Three-Dimensional Neuroepithelial Culture from Human Embryonic Stem Cells and Its Use for Quantitative Conversion to Retinal Pigment Epithelium
A goal in human embryonic stem cell (hESC) research is the faithful differentiation to given cell types such as neural lineages. During embryonic development,a basement membrane surrounds the neural plate that forms a tight,apico-basolaterally polarized epithelium before closing to form a neural tube with a single lumen. Here we show that the three-dimensional epithelial cyst culture of hESCs in Matrigel combined with neural induction results in a quantitative conversion into neuroepithelial cysts containing a single lumen. Cells attain a defined neuroepithelial identity by 5 days. The neuroepithelial cysts naturally generate retinal epithelium,in part due to IGF-1/insulin signaling. We demonstrate the utility of this epithelial culture approach by achieving a quantitative production of retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells from hESCs within 30 days. Direct transplantation of this RPE into a rat model of retinal degeneration without any selection or expansion of the cells results in the formation of a donor-derived RPE monolayer that rescues photoreceptor cells. The cyst method for neuroepithelial differentiation of pluripotent stem cells is not only of importance for RPE generation but will also be relevant to the production of other neuronal cell types and for reconstituting complex patterning events from three-dimensional neuroepithelia.
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Barbaric I et al. (JUL 2014)
Stem Cell Reports 3 1 142--155
Time-lapse analysis of human embryonic stem cells reveals multiple bottlenecks restricting colony formation and their relief upon culture adaptation
Using time-lapse imaging,we have identified a series of bottlenecks that restrict growth of early-passage human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and that are relieved by karyotypically abnormal variants that are selected by prolonged culture. Only a minority of karyotypically normal cells divided after plating,and these were mainly cells in the later stages of cell cycle at the time of plating. Furthermore,the daughter cells showed a continued pattern of cell death after division,so that few formed long-term proliferating colonies. These colony-forming cells showed distinct patterns of cell movement. Increasing cell density enhanced cell movement facilitating cell:cell contact,which resulted in increased proportion of dividing cells and improved survival postplating of normal hESCs. In contrast,most of the karyotypically abnormal cells reentered the cell cycle on plating and gave rise to healthy progeny,without the need for cell:cell contacts and independent of their motility patterns. ?? 2014 The Authors.
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Ting S et al. (MAY 2014)
Biotechnology journal 9 5 675--683
Time-resolved video analysis and management system for monitoring cardiomyocyte differentiation processes and toxicology assays.
Cardiomyocytes (CM) derived from human embryonic stem cells (hESC) are used for cardio-toxicity evaluation and tested in many preclinical trials for their potential use in regenerative therapeutics. As more efficient CM differentiation protocols are developed,reliable automated platforms for characterization and detection are needed. An automated time-resolved video analysis and management system (TVAMS) has been developed for the evaluation of hESC differentiation to CM. The system was used for monitoring the kinetics of embryoid bodies (EB) generation (numbers and size) and differentiation into beating EBs (percentage beating area and beating EB count) in two differentiation protocols. We show that the percentage beating areas of EBs (from total area of the EBs) is a more sensitive and better predictor of CM differentiation efficiency than percentage of beating EBs (from total EBs) as the percentage beating areas of EBs correlates with cardiac troponin-T and myosin heavy chain expression levels. TVAMS can also be used to evaluate the effect of drugs and inhibitors (e.g. isoproterenol and ZD7288) on CM beating frequency. TVAMS can reliably replace the commonly practiced,time consuming,manual counting of total and beating EBs during CM differentiation. TVAMS is a high-throughput non-invasive video imaging platform that can be applied for the development of new CM differentiation protocols,as well as a tool to conduct CM toxicology assays.
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Liu Y et al. (APR 2012)
Stem cells and development 21 6 829--33
Tip110 maintains expression of pluripotent factors in and pluripotency of human embryonic stem cells.
HIV-1 Tat-interacting protein of 110 kDa [Tip110; p110(nrb)/SART3/p110] is an RNA binding nuclear protein implicated in regulation of HIV-1 gene and host gene transcription,pre-mRNA splicing,and cancer immunology. Recently,we demonstrated a role for Tip110 in regulation of hematopoiesis. Here,we show that TIP110 is also expressed in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and expression was decreased with differentiation of these ESCs. TIP110 was found,through up- and down-modulation of expression of Tip110,to be important in maintaining pluripotent factor (NANOG,OCT4,and SOX2) expression in and pluripotency of hESCs,although the mechanisms involved and whether the Tip110 effects are direct remain to be determined.
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Tissue-Engineered Vascular Rings from Human iPSC-Derived Smooth Muscle Cells
There is an urgent need for an efficient approach to obtain a large-scale and renewable source of functional human vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) to establish robust,patient-specific tissue model systems for studying the pathogenesis of vascular disease,and for developing novel therapeutic interventions. Here,we have derived a large quantity of highly enriched functional VSMCs from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC-VSMCs). Furthermore,we have engineered 3D tissue rings from hiPSC-VSMCs using a facile one-step cellular self-assembly approach. The tissue rings are mechanically robust and can be used for vascular tissue engineering and disease modeling of supravalvular aortic stenosis syndrome. Our method may serve as a model system,extendable to study other vascular proliferative diseases for drug screening. Thus,this report describes an exciting platform technology with broad utility for manufacturing cell-based tissues and materials for various biomedical applications.
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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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A. Odawara et al. (JUL 2018)
Scientific reports 8 1 10416
Toxicological evaluation of convulsant and anticonvulsant drugs in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cortical neuronal networks using an MEA system.
