Bhinge A et al. (JUN 2014)
EMBO Journal 33 11 1271--1283
MiR-135b is a direct PAX6 target and specifies human neuroectoderm by inhibiting TGF-$\$/BMP signaling.
Several transcription factors (TFs) have been implicated in neuroectoderm (NE) development,and recently,the TF PAX6 was shown to be critical for human NE specification. However,microRNA networks regulating human NE development have been poorly documented. We hypothesized that microRNAs activated by PAX6 should promote NE development. Using a genomics approach,we identified PAX6 binding sites and active enhancers genome-wide in an in vitro model of human NE development that was based on neural differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESC). PAX6 binding to active enhancers was found in the proximity of several microRNAs,including hsa-miR-135b. MiR-135b was activated during NE development,and ectopic expression of miR-135b in hESC promoted differentiation toward NE. MiR-135b promotes neural conversion by targeting components of the TGF-β and BMP signaling pathways,thereby inhibiting differentiation into alternate developmental lineages. Our results demonstrate a novel TF-miRNA module that is activated during human neuroectoderm development and promotes the irreversible fate specification of human pluripotent cells toward the neural lineage.
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Yang C-TT et al. (AUG 2014)
British Journal of Haematology 166 3 435--448
Human induced pluripotent stem cell derived erythroblasts can undergo definitive erythropoiesis and co-express gamma and beta globins.
Human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs),like embryonic stem cells,are under intense investigation for novel approaches to model disease and for regenerative therapies. Here,we describe the derivation and characterization of hiPSCs from a variety of sources and show that,irrespective of origin or method of reprogramming,hiPSCs can be differentiated on OP9 stroma towards a multi-lineage haemo-endothelial progenitor that can contribute to CD144(+) endothelium,CD235a(+) erythrocytes (myeloid lineage) and CD19(+) B lymphocytes (lymphoid lineage). Within the erythroblast lineage,we were able to demonstrate by single cell analysis (flow cytometry),that hiPSC-derived erythroblasts express alpha globin as previously described,and that a sub-population of these erythroblasts also express haemoglobin F (HbF),indicative of fetal definitive erythropoiesis. More notably however,we were able to demonstrate that a small sub-fraction of HbF positive erythroblasts co-expressed HbA in a highly heterogeneous manner,but analogous to cord blood-derived erythroblasts when cultured using similar methods. Moreover,the HbA expressing erythroblast population could be greatly enhanced (44textperiodcentered0 ± 6textperiodcentered04%) when a defined serum-free approach was employed to isolate a CD31(+) CD45(+) erythro-myeloid progenitor. These findings demonstrate that hiPSCs may represent a useful alternative to standard sources of erythrocytes (RBCs) for future applications in transfusion medicine.
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Kawase E ( 2016)
1307 61--69
Efficient Expansion of Dissociated Human Pluripotent Stem Cells Using a Synthetic Substrate.
Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs),including human embryonic stem cells and human-induced pluripotent stem cells,are a renewable cell source for a wide range of applications in regenerative medicine and useful tools for human disease modeling and drug discovery. For these purposes,large numbers of high-quality cells are essential. Recently,we showed that a biological substrate,recombinant E8 fragments of laminin isoforms,sustains long-term self-renewal of hPSCs in defined,xeno-free medium with dissociated single-cell passaging. Here,we describe a modified culture system with similar performance to efficiently expand hPSCs under defined,xeno-free conditions using a non-biological synthetic substrate.
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Liu Y et al. (MAR 2015)
Journal of Biomedical Materials Research - Part A 103 3 1053--1059
Native nucleus pulposus tissue matrix promotes notochordal differentiation of human induced pluripotent stem cells with potential for treating intervertebral disc degeneration
Native porcine nucleus pulposus (NP) tissue harbors a number of notochordal cells (NCs). Whether the native NP matrix supports the homeostasis of notochordal cells is poorly understood. We hypothesized the NP matrix alone may contain sufficient regulatory factors and can serve as stimuli to generate notochordal cells (NCs) from human pluripotent stem cells. NCs are a promising cell sources for cell-based therapy to treat some types of intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration. One major limitation of this emerging technique is the lack of available NCs as a potential therapeutic cell source. Human pluripotent stem cells derived from reprogramming or somatic cell nuclear transfer technique may yield stable and unlimited source for therapeutic use. We devised a new method to use porcine NP matrix to direct notochordal differentiation of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). The results showed that hiPSCs successfully differentiated into NC-like cells under the influence of devitalized porcine NP matrix. The NC-like cells expressed typical notochordal marker genes including brachyury (T),cytokeratin-8 (CK-8) and cytokeratin-18 (CK-18),and they displayed the ability to generate NP-like tissue in vitro,which was rich in aggrecan and collagen type II. These findings demonstrated the proof of concept for using native NP matrix to direct notochordal differentiation of hiPSCs. It provides a foundation for further understanding the biology of NCs,and eventually towards regenerative therapies for disc degeneration.
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Mormone E et al. (NOV 2014)
Stem cells and development 23 21 2626--36
Footprint-free" human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived astrocytes for in vivo cell-based therapy."
