Gonzales KAU et al. (JUL 2015)
Cell 162 3 564--579
Deterministic Restriction on Pluripotent State Dissolution by Cell-Cycle Pathways.
During differentiation,human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) shut down the regulatory network conferring pluripotency in a process we designated pluripotent state dissolution (PSD). In a high-throughput RNAi screen using an inclusive set of differentiation conditions,we identify centrally important and context-dependent processes regulating PSD in hESCs,including histone acetylation,chromatin remodeling,RNA splicing,and signaling pathways. Strikingly,we detected a strong and specific enrichment of cell-cycle genes involved in DNA replication and G2 phase progression. Genetic and chemical perturbation studies demonstrate that the S and G2 phases attenuate PSD because they possess an intrinsic propensity toward the pluripotent state that is independent of G1 phase. Our data therefore functionally establish that pluripotency control is hardwired to the cell-cycle machinery,where S and G2 phase-specific pathways deterministically restrict PSD,whereas the absence of such pathways in G1 phase potentially permits the initiation of differentiation.
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Link AS et al. (AUG 2016)
Molecular neurobiology 53 6 4210--4225
Kdm6b and Pmepa1 as Targets of Bioelectrically and Behaviorally Induced Activin A Signaling.
The transforming growth factor-$\$(TGF-$\$) family member activin A exerts multiple neurotrophic and protective effects in the brain. Activin also modulates cognitive functions and affective behavior and is a presumed target of antidepressant therapy. Despite its important role in the injured and intact brain,the mechanisms underlying activin effects in the CNS are still largely unknown. Our goal was to identify the first target genes of activin signaling in the hippocampus in vivo. Electroconvulsive seizures,a rodent model of electroconvulsive therapy in humans,were applied to C57BL/6J mice to elicit a strong increase in activin A signaling. Chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments with hippocampal lysates subsequently revealed that binding of SMAD2/3,the intracellular effectors of activin signaling,was significantly enriched at the Pmepa1 gene,which encodes a negative feedback regulator of TGF-$\$ in cancer cells,and at the Kdm6b gene,which encodes an epigenetic regulator promoting transcriptional plasticity. Underlining the significance of these findings,activin treatment also induced PMEPA1 and KDM6B expression in human forebrain neurons generated from embryonic stem cells suggesting interspecies conservation of activin effects in mammalian neurons. Importantly,physiological stimuli such as provided by environmental enrichment proved already sufficient to engender a rapid and significant induction of activin signaling concomitant with an upregulation of Pmepa1 and Kdm6b expression. Taken together,our study identified the first target genes of activin signaling in the brain. With the induction of Kdm6b expression,activin is likely to gain impact on a presumed epigenetic regulator of activity-dependent neuronal plasticity.
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Liang D et al. ( 2015)
Endocrine journal 62 10 907--920
Embryonic stem cell-derived pancreatic endoderm transplant with MCT1-suppressing miR-495 attenuates type II diabetes in mice.
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) is a chronic metabolic disorder resulting from defects in both insulin secretion and insulin activity. The deficit and dysfunction of insulin secreting $\$-cells are signature symptoms of T2D. Additionally,in pancreatic $\$-cells,a small group of genes that are abundantly expressed in most other tissues is highly selectively repressed. Monocarboxylate transporter 1 (MCT1) is one of these genes. In this study,we identified an MCT1-suppressing microRNA (hsa-miR-495) and used this microRNA together with human embryonic stem cell (hESC) derived pancreatic endoderm (PE) cells transplanted into a high-fat diet induced T2D mouse model. Glucose metabolism significantly improved and other symptoms of T2D were attenuated after the procedure. Our findings support the potential for T2D treatment using the combination of microRNA and hESC differentiated PE cells.
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Carvalho JL et al. (NOV 2012)
Journal of tissue science & engineering Suppl 11 002
Characterization of Decellularized Heart Matrices as Biomaterials for Regular and Whole Organ Tissue Engineering and Initial In-vitro Recellularization with Ips Cells.