Functional evaluation assays using human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived neurons can predict the convulsion toxicity of new drugs and the neurological effects of antiepileptic drugs. However,differences in responsiveness depending on convulsant type and antiepileptic drugs,and an evaluation index capable of comparing in vitro responses with in vivo responses are not well known. We observed the difference in synchronized burst patterns in the epileptiform activities induced by pentylentetrazole (PTZ) and 4-aminopryridine (4-AP) with different action mechanisms using multi-electrode arrays (MEAs); we also observed that 100 µM of the antiepileptic drug phenytoin suppressed epileptiform activities induced by PTZ,but increased those induced by 4-AP. To compare in vitro results with in vivo convulsive responses,frequency analysis of below 250 Hz,excluding the spike component,was performed. The in vivo convulsive firing enhancement of the high gamma$ wave and beta$ wave component were observed remarkably in in vitro hiPSC-derived neurons with astrocytes in co-culture. MEA measurement of hiPSC-derived neurons in co-culture with astrocytes and our analysis methods,including frequency analysis,appear effective for predicting convulsion toxicity,side effects,and their mechanism of action as well as the comparison of convulsions induced in vivo.
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Ma N et al. (NOV 2013)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 288 48 34671--34679
$\$-Thalassemia ($\$-Thal) is a group of life-threatening blood disorders caused by either point mutations or deletions of nucleotides in $\$-globin gene (HBB). It is estimated that 4.5% of the population in the world carry $\$-Thal mutants (1),posing a persistent threat to public health. The generation of patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and subsequent correction of the disease-causing mutations offer an ideal therapeutic solution to this problem. However,homologous recombination-based gene correction in human iPSCs remains largely inefficient. Here,we describe a robust process combining efficient generation of integration-free $\$-Thal iPSCs from the cells of patients and transcription activator-like effector nuclease (TALEN)-based universal correction of HBB mutations in situ. We generated integration-free and gene-corrected iPSC lines from two patients carrying different types of homozygous mutations and showed that these iPSCs are pluripotent and have normal karyotype. We showed that the correction process did not generate TALEN-induced off targeting mutations by sequencing. More importantly,the gene-corrected $\$-Thal iPS cell lines from each patient can be induced to differentiate into hematopoietic progenitor cells and then further to erythroblasts expressing normal $\$-globin. Our studies provide an efficient and universal strategy to correct different types of $\$-globin mutations in $\$-Thal iPSCs for disease modeling and applications.
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M. S. Fernandopulle et al. (JUN 2018)
Current protocols in cell biology 79 1 e51
Transcription Factor-Mediated Differentiation of Human iPSCs into Neurons.
Accurate modeling of human neuronal cell biology has been a long-standing challenge. However,methods to differentiate human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to neurons have recently provided experimentally tractable cell models. Numerous methods that use small molecules to direct iPSCs into neuronal lineages have arisen in recent years. Unfortunately,these methods entail numerous challenges,including poor efficiency,variable cell type heterogeneity,and lengthy,expensive differentiation procedures. We recently developed a new method to generate stable transgenic lines of human iPSCs with doxycycline-inducible transcription factors at safe-harbor loci. Using a simple two-step protocol,these lines can be inducibly differentiated into either cortical (i3 Neurons) or lower motor neurons (i3 LMN) in a rapid,efficient,and scalable manner (Wang et al.,2017). In this manuscript,we describe a set of protocols to assist investigators in the culture and genetic engineering of iPSC lines to enable transcription factor-mediated differentiation of iPSCs into i3 Neurons or i3 LMNs,and we present neuronal culture conditions for various experimental applications. {\textcopyright} 2018 by John Wiley & Sons,Inc.
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Gifford CA et al. (MAY 2013)
Cell 153 5 1149--1163
Transcriptional and epigenetic dynamics during specification of human embryonic stem cells
Differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) provides a unique opportunity to study the regulatory mechanisms that facilitate cellular transitions in a human context. To that end,we performed comprehensive transcriptional and epigenetic profiling of populations derived through directed differentiation of hESCs representing each of the three embryonic germ layers. Integration of whole-genome bisulfite sequencing,chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing,and RNA sequencing reveals unique events associated with specification toward each lineage. Lineage-specific dynamic alterations in DNA methylation and H3K4me1 are evident at putative distal regulatory elements that are frequently bound by pluripotency factors in the undifferentiated hESCs. In addition,we identified germ-layer-specific H3K27me3 enrichment at sites exhibiting high DNA methylation in the undifferentiated state. A better understanding of these initial specification events will facilitate identification of deficiencies in current approaches,leading to more faithful differentiation strategies as well as providing insights into the rewiring of human regulatory programs during cellular transitions. ?? 2013 Elsevier Inc.
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Xia N et al. (FEB 2016)
Scientific Reports 6 20270
Transcriptional comparison of human induced and primary midbrain dopaminergic neurons
Generation of induced dopaminergic (iDA) neurons may provide a significant step forward towards cell replacement therapy for Parkinson's disease (PD). To study and compare transcriptional programs of induced cells versus primary DA neurons is a preliminary step towards characterizing human iDA neurons. We have optimized a protocol to efficiently generate iDA neurons from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs). We then sequenced the transcriptomes of iDA neurons derived from 6 different hPSC lines and compared them to that of primary midbrain (mDA) neurons. We identified a small subset of genes with altered expression in derived iDA neurons from patients with Parkinson's Disease (PD). We also observed that iDA neurons differ significantly from primary mDA neurons in global gene expression,especially in genes related to neuron maturation level. Results suggest iDA neurons from patient iPSCs could be useful for basic and translational studies,including in vitro modeling of PD. However,further refinement of methods of induction and maturation of neurons may better recapitulate full development of mDA neurons from hPSCs.
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