Transcriptomic analysis of induced pluripotent stem cells derived from patients with bipolar disorder from an old order amish pedigree
Fibroblasts from patients with Type I bipolar disorder (BPD) and their unaffected siblings were obtained from an Old Order Amish pedigree with a high incidence of BPD and reprogrammed to induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). Established iPSCs were subsequently differentiated into neuroprogenitors (NPs) and then to neurons. Transcriptomic microarray analysis was conducted on RNA samples from iPSCs,NPs and neurons matured in culture for either 2 weeks (termed early neurons,E) or 4 weeks (termed late neurons,L). Global RNA profiling indicated that BPD and control iPSCs differentiated into NPs and neurons at a similar rate,enabling studies of differentially expressed genes in neurons from controls and BPD cases. Significant disease-associated differences in gene expression were observed only in L neurons. Specifically,328 genes were differentially expressed between BPD and control L neurons including GAD1,glutamate decarboxylase 1 (2.5 fold) and SCN4B,the voltage gated type IV sodium channel beta subunit (-14.6 fold). Quantitative RT-PCR confirmed the up-regulation of GAD1 in BPD compared to control L neurons. Gene Ontology,GeneGo and Ingenuity Pathway Analysis of differentially regulated genes in L neurons suggest that alterations in RNA biosynthesis and metabolism,protein trafficking as well as receptor signaling pathways may play an important role in the pathophysiology of BPD.
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Niedringhaus M et al. (FEB 2015)
Sci Rep 5 8353
Transferable neuronal mini-cultures to accelerate screening in primary and induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons
The effort and cost of obtaining neurons for large-scale screens has limited drug discovery in neuroscience. To overcome these obstacles,we fabricated arrays of releasable polystyrene micro-rafts to generate thousands of uniform,mobile neuron mini-cultures. These mini-cultures sustain synaptically-active neurons which can be easily transferred,thus increasing screening throughput by textgreater30-fold. Compared to conventional methods,micro-raft cultures exhibited significantly improved neuronal viability and sample-to-sample consistency. We validated the screening utility of these mini-cultures for both mouse neurons and human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons by successfully detecting disease-related defects in synaptic transmission and identifying candidate small molecule therapeutics. This affordable high-throughput approach has the potential to transform drug discovery in neuroscience.
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Galat V et al. (MAY 2016)
Stem cells and development 25 14 1060--1072
Transgene Reactivation in Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Derivatives and Reversion to Pluripotency of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Mesenchymal Cells.
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have enormous potential in regenerative medicine and disease modeling. It is now felt that clinical trials should be performed with iPSCs derived with non-integrative constructs. Numerous studies,however,including those describing disease models,are still being published using cells derived from iPSCs generated with integrative constructs. Our experimental work presents the first evidence of spontaneous transgene reactivation in vitro in several cellular types. Our results show that the transgenes were predominantly silent in parent iPSCs,but in mesenchymal and endothelial iPSC derivatives,the transgenes experienced random up-regulation of Nanog and c-Myc. Additionally,we provide evidence of spontaneous secondary reprogramming and reversion to pluripotency in mesenchymal stem cells derived from iPSCs. These findings strongly suggest that the studies,which utilize cellular products derived from iPSCs generated with retro- or lentiviruses,should be evaluated with consideration of the possibility of transgene reactivation. The in vitro model described here provides insight into the earliest events of culture transformation and suggests the hypothesis that reversion to pluripotency may be responsible for the development of tumors in cell replacement experiments. The main goal of this work,however,is to communicate the possibility of transgene reactivation in retro- or lenti- iPSC derivatives and the associated loss of cellular fidelity in vitro,which may impact the outcomes of disease modeling and related experimentation.
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Merling RK et al. (APR 2013)
Blood 121 14 e98--107
Transgene-free iPSCs generated from small volume peripheral blood nonmobilized CD34+ cells.
Demonstrates efficient reprogramming of iPS cells from CD34+ stem cells enriched from a small volume of peripheral blood.