Tissue engineering strategies,based on solid/porous scaffolds,suffer from several limitations,such as ineffective vascularization,poor cell distribution and organization within scaffold,in addition to low final cell density,among others. Therefore,the search for other tissue engineering approaches constitutes an active area of investigation. Decellularized matrices (DM) present major advantages compared to solid scaffolds,such as ideal chemical composition,the preservation of vascularization structure and perfect three-dimensional structure. In the present study,we aimed to characterize and investigate murine heart decellularized matrices as biomaterials for regular and whole organ tissue engineering. Heart decellularized matrices were characterized according to: 1. DNA content,through DNA quantificationo and PCR of isolated genomic DNA; 2. Histological structure,assessed after Hematoxylin and Eosin,as well as Masson's Trichrome stainings; 3. Surface nanostructure analysis,performed,using SEM. Those essays allowed us to conclude that DM was indeed decellularized,with preserved extracellular matrix structure. Following characterization,decellularized heart slices were seeded with induced Pluripotent Stem cells (iPS). As expected,but - to the best of our knowledge - never shown before,decellularization of murine heart matrices maintained matrix biocompatibility,as iPS cells rapidly attached to the surface of the material and proliferated. Strikingly though,heart DM presented a differentiation induction effect over those cells,which lost their pluripotency markers after 7 days of culture in the DM. Such loss of differentiation markers was observed,even though bFGF containing media mTSR was used during such period. Gene expression of iPS cells cultured on DM will be further analyzed,in order to assess the effects of culturing pluripotent stem cells in decellularized heart matrices.
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Du L et al. (MAY 2016)
Journal of applied toxicology : JAT 36 5 659--668
BDE-209 inhibits pluripotent genes expression and induces apoptosis in human embryonic stem cells.
Decabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-209) has been detected in human serum,semen,placenta,cord blood and milk worldwide. However,little is known regarding the potential effects on the early human embryonic development of BDE-209. In this study,human embryonic stem cell lines FY-hES-10 and FY-hES-26 were used to evaluate the potential effects and explore the toxification mechanisms using low-level BDE-209 exposure. Our data showed that BDE-209 exposure (1,10 and 100 nM) reduced the expression of pluripotent genes such as OCT4,SOX2 and NANOG and induced human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) apoptosis. The downregulation of BIRC5/BCL2 and upregulation of BAX were related to apoptosis of hESCs induced by BDE-209 exposure. A mechanism study showed that OCT4 down-regulation accompanied by OCT4 promoter hypermethylation and increasing miR-145/miR-335 levels,OCT4 inhibitors. Moreover,BDE-209 could increase the generation of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) and decrease SOD2 expression. The ROS increase and OCT4 downregulation after BDE-209 exposure could be reversed partly by antioxidant N-acetylcysteine supplement. These findings showed that BDE-209 exposure could decrease pluripotent genes expression via epigenetic regulation and induce apoptosis through ROS generation in human embryonic stem cells in vitro.
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Nayak RC et al. (AUG 2015)
The Journal of clinical investigation 125 8 3103--3116
Pathogenesis of ELANE-mutant severe neutropenia revealed by induced pluripotent stem cells.
Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) is often associated with inherited heterozygous point mutations in ELANE,which encodes neutrophil elastase (NE). However,a lack of appropriate models to recapitulate SCN has substantially hampered the understanding of the genetic etiology and pathobiology of this disease. To this end,we generated both normal and SCN patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs),and performed genome editing and differentiation protocols that recapitulate the major features of granulopoiesis. Pathogenesis of ELANE point mutations was the result of promyelocyte death and differentiation arrest,and was associated with NE mislocalization and activation of the unfolded protein response/ER stress (UPR/ER stress). Similarly,high-dose G-CSF (or downstream signaling through AKT/BCL2) rescues the dysgranulopoietic defect in SCN patient-derived iPSCs through C/EBP$$-dependent emergency granulopoiesis. In contrast,sivelestat,an NE-specific small-molecule inhibitor,corrected dysgranulopoiesis by restoring normal intracellular NE localization in primary granules; ameliorating UPR/ER stress; increasing expression of CEBPA,but not CEBPB; and promoting promyelocyte survival and differentiation. Together,these data suggest that SCN disease pathogenesis includes NE mislocalization,which in turn triggers dysfunctional survival signaling and UPR/ER stress. This paradigm has the potential to be clinically exploited to achieve therapeutic responses using lower doses of G-CSF combined with targeting to correct NE mislocalization.
