with maintenance of the level of pluripotency markers. Directed differentiation into hepatocyte-like cells on microcarriers,both in static culture and stirred bioreactors,induced similar levels of hepatocyte-like cell differentiation as observed with cells cultured in conventional tissue culture plates. The cells expressed both immature and mature hepatocyte-lineage genes and proteins such as asialoglycoprotein receptor-1 (ASGPR-1) and albumin. Differentiated cells exhibited functional characteristics such as secretion of albumin and urea,and CYP3A4 activity could be detected. Microcarriers thus offer the potential for large-scale expansion and differentiation of hESCs induced hepatocyte-like cells in a more controllable bioreactor environment. ?? 2014.
View Publication
Temporal impact of substrate mechanics on differentiation of human embryonic stem cells to cardiomyocytes
A significant clinical need exists to differentiate human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) into cardiomyocytes,enabling tissue modeling for in vitro discovery of new drugs or cell-based therapies for heart repair in vivo. Chemical and mechanical microenvironmental factors are known to impact the efficiency of stem cell differentiation,but cardiac differentiation protocols in hPSCs are typically performed on rigid tissue culture polystyrene (TCPS) surfaces,which do not present a physiological mechanical setting. To investigate the temporal effects of mechanics on cardiac differentiation,we cultured human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and their derivatives on polyacrylamide hydrogel substrates with a physiologically relevant range of stiffnesses. In directed differentiation and embryoid body culture systems,differentiation of hESCs to cardiac troponin T-expressing (cTnT+) cardiomyocytes peaked on hydrogels of intermediate stiffness. Brachyury expression also peaked on intermediate stiffness hydrogels at day 1 of directed differentiation,suggesting that stiffness impacted the initial differentiation trajectory of hESCs to mesendoderm. To investigate the impact of substrate mechanics during cardiac specification of mesodermal progenitors,we initiated directed cardiomyocyte differentiation on TCPS and transferred cells to hydrogels at the Nkx2.5/Isl1+ cardiac progenitor cell stage. No differences in cardiomyocyte purity with stiffness were observed on day 15. These experiments indicate that differentiation of hESCs is sensitive to substrate mechanics at early stages of mesodermal induction,and proper application of substrate mechanics can increase the propensity of hESCs to differentiate to cardiomyocytes. textcopyright 2013 Acta Materialia Inc.
View Publication
Lou Y-R et al. (FEB 2014)
Stem Cells and Development 23 4 380--392
The Use of Nanofibrillar Cellulose Hydrogel As a Flexible Three-Dimensional Model to Culture Human Pluripotent Stem Cells
Human embryonic stem cells and induced pluripotent stem cells have great potential in research and thera-pies. The current in vitro culture systems for human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) do not mimic the three-dimensional (3D) in vivo stem cell niche that transiently supports stem cell proliferation and is subject to changes which facilitate subsequent differentiation during development. Here,we demonstrate,for the first time,that a novel plant-derived nanofibrillar cellulose (NFC) hydrogel creates a flexible 3D environment for hPSC culture. The pluripotency of hPSCs cultured in the NFC hydrogel was maintained for 26 days as evidenced by the expression of OCT4,NANOG,and SSEA-4,in vitro embryoid body formation and in vivo teratoma formation. The use of a cellulose enzyme,cellulase,enables easy cell propagation in 3D culture as well as a shift between 3D and two-dimensional cultures. More importantly,the removal of the NFC hydrogel facilitates differentiation while retaining 3D cell organization. Thus,the NFC hydrogel represents a flexible,xeno-free 3D culture system that supports pluripotency and will be useful in hPSC-based drug research and regenerative medicine.
View Publication
Robust pluripotent stem cell expansion and cardiomyocyte differentiation via geometric patterning
Geometric factors including the size,shape,density,and spacing of pluripotent stem cell colonies play a significant role in the maintenance of pluripotency and in cell fate determination. These factors are impossible to control using standard tissue culture methods. As such,there can be substantial batch-to-batch variability in cell line maintenance and differentiation yield. Here,we demonstrate a simple,robust technique for pluripotent stem cell expansion and cardiomyocyte differentiation by patterning cell colonies with a silicone stencil. We have observed that patterning human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) colonies improves the uniformity and repeatability of their size,density,and shape. Uniformity of colony geometry leads to improved homogeneity in the expression of pluripotency markers SSEA4 and Nanog as compared with conventional clump passaging. Patterned cell colonies are capable of undergoing directed differentiation into spontaneously beating cardiomyocyte clusters with improved yield and repeatability over unpatterned cultures seeded either as cell clumps or uniform single cell suspensions. Circular patterns result in a highly repeatable 3D ring-shaped band of cardiomyocytes which electrically couple and lead to propagating contraction waves around the ring. Because of these advantages,geometrically patterning stem cells using stencils may offer greater repeatability from batch-to-batch and person-to-person,an increase in differentiation yield,a faster experimental workflow,and a simpler protocol to communicate and follow. Furthermore,the ability to control where cardiomyocytes arise across a culture well during differentiation could greatly aid the design of electrophysiological assays for drug-screening.
View Publication
Lin P-Y et al. (NOV 2013)
Stem cells and development 23 4 372--379
A synthetic peptide-acrylate surface for production of insulin-producing cells from human embryonic stem cells.
Human embryonic stem cells (hESCs),due to their self-renewal capacity and pluripotency,have become a potential source of transplantable $\$-cells for the treatment of diabetes. However,it is imperative that the derived cells fulfill the criteria for clinical treatment. In this study,we replaced common Matrigel with a synthetic peptide-acrylate surface (Synthemax) to expand undifferentiated hESCs and direct their differentiation in a defined and serum-free medium. We confirmed that the cells still expressed pluripotent markers,had the ability to differentiate into three germ layers,and maintained a normal karyotype after 10 passages of subculture. Next,we reported an efficient protocol for deriving nearly 86% definitive endoderm cells from hESCs under serum-free conditions. Moreover,we were able to obtain insulin-producing cells within 21 days following a simple three-step protocol. The results of immunocytochemical and quantitative gene expression analysis showed that the efficiency of induction was not significantly different between the Synthemax surface and the Matrigel-coated surface. Thus,we provided a totally defined condition from hESC culture to insulin-producing cell differentiation,and the derived cells could be a therapeutic resource for diabetic patients in the future.
View Publication
Mou H et al. (APR 2012)
Cell stem cell 10 4 385--397
Generation of multipotent lung and airway progenitors from mouse ESCs and patient-specific cystic fibrosis iPSCs
Deriving lung progenitors from patient-specific pluripotent cells is a key step in producing differentiated lung epithelium for disease modeling and transplantation. By mimicking the signaling events that occur during mouse lung development,we generated murine lung progenitors in a series of discrete steps. Definitive endoderm derived from mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) was converted into foregut endoderm,then into replicating Nkx2.1+ lung endoderm,and finally into multipotent embryonic lung progenitor and airway progenitor cells. We demonstrated that precisely-timed BMP,FGF,and WNT signaling are required for NKX2.1 induction. Mouse ESC-derived Nkx2.1+ progenitor cells formed respiratory epithelium (tracheospheres) when transplanted subcutaneously into mice. We then adapted this strategy to produce disease-specific lung progenitor cells from human Cystic Fibrosis induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs),creating a platform for dissecting human lung disease. These disease-specific human lung progenitors formed respiratory epithelium when subcutaneously engrafted into immunodeficient mice.
View Publication