Bell S et al. (MAR 2017)
Stem cells translational medicine 6 3 886--896
A Rapid Pipeline to Model Rare Neurodevelopmental Disorders with Simultaneous CRISPR/Cas9 Gene Editing.
The development of targeted therapeutics for rare neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) faces significant challenges due to the scarcity of subjects and the difficulty of obtaining human neural cells. Here,we illustrate a rapid,simple protocol by which patient derived cells can be reprogrammed to induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) using an episomal vector and differentiated into neurons. Using this platform enables patient somatic cells to be converted to physiologically active neurons in less than two months with minimal labor. This platform includes a method to combine somatic cell reprogramming with CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing at single cell resolution,which enables the concurrent development of clonal knockout or knock-in models that can be used as isogenic control lines. This platform reduces the logistical barrier for using iPSC technology,allows for the development of appropriate control lines for use in rare neurodevelopmental disease research,and establishes a fundamental component to targeted therapeutics and precision medicine. Stem Cells Translational Medicine 2017;6:886-896.
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Prowse A et al. (JUL 2009)
BioTechniques 47 1 599--606
A rapid, cost-effective method for counting human embryonic stem cell numbers as clumps.
Enumeration of human embryonic stem cell (hESC) numbers through single cell digestion can be time consuming especially in high-throughput or multi-factorial analysis containing 50+ samples. We have developed a reproducible,cost-effective method of counting hESCs in clumps circumventing the need to manually dissociate each sample to single cells. The method is based on the DNA binding capacity of propidium iodide (PI) and subsequent fluorescent signal detection. Standard curves generated for cell numbers versus PI fluorescence as single cells or clumps showed an almost identical relationship in the lines of best fit. The reproducibility of the assay was first demonstrated by seeding hESC clumps at specific cell densities ranging 0.05[x02013]2x105 cells/well and then secondly by using the assay to count cell numbers after different growth conditions. Validation tests showed that consistent seeding densities are important in maintaining undifferentiated hESC culture and that the assay can be used to estimate relative cell numbers and growth curves with high accuracy.
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Liu J et al. (NOV 2014)
FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 28 11 4642--4656
A reciprocal antagonism between miR-376c and TGF-$\$ regulates neural differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells.
Differentiation of neural lineages from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) raises the hope of generating functional cells for the treatment of neural diseases. However,current protocols for differentiating hPSCs into neural lineages remain inefficient and largely variable between different hPSC lines. We report that microRNA 376c (miR-376c) significantly enhanced neural differentiation of hPSCs in a defined condition by suppressing SMAD4,the co-SMAD for TGF-β signaling. Downstream,SMAD4 directly bound and suppressed PAX6,the critical neural lineage specification factor. Interestingly,we also found that SMAD4 binds and suppresses miR-376c clusters in undifferentiated hESCs. In summary,our findings revealed a reciprocal antagonism between miR-376c and SMAD signaling that regulates cell fate during human neural differentiation.-Liu,J.,Wang,L.,Su,Z.,Wu,W.,Cai,X.,Li,D.,Hou,J.,Pei,D.,Pan,G. A reciprocal antagonism between miR-376c and TGF-β signaling regulates neural differentiation of hPSCs.
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Diekmann U et al. (JAN 2015)
Stem cells and development 24 2 190--204
A reliable and efficient protocol for human pluripotent stem cell differentiation into the definitive endoderm based on dispersed single cells.
Differentiation of pluripotent cells into endoderm-related cell types initially requires in vitro gastrulation into the definitive endoderm (DE). Most differentiation protocols are initiated from colonies of pluripotent cells complicating their adaption due to insufficiently defined starting conditions. The protocol described here was initiated from a defined cell number of dispersed single cells and tested on three different human embryonic stem cell lines and one human induced pluripotent stem cell line. Combined activation of ActivinA/Nodal signaling and GSK3 inhibition for the first 24 h,followed by ActivinA/Nodal signaling efficiently induced the DE state. Activation of ActivinA/Nodal signaling alone was not effective. Efficient GSK3 inhibition allowed the reduction of the ActivinA concentration during the entire protocol. A feeder-independent cultivation of pluripotent cells was preferred to achieve the high efficiency and robustness since feeder cells hindered the differentiation process. Additionally,inhibition of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling pathway was not required,nonetheless yielding high cell numbers efficiently committed toward the DE. Finally,the endoderm generated could be differentiated further into PDX1-positive pan-pancreatic cells and NGN3-positive endocrine progenitors. Thus,this efficient and robust DE differentiation protocol is a step forward toward better reproducibility due to the well-defined conditions based on dispersed single cells from feeder-free-cultivated human pluripotent cells.
