Lie K-HH et al. (JAN 2012)
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton,N.J.) 873 237--246
Derivation, propagation, and characterization of neuroprogenitors from pluripotent stem cells (hESCs and hiPSCs).
The differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) towards functional neurons particularly hold great potential for the cell-based replacement therapy in neurodegenerative diseases. Here,we describe a stepwise differentiation protocol that mimics the early stage of neural development in human to promote the generation of neuroprogenitors at a high yield. Both the hESCs and hiPSCs are initially cultured in an optimized feeder-free condition,which offer an efficient formation of aggregates. To specify the neuroectodermal specification,these aggregates are differentiated in a defined neural induction medium to develop into neural rosettes-like structures. The rosettes are expanded into free-floating sphere and can be further propagated or developed into variety of neuronal subtypes.
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Krawetz R and Rancourt DE (JAN 2012)
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton,N.J.) 873 227--235
Suspension bioreactor expansion of undifferentiated human embryonic stem cells
Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) are unique cells,which have the ability to differentiate into all cell types that comprise the adult organism. Furthermore,ESCs can infinitely self-renew under optimized conditions. These features place human ESCs (hESCs) in a position where these cells can be exploited for tissue engineering and regenerative medicine approaches in treating human degenerative disorders. However,cell therapy approaches will require large amounts of clinically useable cells,not typically achievable using standard static cell culture methods. Here,we describe a method wherein clinically relevant numbers of hESCs can be generated in a cost and time effective manner.
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Mateizel I et al. (JAN 2012)
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton,N.J.) 873 81--112
Establishment of hESC lines from the inner cell mass of blastocyst-stage embryos and single blastomeres of 4-cell stage embryos.
More than 600 human embryonic stem cell (hESC) lines have been reported today at the human European Embryonic Stem Cell Registry ( http://www.hescreg.eu/ ). Despite these high numbers,there are currently no general protocols for derivation,culture,and characterization of hESC. Moreover,data on the culture of the embryo used for the derivation (medium,day of ICM isolation) are usually not available but can have an impact on the derivation rate. We present here the protocols for derivation,culture and characterization as we applied them for the 22 hESC lines (named VUB-hESC) in our laboratory.
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Meng G and Rancourt DE (JAN 2012)
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton,N.J.) 873 69--80
Derivation and maintenance of undifferentiated human embryonic stem cells
Human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) are self-renewing,pluripotent cells derived from the inner cell mass of blastocysts,early-stage embryos,or blastomeres. hESCs can be propagated indefinitely in an undifferentiated state in vitro and have the ability to differentiate into all cell types of the body. Therefore,these cells can potentially provide an unlimited source of cells and hold promise for transplantation therapy,regenerative medicine,drug screening and discovery,and basic scientific research. Surplus human embryos donated for hESC derivation are extremely valuable,and inefficient derivation of hESCs would be a terrible waste of human embryos. Here,we describe a method for isolating hESC lines from human blastocysts with high efficiency. We also describe the methods for excising differentiated areas from partially differentiated hESC colonies and re-isolating undifferentiated hESCs from extremely differentiated hESC colonies.
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Fraga AM et al. (JAN 2012)
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton,N.J.) 873 1--12
Establishment of new lines of human embryonic stem cells: evolution of the methodology.
Although since 1998 more than 1,200 different hESC lines have been established worldwide,there is still a recognized interest in the establishment of new lines of hESC,particularly from HLA types and ethnic groups underrepresented among the currently available lines. The methodology of hESC derivation has evolved significantly since the initial derivations using human LIF (hLIF) for maintenance of pluripotency. However,there are still a number of alternative strategies for the different steps involved in establishing a new line of hESC. We have analyzed the different strategies/parameters used between 1998 and 2010 for the derivation of the 375 hESC lines able to form teratomas in immunocompromised mice deposited in two international stem cell registries. Here we describe some trends in the methodology for establishing hESC lines,discussing the developments in the field. Nevertheless,we describe a much greater heterogeneity of strategies for hESCs derivation than what is used for murine ESC lines,indicating that optimum conditions have not been identified yet,and thus,hESC establishment is still an evolving field of research.