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Guan X et al. (JUL 2015)
Human gene therapy. Clinical development 150715074418003
Use of adeno-associated virus to enrich cardiomyocytes derived from human stem cells.
Cardiomyocytes derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) show great promise as autologous donor cells to treat heart disease. A major technical obstacle to this approach is that available induction methods often produce heterogeneous cell population with low percentage of cardiomyocytes. Here we describe a cardiac enrichment approach using non-integrating adeno-associated virus (AAV). We first examined several AAV serotypes for their ability to selectively transduce iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes. Result showed that AAV1 demonstrated the highest in vitro transduction efficiency among seven widely used serotypes. Next differentiated iPSC derivatives were transduced with drug-selectable AAV1 expressing neomycin resistance gene. Selection with G418 enriched the cardiac cell fraction from 27% to 57% in two weeks. Compared to other enrichment strategies such as integrative genetic selection,mitochondria labeling or surface marker cell sorting,this simple AAV method described herein bypasses antibody or dye labeling. These findings provide proof-of-concept for large-scale cardiomyocyte enrichment by exploiting AAV's intrinsic tissue tropism.
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Ma Z et al. (JUL 2015)
Nature communications 6 May 7413
Self-organizing human cardiac microchambers mediated by geometric confinement.
Tissue morphogenesis and organ formation are the consequences of biochemical and biophysical cues that lead to cellular spatial patterning in development. To model such events in vitro,we use PEG-patterned substrates to geometrically confine human pluripotent stem cell colonies and spatially present mechanical stress. Modulation of the WNT/β-catenin pathway promotes spatial patterning via geometric confinement of the cell condensation process during epithelial-mesenchymal transition,forcing cells at the perimeter to express an OCT4+ annulus,which is coincident with a region of higher cell density and E-cadherin expression. The biochemical and biophysical cues synergistically induce self-organizing lineage specification and creation of a beating human cardiac microchamber confined by the pattern geometry. These highly defined human cardiac microchambers can be used to study aspects of embryonic spatial patterning,early cardiac development and drug-induced developmental toxicity.
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Jiang B et al. (OCT 2015)
Biomaterials 65 103--114
Generation of cardiac spheres from primate pluripotent stem cells in a small molecule-based 3D system.
Pluripotent stem cell (PSC) usage in heart regenerative medicine requires producing enriched cardiomyocytes (CMs) with mature phenotypes in a defined medium. However,current methods are typically performed in 2D environments that produce immature CMs. Here we report a simple,growth factor-free 3D culture system to rapidly and efficiently generate 85.07 ± 1.8% of spontaneously contractile cardiac spheres (scCDSs) using 3D-cultured human and monkey PSC-spheres. Along with small molecule-based 3D induction,this protocol produces CDSs of up to 95.7% CMs at a yield of up to 237 CMs for every input pluripotent cell,is effective for human and monkey PSCs,and maintains 81.03 ± 12.43% of CDSs in spontaneous contractibility for over three months. These CDSs displayed CM ultrastructure,calcium transient,appropriate pharmacological responses and CM gene expression profiles specific for maturity. Furthermore,3D-derived CMs displayed more mature phenotypes than those from a parallel 2D-culture. The system is compatible to large-scaly produce CMs for disease study,cell therapy and pharmaceutics screening.
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Douvaras P and Fossati V (AUG 2015)
Nature protocols 10 8 1143--1154
Generation and isolation of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells from human pluripotent stem cells.