The generation of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) from somatic cells has enabled the possibility to provide patient-specific hiPSC for cell-based therapy,drug discovery,and other translational applications. Two major obstacles in using hiPSC for clinical application reside in the risk of genomic modification when they are derived with viral transgenes and risk of teratoma formation if undifferentiated cells are engrafted. In this study,we report the generation of footprint-free" hiPSC-derived astrocytes. These are efficiently generated�
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Grunseich C et al. (OCT 2014)
Neurobiology of Disease 70 12--20
Stem cell-derived motor neurons from spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy patients.
Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA,Kennedy's disease) is a motor neuron disease caused by polyglutamine repeat expansion in the androgen receptor. Although degeneration occurs in the spinal cord and muscle,the exact mechanism is not clear. Induced pluripotent stem cells from spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy patients provide a useful model for understanding the disease mechanism and designing effective therapy. Stem cells were generated from six patients and compared to control lines from three healthy individuals. Motor neurons from four patients were differentiated from stem cells and characterized to understand disease-relevant phenotypes. Stem cells created from patient fibroblasts express less androgen receptor than control cells,but show androgen-dependent stabilization and nuclear translocation. The expanded repeat in several stem cell clones was unstable,with either expansion or contraction. Patient stem cell clones produced a similar number of motor neurons compared to controls,with or without androgen treatment. The stem cell-derived motor neurons had immunoreactivity for HB9,Isl1,ChAT,and SMI-32,and those with the largest repeat expansions were found to have increased acetylated ??-tubulin and reduced HDAC6. Reduced HDAC6 was also found in motor neuron cultures from two other patients with shorter repeats. Evaluation of stably transfected mouse cells and SBMA spinal cord showed similar changes in acetylated ??-tubulin and HDAC6. Perinuclear lysosomal enrichment,an HDAC6 dependent process,was disrupted in motor neurons from two patients with the longest repeats. SBMA stem cells present new insights into the disease,and the observations of reduced androgen receptor levels,repeat instability,and reduced HDAC6 provide avenues for further investigation of the disease mechanism and development of effective therapy. ?? 2014.
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Chemically defined generation of human cardiomyocytes.
Existing methods for human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) cardiac differentiation are efficient but require complex,undefined medium constituents that hinder further elucidation of the molecular mechanisms of cardiomyogenesis. Using hiPSCs derived under chemically defined conditions on synthetic matrices,we systematically developed an optimized cardiac differentiation strategy,using a chemically defined medium consisting of just three components: the basal medium RPMI 1640,L-ascorbic acid 2-phosphate and rice-derived recombinant human albumin. Along with small molecule-based induction of differentiation,this protocol produced contractile sheets of up to 95% TNNT2(+) cardiomyocytes at a yield of up to 100 cardiomyocytes for every input pluripotent cell and was effective in 11 hiPSC lines tested. This chemically defined platform for cardiac specification of hiPSCs will allow the elucidation of cardiomyocyte macromolecular and metabolic requirements and will provide a minimal system for the study of maturation and subtype specification.
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Baatz JE et al. (JUL 2014)
In vivo (Athens,Greece) 28 4 411--423
Cryopreservation of viable human lung tissue for versatile post-thaw analyses and culture.
Clinical trials are currently used to test therapeutic efficacies for lung cancer,infections and diseases. Animal models are also used as surrogates for human disease. Both approaches are expensive and time-consuming. The utility of human biospecimens as models is limited by specialized tissue processing methods that preserve subclasses of analytes (e.g. RNA,protein,morphology) at the expense of others. We present a rapid and reproducible method for the cryopreservation of viable lung tissue from patients undergoing lobectomy or transplant. This method involves the pseudo-diaphragmatic expansion of pieces of fresh lung tissue with cryoprotectant formulation (pseudo-diaphragmatic expansion-cryoprotectant perfusion or PDX-CP) followed by controlled-rate freezing in cryovials. Expansion-perfusion rates,volumes and cryoprotectant formulation were optimized to maintain tissue architecture,decrease crystal formation and increase long-term cell viability. Rates of expansion of 4 cc/min or less and volumes ranging from 0.8-1.2 × tissue volume were well-tolerated by lung tissue obtained from patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis,showing minimal differences compared to standard histopathology. Morphology was greatly improved by the PDX-CP procedure compared to simple fixation. Fresh versus post-thawed lung tissue showed minimal differences in histology,RNA integrity numbers and post-translational modified protein integrity (2-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis). It was possible to derive numerous cell types,including alveolar epithelial cells,fibroblasts and stem cells,from the tissue for at least three months after cryopreservation. This new method should provide a uniform,cost-effective approach to the banking of biospecimens,with versatility to be amenable to any post-acquisition process applicable to fresh tissue samples.