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Olmer R et al. (OCT 2012)
Tissue engineering. Part C,Methods 18 10 772--784
Suspension culture of human pluripotent stem cells in controlled, stirred bioreactors
Therapeutic and industrial applications of pluripotent stem cells and their derivatives require large cell quantities generated in defined conditions. To this end,we have translated single cell-inoculated suspension cultures of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs; including human induced pluripotent stem cells [hiPS] and human embryonic stem cells [hESC]) to stirred tank bioreactors. These systems that are widely used in biopharmaceutical industry allow straightforward scale up and detailed online monitoring of key process parameters. To ensure minimum medium consumption,but in parallel functional integration of all probes mandatory for process monitoring,that is,for pO₂ and pH,experiments were performed in 100 mL culture volume in a mini reactor platform" consisting of four independently controlled vessels. By establishing defined parameters for tightly controlled cell inoculation and aggregate formation up to 2×10�?� hiPSCs/100 mL were generated in a single process run in 7 days. Expression of pluripotency markers and ability of cells to differentiate into derivates of all three germ layers in vitro was maintained�
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Sandt C et al. (JAN 2012)
PLoS ONE 7 4 e30743
Identification of spectral modifications occurring during reprogramming of somatic cells.
Recent technological advances in cell reprogramming by generation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) offer major perspectives in disease modelling and future hopes for providing novel stem cells sources in regenerative medicine. However,research on iPSC still requires refining the criteria of the pluripotency stage of these cells and exploration of their equivalent functionality to human embryonic stem cells (ESC). We report here on the use of infrared microspectroscopy to follow the spectral modification of somatic cells during the reprogramming process. We show that induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) adopt a chemical composition leading to a spectral signature indistinguishable from that of embryonic stem cells (ESC) and entirely different from that of the original somatic cells. Similarly,this technique allows a distinction to be made between partially and fully reprogrammed cells. We conclude that infrared microspectroscopy signature is a novel methodology to evaluate induced pluripotency and can be added to the tests currently used for this purpose.
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Jaramillo M and Banerjee I (MAR 2012)
Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE 61 2--7
Endothelial cell co-culture mediates maturation of human embryonic stem cell to pancreatic insulin producing cells in a directed differentiation approach.
Embryonic stem cells (ESC) have two main characteristics: they can be indefinitely propagated in vitro in an undifferentiated state and they are pluripotent,thus having the potential to differentiate into multiple lineages. Such properties make ESCs extremely attractive for cell based therapy and regenerative treatment applications. However for its full potential to be realized the cells have to be differentiated into mature and functional phenotypes,which is a daunting task. A promising approach in inducing cellular differentiation is to closely mimic the path of organogenesis in the in vitro setting. Pancreatic development is known to occur in specific stages,starting with endoderm,which can develop into several organs,including liver and pancreas. Endoderm induction can be achieved by modulation of the nodal pathway through addition of Activin A in combination with several growth factors. Definitive endoderm cells then undergo pancreatic commitment by inhibition of sonic hedgehog inhibition,which can be achieved in vitro by addition of cyclopamine. Pancreatic maturation is mediated by several parallel events including inhibition of notch signaling; aggregation of pancreatic progenitors into 3-dimentional clusters; induction of vascularization; to name a few. By far the most successful in vitro maturation of ESC derived pancreatic progenitor cells have been achieved through inhibition of notch signaling by DAPT supplementation. Although successful,this results in low yield of the mature phenotype with reduced functionality. A less studied area is the effect of endothelial cell signaling in pancreatic maturation,which is increasingly being appreciated as an important contributing factor in in-vivo pancreatic islet maturation. The current study explores such effect of endothelial cell signaling in maturation of human ESC derived pancreatic progenitor cells into insulin producing islet-like cells. We report a multi-stage directed differentiation protocol where the human ESCs are first induced towards endoderm by Activin A along with inhibition of PI3K pathway. Pancreatic specification of endoderm cells is achieved by inhibition of sonic hedgehog signaling by Cyclopamine along with retinoid induction by addition of Retinoic Acid. The final stage of maturation is induced by endothelial cell signaling achieved by a co-culture configuration. While several endothelial cells have been tested in the co-culture,herein we present our data with rat heart microvascular endothelial Cells (RHMVEC),primarily for the ease of analysis.