In the CNS,oligodendrocytes act as the myelinating cells. Oligodendrocytes have been identified to be key players in several neurodegenerative disorders. This protocol describes a robust,fast and reproducible differentiation protocol to generate human oligodendrocytes from pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) using a chemically defined,growth factor-rich medium. Within 8 d,PSCs differentiate into paired box 6-positive (PAX6(+)) neural stem cells,which give rise to OLIG2(+) progenitors by day 12. Oligodendrocyte lineage transcription factor 2-positive (OLIG2(+)) cells begin to express the transcription factor NKX2.2 around day 18,followed by SRY-box 10 (SOX10) around day 40. Oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) that are positive for the cell surface antigen recognized by the O4 antibody (O4(+)) appear around day 50 and reach,on average,43% of the cell population after 75 d of differentiation. O4(+) OPCs can be isolated by cell sorting for myelination studies,or they can be terminally differentiated to myelin basic protein-positive (MBP(+)) oligodendrocytes. This protocol also describes an alternative strategy for markedly reducing the length and the costs of the differentiation and generating ∼30% O4(+) cells after only 55 d of culture.
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Aikawa N et al. ( 2015)
Biological & pharmaceutical bulletin 38 7 1070--1075
A Simple Protocol for the Myocardial Differentiation of Human iPS Cells.
We have developed a simple protocol for inducing the myocardial differentiation of human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. Human iPS cell-derived embryonic bodies (EBs) were treated with a combination of activin-A,bone morphogenetic protein-4 and wnt-3a for one day in serum-free suspension culture,and were subsequently treated with noggin for three days. Thereafter,the EBs were subjected to adherent culture in media with 5% serum. All EBs were differentiated into spontaneously beating EBs,which were identified by the presence of striated muscles in transmission electron microscopy and the expression of the specific cardiomyocyte markers,NKX2-5 and TNNT2. The beating rate of the beating EBs was decreased by treatment with a rapidly activating delayed rectifier potassium current (Ikr) channel blocker,E-4031,an Ikr trafficking inhibitor,pentamidin,and a slowly activating delayed rectifier potassium current (Iks) channel blocker,chromanol 293B,and was increased by treatment with a beta-receptor agonist,isoproterenol. At a low concentration,verapamil,a calcium channel blocker,increased the beating rate of the beating EBs,while a high concentration decreased this rate. These findings suggest that the spontaneously beating EBs were myocardial cell clusters. This simple protocol for myocardial differentiation would be useful in providing a sufficient number of the beating myocardial cell clusters for studies requiring human myocardium.
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Sokolov M et al. (JUN 2015)
International journal of molecular sciences 16 7 14737--48
Comparative Analysis of Whole-Genome Gene Expression Changes in Cultured Human Embryonic Stem Cells in Response to Low, Clinical Diagnostic Relevant, and High Doses of Ionizing Radiation Exposure.
The biological effects of low-dose ionizing radiation (LDIR) exposure in humans are not comprehensively understood,generating a high degree of controversy in published literature. The earliest stages of human development are known to be among the most sensitive to stress exposures,especially genotoxic stresses. However,the risks stemming from exposure to LDIR,particularly within the clinical diagnostic relevant dose range,have not been directly evaluated in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). Here,we describe the dynamics of the whole genome transcriptional responses of different hESC lines to both LDIR and,as a reference,high-dose IR (HDIR). We found that even doses as low as 0.05 Gy could trigger statistically significant transient changes in a rather limited subset of genes in all hESCs lines examined. Gene expression signatures of hESCs exposed to IR appear to be highly dose-,time-,and cell line-dependent. We identified 50 genes constituting consensus gene expression signature as an early response to HDIR across all lines of hESC examined. We observed substantial differences in biological pathways affected by either LDIR or HDIR in hESCs,suggesting that the molecular mechanisms underpinning the responses of hESC may fundamentally differ depending on radiation doses.
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