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Elanzew A et al. (OCT 2015)
Biotechnology journal 10 10 1589--1599
A reproducible and versatile system for the dynamic expansion of human pluripotent stem cells in suspension.
Reprogramming of patient cells to human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) has facilitated in vitro disease modeling studies aiming at deciphering the molecular and cellular mechanisms that contribute to disease pathogenesis and progression. To fully exploit the potential of hiPSC for biomedical applications,technologies that enable the standardized generation and expansion of hiPSC from large numbers of donors are required. Paralleled automated processes for the expansion of hiPSC could provide an opportunity to maximize the generation of hiPSC collections from patient cohorts while minimizing hands-on time and costs. In order to develop a simple method for the parallel expansion of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSC) we established a protocol for their cultivation as undifferentiated aggregates in a bench-top bioreactor system (BioLevitator™). We show that long-term expansion (10 passages) of hPSCs either in mTeSR or E8 medium preserved a normal karyotype,three-germ-layer differentiation potential and high expression of pluripotency-associated markers. The system enables the expansion from low inoculation densities (0.3 × 10(5) cells/mL) and provides a simplified,cost-efficient and time-saving method for the provision of hiPSC at midi-scale. Implementation of this protocol in cell production schemes has the potential to advance cell manufacturing in many areas of hiPSC-based medical research.
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Lippmann ES et al. (FEB 2014)
Scientific reports 4 February 2014 4160
A retinoic acid-enhanced, multicellular human blood-brain barrier model derived from stem cell sources.
Blood-brain barrier (BBB) models are often used to investigate BBB function and screen brain-penetrating therapeutics,but it has been difficult to construct a human model that possesses an optimal BBB phenotype and is readily scalable. To address this challenge,we developed a human in vitro BBB model comprising brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs),pericytes,astrocytes and neurons derived from renewable cell sources. First,retinoic acid (RA) was used to substantially enhance BBB phenotypes in human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC)-derived BMECs,particularly through adherens junction,tight junction,and multidrug resistance protein regulation. RA-treated hPSC-derived BMECs were subsequently co-cultured with primary human brain pericytes and human astrocytes and neurons derived from human neural progenitor cells (NPCs) to yield a fully human BBB model that possessed significant tightness as measured by transendothelial electrical resistance (˜5,000 $\$(2)). Overall,this scalable human BBB model may enable a wide range of neuroscience studies.
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Rankin SA et al. (JUN 2016)
Cell reports 1--13
A Retinoic Acid-Hedgehog Cascade Coordinates Mesoderm-Inducing Signals and Endoderm Competence during Lung Specification.
Organogenesis of the trachea and lungs requires a complex series of mesoderm-endoderm interactions mediated by WNT,BMP,retinoic acid (RA),and hedgehog (Hh),but how these pathways interact in a gene regulatory network is less clear. Using Xenopus embryology,mouse genetics,and human ES cell cultures,we identified a conserved signaling cascade that initiates respiratory lineage specification. We show that RA has multiple roles; first RA pre-patterns the lateral plate mesoderm and then it promotes Hh ligand expression in the foregut endoderm. Hh subsequently signals back to the pre-patterned mesoderm to promote expression of the lung-inducing ligands Wnt2/2b and Bmp4. Finally,RA regulates the competence of the endoderm to activate the Nkx2-1+ respiratory program in response to these mesodermal WNT and BMP signals. These data provide insights into early lung development and a paradigm for how mesenchymal signals are coordinated with epithelial competence during organogenesis.
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Kreitzer FR et al. (JUN 2013)
American journal of stem cells 2 2 119--31
A robust method to derive functional neural crest cells from human pluripotent stem cells.
Neural crest (NC) cells contribute to the development of many complex tissues of all three germ layers during embryogenesis,and its abnormal development accounts for several congenital birth defects. Generating NC cells-including specific subpopulations such as cranial,cardiac,and trunk NC cells-from human pluripotent stem cells will provide a valuable model system to study human development and disease. Here,we describe a rapid and robust NC differentiation method called LSB-short" that is based on dual SMAD pathway inhibition. This protocol yields high percentages of NC cell populations from multiple human induced pluripotent stem and human embryonic stem cell lines in 8 days. The resulting cells can be propagated easily
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