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Wang Z et al. (APR 2012)
Cell stem cell 10 4 440--454
Distinct lineage specification roles for NANOG, OCT4, and SOX2 in human embryonic stem cells.
Nanog,Oct4,and Sox2 are the core regulators of mouse (m)ESC pluripotency. Although their basic importance in human (h)ESCs has been demonstrated,the mechanistic functions are not well defined. Here,we identify general and cell-line-specific requirements for NANOG,OCT4,and SOX2 in hESCs. We show that OCT4 regulates,and interacts with,the BMP4 pathway to specify four developmental fates. High levels of OCT4 enable self-renewal in the absence of BMP4 but specify mesendoderm in the presence of BMP4. Low levels of OCT4 induce embryonic ectoderm differentiation in the absence of BMP4 but specify extraembryonic lineages in the presence of BMP4. NANOG represses embryonic ectoderm differentiation but has little effect on other lineages,whereas SOX2 and SOX3 are redundant and repress mesendoderm differentiation. Thus,instead of being panrepressors of differentiation,each factor controls specific cell fates. Our study revises the view of how self-renewal is orchestrated in hESCs.
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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.
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Hirai H et al. (JAN 2012)
PLoS ONE 7 3 e34149
Efficient iPS cell production with the MyoD transactivation domain in serum-free culture.
A major difficulty of producing induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) has been the low efficiency of reprogramming differentiated cells into pluripotent cells. We previously showed that 5% of mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) were reprogrammed into iPSCs when they were transduced with a fusion gene composed of Oct4 and the transactivation domain of MyoD (called M(3)O),along with Sox2,Klf4 and c-Myc (SKM). In addition,M(3)O facilitated chromatin remodeling of pluripotency genes in the majority of transduced MEFs,including cells that did not become iPSCs. These observations suggested the possibility that more than 5% of cells had acquired the ability to become iPSCs given more favorable culture conditions. Here,we raised the efficiency of making mouse iPSCs with M(3)O-SKM to 26% by culturing transduced cells at low density in serum-free culture medium. In contrast,the efficiency increased from 0.1% to only 2% with the combination of wild-type Oct4 and SKM (OSKM) under the same culture condition. For human iPSCs,M(3)O-SKM achieved 7% efficiency under a similar serum-free culture condition,in comparison to 1% efficiency with OSKM. This study highlights the power of combining the transactivation domain of MyoD with a favorable culture environment.
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Kovarova M and Koller B (APR 2012)
Current protocols in immunology / edited by John E. Coligan ... [et al.] Chapter 22 Unit 22F.10.1--16
Differentiation of mast cells from embryonic stem cells.
In this unit,we describe a simple coculture-free method for obtaining mast cells from mouse and human embryonic stem (ES) cells. Much of our knowledge regarding the mechanisms by which mast cells are activated comes from studies of mouse bone marrow-derived mast cells. Studies of human mast cells have been hampered by the limited sources from which they can be cultured,the difficulty in introducing specific genetic changes into these cells,and differences between established cultures that reflect the unique genetic makeup of the tissue donor. Derivation of mast cells from embryonic stem cells addresses these limitations. ES-derived mast cells can be generated in numbers sufficient for studies of the pathways involved in mast cell effector functions. These ES cell-derived mast cells respond to antigens and other stimuli by releasing histamine,cytokines,lipids,and other bioactive mediators. The derivation of human mast cells from ES cells carrying mutations introduced by homologous recombination should provide a novel means of testing the function of genes in both the development and the effector functions of mast cells.
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