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Wu J et al. (JUL 2014)
PLoS ONE 9 7 e102486
Oxygen transport and stem cell aggregation in stirred-suspension bioreactor cultures
Stirred-suspension bioreactors are a promising modality for large-scale culture of 3D aggregates of pluripotent stem cells and their progeny. Yet,cells within these clusters experience limitations in the transfer of factors and particularly O2 which is characterized by low solubility in aqueous media. Cultured stem cells under different O2 levels may exhibit significantly different proliferation,viability and differentiation potential. Here,a transient diffusion-reaction model was built encompassing the size distribution and ultrastructural characteristics of embryonic stem cell (ESC) aggregates. The model was coupled to experimental data from bioreactor and static cultures for extracting the effective diffusivity and kinetics of consumption of O2 within mouse (mESC) and human ESC (hESC) clusters. Under agitation,mESC aggregates exhibited a higher maximum consumption rate than hESC aggregates. Moreover,the reaction-diffusion model was integrated with a population balance equation (PBE) for the temporal distribution of ESC clusters changing due to aggregation and cell proliferation. Hypoxia was found to be negligible for ESCs with a smaller radius than 100 µm but became appreciable for aggregates larger than 300 µm. The integrated model not only captured the O2 profile both in the bioreactor bulk and inside ESC aggregates but also led to the calculation of the duration that fractions of cells experience a certain range of O2 concentrations. The approach described in this study can be employed for gaining a deeper understanding of the effects of O2 on the physiology of stem cells organized in 3D structures. Such frameworks can be extended to encompass the spatial and temporal availability of nutrients and differentiation factors and facilitate the design and control of relevant bioprocesses for the production of stem cell therapeutics.
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Greene WA et al. (JUN 2014)
Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE 88 e51589
MicroRNA expression profiles of human iPS cells, retinal pigment epithelium derived from iPS, and fetal retinal pigment epithelium.
The objective of this report is to describe the protocols for comparing the microRNA (miRNA) profiles of human induced-pluripotent stem (iPS) cells,retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) derived from human iPS cells (iPS-RPE),and fetal RPE. The protocols include collection of RNA for analysis by microarray,and the analysis of microarray data to identify miRNAs that are differentially expressed among three cell types. The methods for culture of iPS cells and fetal RPE are explained. The protocol used for differentiation of RPE from human iPS is also described. The RNA extraction technique we describe was selected to allow maximal recovery of very small RNA for use in a miRNA microarray. Finally,cellular pathway and network analysis of microarray data is explained. These techniques will facilitate the comparison of the miRNA profiles of three different cell types.
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Suchá et al. (MAY 2014)
European journal of histochemistry : EJH 58 2 2389
PRMT1 arginine methyltransferase accumulates in cytoplasmic bodies that respond to selective inhibition and DNA damage.
Protein arginine methyltransferases (PRMTs) are responsible for symmetric and asymmetric methylation of arginine residues of nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins. In the nucleus,PRMTs belong to important chromatin modifying enzymes of immense functional significance that affect gene expression,splicing and DNA repair. By time-lapse microscopy we have studied the sub-cellular localization and kinetics of PRMT1 after inhibition of PRMT1 and after irradiation. Both transiently expressed and endogenous PRMT1 accumulated in cytoplasmic bodies that were located in the proximity of the cell nucleus. The shape and number of these bodies were stable in untreated cells. However,when cell nuclei were microirradiated by UV-A,the mobility of PRMT1 cytoplasmic bodies increased,size was reduced,and disappeared within approximately 20 min. The same response occurred after $$-irradiation of the whole cell population,but with delayed kinetics. Treatment with PRMT1 inhibitors induced disintegration of these PRMT1 cytoplasmic bodies and prevented formation of 53BP1 nuclear bodies (NBs) that play a role during DNA damage repair. The formation of 53BP1 NBs was not influenced by PRMT1 overexpression. Taken together,we show that PRMT1 concentrates in cytoplasmic bodies,which respond to DNA injury in the cell nucleus,and to treatment with various PRMT1 inhibitors.
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Zhang X et al. (SEP 2011)
Nature cell biology 13 9 1092--9
FOXO1 is an essential regulator of pluripotency in human embryonic stem cells.
Pluripotency of embryonic stem cells (ESCs) is defined by their ability to differentiate into three germ layers and derivative cell types and is established by an interactive network of proteins including OCT4 (also known as POU5F1; ref. ),NANOG (refs ,),SOX2 (ref. ) and their binding partners. The forkhead box O (FoxO) transcription factors are evolutionarily conserved regulators of longevity and stress response whose function is inhibited by AKT protein kinase. FoxO proteins are required for the maintenance of somatic and cancer stem cells; however,their function in ESCs is unknown. We show that FOXO1 is essential for the maintenance of human ESC pluripotency,and that an orthologue of FOXO1 (Foxo1) exerts a similar function in mouse ESCs. This function is probably mediated through direct control by FOXO1 of OCT4 and SOX2 gene expression through occupation and activation of their respective promoters. Finally,AKT is not the predominant regulator of FOXO1 in human ESCs. Together these results indicate that FOXO1 is a component of the circuitry of human ESC pluripotency. These findings have critical implications for stem cell biology,development,longevity and reprogramming,with potentially important ramifications for therapy.
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