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Ovchinnikov DA et al. (SEP 2014)
Stem cell research 13 2 251--261
Transgenic human ES and iPS reporter cell lines for identification and selection of pluripotent stem cells in vitro
Optimization of pluripotent stem cell expansion and differentiation is facilitated by biological tools that permit non-invasive and dynamic monitoring of pluripotency,and the ability to select for an undifferentiated input cell population. Here we report on the generation and characterisation of clonal human embryonic stem (HES3,H9) and human induced pluripotent stem cell lines (UQEW01i-epifibC11) that have been stably modified with an artificial EOS(C3+) promoter driving expression of EGFP and puromycin resistance-conferring proteins. We show that EGFP expression faithfully reports on the pluripotency status of the cells in these lines and that antibiotic selection allows for an efficient elimination of differentiated cells from the cultures. We demonstrate that the extinction of the expression of the pluripotency reporter during differentiation closely correlates with the decrease in expression of conventional pluripotency markers,such as OCT4 (POU5F1),TRA-1-60 and SSEA4 when screening across conditions with various levels of pluripotency-maintaining or differentiation-inducing signals. We further illustrate the utility of these lines for real-time monitoring of pluripotency in embryoid bodies and microfluidic bioreactors.
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Takayama N et al. (DEC 2010)
The Journal of experimental medicine 207 13 2817--30
Transient activation of c-MYC expression is critical for efficient platelet generation from human induced pluripotent stem cells.
Human (h) induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a potentially abundant source of blood cells,but how best to select iPSC clones suitable for this purpose from among the many clones that can be simultaneously established from an identical source is not clear. Using an in vitro culture system yielding a hematopoietic niche that concentrates hematopoietic progenitors,we show that the pattern of c-MYC reactivation after reprogramming influences platelet generation from hiPSCs. During differentiation,reduction of c-MYC expression after initial reactivation of c-MYC expression in selected hiPSC clones was associated with more efficient in vitro generation of CD41a(+)CD42b(+) platelets. This effect was recapitulated in virus integration-free hiPSCs using a doxycycline-controlled c-MYC expression vector. In vivo imaging revealed that these CD42b(+) platelets were present in thrombi after laser-induced vessel wall injury. In contrast,sustained and excessive c-MYC expression in megakaryocytes was accompanied by increased p14 (ARF) and p16 (INK4A) expression,decreased GATA1 expression,and impaired production of functional platelets. These findings suggest that the pattern of c-MYC expression,particularly its later decline,is key to producing functional platelets from selected iPSC clones.
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Rasmussen MA et al. (SEP 2014)
Stem Cell Reports 3 3 404--413
Transient p53 suppression increases reprogramming of human fibroblasts without affecting apoptosis and DNA damage
The discovery of human-induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) has sparked great interest in the potential treatment of patients with their own in vitro differentiated cells. Recently,knockout of the Tumor Protein 53 (p53) gene was reported to facilitate reprogramming but unfortunately also led to genomic instability. Here,we report that transient suppression of p53 during nonintegrative reprogramming of human fibroblasts leads to a significant increase in expression of pluripotency markers and overall number of iPSC colonies,due to downstream suppression of p21,without affecting apoptosis and DNA damage. Stable iPSC lines generated with or without p53 suppression showed comparable expression of pluripotency markers and methylation patterns,displayed normal karyotypes,contained between 0 and 5 genomic copy number variations and produced functional neurons in vitro. In conclusion,transient p53 suppression increases reprogramming efficiency without affecting genomic stability,rendering the method suitable for in vitro mechanistic studies with the possibility for future clinical translation.
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Jiang J et al. (AUG 2013)
Nature 500 7462 296--300
Translating dosage compensation to trisomy 21.
Down's syndrome is a common disorder with enormous medical and social costs,caused by trisomy for chromosome 21. We tested the concept that gene imbalance across an extra chromosome can be de facto corrected by manipulating a single gene,XIST (the X-inactivation gene). Using genome editing with zinc finger nucleases,we inserted a large,inducible XIST transgene into the DYRK1A locus on chromosome 21,in Down's syndrome pluripotent stem cells. The XIST non-coding RNA coats chromosome 21 and triggers stable heterochromatin modifications,chromosome-wide transcriptional silencing and DNA methylation to form a ‘chromosome 21 Barr body'. This provides a model to study human chromosome inactivation and creates a system to investigate genomic expression changes and cellular pathologies of trisomy 21,free from genetic and epigenetic noise. Notably,deficits in proliferation and neural rosette formation are rapidly reversed upon silencing one chromosome 21. Successful trisomy silencing in vitro also surmounts the major first step towards potential development of ‘chromosome therapy'.
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Schwarz N et al. (FEB 2015)
Human Molecular Genetics 24 4 972--986
Translational read-through of the RP2 Arg120stop mutation in patient iPSC-derived retinal pigment epithelium cells
Mutations in the RP2 gene lead to a severe form of X-linked retinitis pigmentosa. RP2 patients frequently present with nonsense mutations and no treatments are currently available to restore RP2 function. In this study,we reprogrammed fibroblasts from an RP2 patient carrying the nonsense mutation c.519CtextgreaterT (p.R120X) into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC),and differentiated these cells into retinal pigment epithelial cells (RPE) to study the mechanisms of disease and test potential therapies. RP2 protein was undetectable in the RP2 R120X patient cells,suggesting a disease mechanism caused by complete lack of RP2 protein. The RP2 patient fibroblasts and iPSC-derived RPE cells showed phenotypic defects in IFT20 localization,Golgi cohesion and G$\$1 trafficking. These phenotypes were corrected by over-expressing GFP-tagged RP2. Using the translational read-through inducing drugs (TRIDs) G418 and PTC124 (Ataluren),we were able to restore up to 20% of endogenous,full-length RP2 protein in R120X cells. This level of restored RP2 was sufficient to reverse the cellular phenotypic defects observed in both the R120X patient fibroblasts and iPSC-RPE cells. This is the first proof-of-concept study to demonstrate successful read-through and restoration of RP2 function for the R120X nonsense mutation. The ability of the restored RP2 protein level to reverse the observed cellular phenotypes in cells lacking RP2 indicates that translational read-through could be clinically beneficial for patients.
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Pecho-Vrieseling E et al. (AUG 2014)
Nat Neurosci 17 8 1064--1072
Transneuronal propagation of mutant huntingtin contributes to non-cell autonomous pathology in neurons.
In Huntington's disease (HD),whether transneuronal spreading of mutant huntingtin (mHTT) occurs and its contribution to non-cell autonomous damage in brain networks is largely unknown. We found mHTT spreading in three different neural network models: human neurons integrated in the neural network of organotypic brain slices of HD mouse model,an ex vivo corticostriatal slice model and the corticostriatal pathway in vivo. Transneuronal propagation of mHTT was blocked by two different botulinum neurotoxins,each known for specifically inactivating a single critical component of the synaptic vesicle fusion machinery. Moreover,healthy human neurons in HD mouse model brain slices displayed non-cell autonomous changes in morphological integrity that were more pronounced when these neurons bore mHTT aggregates. Altogether,our findings suggest that transneuronal propagation of mHTT might be an important and underestimated contributor to the pathophysiology of HD.
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Li Z et al. (FEB 2009)
Journal of cellular biochemistry 106 2 194--9
Transplantation of human embryonic stem cell-derived endothelial cells for vascular diseases.
Using endothelial cells for therapeutic angiogenesis/vasculogenesis of ischemia diseases has led to exploring human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) as a potentially unlimited source for endothelial progenitor cells. With their capacity for self-renewal and pluripotency,hESCs and their derived endothelial cells (hESC-ECs) may be more advantageous than other endothelial cells obtained from diseased populations. However,hESC-ECs' poor differentiation efficiency and poorly characterized in vivo function after transplantation present significant challenges for their future clinical application. This review will focus on the differentiation pathways of hESCs and their therapeutic potential for vascular diseases,as well as the monitoring of transplanted cells' fate via molecular imaging. Finally,cell enhancement strategies to improve the engraftment efficiency of hESC-ECs will be discussed.
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Su H et al. (JUL 2013)
Stem Cell Research 11 1 529--539
Transplanted motoneurons derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells form functional connections with target muscle
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) hold promise for the treatment of motoneuron diseases because of their distinct features including pluripotency,self-derivation and potential ability to differentiate into motoneurons. However,it is still unknown whether human iPSC-derived motoneurons can functionally innervate target muscles in vivo,which is the definitive sign of successful cell therapy for motoneuron diseases. In the present study,we demonstrated that human iPSCs derived from mesenchymal cells of the umbilical cord possessed a high yield in neural differentiation. Using a chemically-defined in vitro system,human iPSCs efficiently differentiated into motoneurons which displayed typical morphology,expressed specific molecules,and generated repetitive trains of action potentials. When transplanted into the injured musculocutaneous nerve of rats,they survived robustly,extended axons along the nerve,and formed functional connections with the target muscle (biceps brachii),thereby protecting the muscle from atrophy. Our study provides evidence for the first time that human iPSC-derived motoneurons are truly functional not only in vitro but also in vivo,and they have potential for stem cell-based therapies for motoneuron diseases. textcopyright 2013 Elsevier B.V.
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