Su CTE et al. (FEB 2015)
Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE 96 1--9
An Optogenetic Approach for Assessing Formation of Neuronal Connections in a Co-culture System.
Here we describe a protocol to generate a co-culture consisting of 2 different neuronal populations. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are reprogrammed from human fibroblasts using episomal vectors. Colonies of iPSCs can be observed 30 days after initiation of fibroblast reprogramming. Pluripotent colonies are manually picked and grown in neural induction medium to permit differentiation into neural progenitor cells (NPCs). iPSCs rapidly convert into neuroepithelial cells within 1 week and retain the capability to self-renew when maintained at a high culture density. Primary mouse NPCs are differentiated into astrocytes by exposure to a serum-containing medium for 7 days and form a monolayer upon which embryonic day 18 (E18) rat cortical neurons (transfected with channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2)) are added. Human NPCs tagged with the fluorescent protein,tandem dimer Tomato (tdTomato),are then seeded onto the astrocyte/cortical neuron culture the following day and allowed to differentiate for 28 to 35 days. We demonstrate that this system forms synaptic connections between iPSC-derived neurons and cortical neurons,evident from an increase in the frequency of synaptic currents upon photostimulation of the cortical neurons. This co-culture system provides a novel platform for evaluating the ability of iPSC-derived neurons to create synaptic connections with other neuronal populations.
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Crook JM et al. (MAR 2015)
Expert review of neurotherapeutics 15 3 295--304
The potential of induced pluripotent stem cells in models of neurological disorders: implications on future therapy.
There is an urgent need for new and advanced approaches to modeling the pathological mechanisms of complex human neurological disorders. This is underscored by the decline in pharmaceutical research and development efficiency resulting in a relative decrease in new drug launches in the last several decades. Induced pluripotent stem cells represent a new tool to overcome many of the shortcomings of conventional methods,enabling live human neural cell modeling of complex conditions relating to aberrant neurodevelopment,such as schizophrenia,epilepsy and autism as well as age-associated neurodegeneration. This review considers the current status of induced pluripotent stem cell-based modeling of neurological disorders,canvassing proven and putative advantages,current constraints,and future prospects of next-generation culture systems for biomedical research and translation.
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mTeSR™1
mTeSR™1
Gallegos-Cá et al. (AUG 2015)
Stem cells and development 24 16 1901--1911
For diseases of the brain,the pig (Sus scrofa) is increasingly being used as a model organism that shares many anatomical and biological similarities with humans. We report that pig induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) can recapitulate events in early mammalian neural development. Pig iPSC line (POU5F1(high)/SSEA4(low)) had a higher potential to form neural rosettes (NR) containing neuroepithelial cells than either POU5F1(low)/SSEA4(low) or POU5F1(low)/SSEA4(high) lines. Thus,POU5F1 and SSEA4 pluripotency marker profiles in starting porcine iPSC populations can predict their propensity to form more robust NR populations in culture. The NR were isolated and expanded in vitro,retaining their NR morphology and neuroepithelial molecular properties. These cells expressed anterior central nervous system fate markers OTX2 and GBX2 through at least seven passages,and responded to retinoic acid,promoting a more posterior fate (HOXB4+,OTX2-,and GBX2-). These findings offer insight into pig iPSC development,which parallels the human iPSC in both anterior and posterior neural cell fates. These in vitro similarities in early neural differentiation processes support the use of pig iPSC and differentiated neural cells as a cell therapy in allogeneic porcine neural injury and degeneration models,providing relevant translational data for eventual human neural cell therapies.
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Dispase (1 U/mL)
mTeSR™1
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Miranda C et al. (OCT 2015)
Biotechnology Journal 10 10 1612--1624
Spatial and temporal control of cell aggregation efficiently directs human pluripotent stem cells towards neural commitment
3D suspension culture is generally considered a promising method to achieve efficient expansion and controlled differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs). In this work,we focused on developing an integrated culture platform for expansion and neural commitment of hPSCs into neural precursors using 3D suspension conditions and chemically-defined culture media. We evaluated different inoculation methodologies for hPSC expansion as 3D aggregates and characterized the resulting cultures in terms of aggregate size distribution. It was demonstrated that upon single-cell inoculation,after four days of culture,3D aggregates were composed of homogenous populations of hPSC and were characterized by an average diameter of 139 ± 26 μm,which was determined to be the optimal size to initiate neural commitment. Temporal analysis revealed that upon neural specification it is possible to maximize the percentage of neural precursor cells expressing the neural markers Sox1 and Pax6 after nine days of culture. These results highlight our ability to define a robust method for production of hPSC-derived neural precursors that minimizes processing steps and that constitutes a promising alternative to the traditional planar adherent culture system due to a high potential for scaling-up.
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mTeSR™1
mTeSR™1
Martí et al. (APR 2016)
Molecular Neurobiology 53 5 2857--2868
RTP801 Is Involved in Mutant Huntingtin-Induced Cell Death
RTP801 expression is induced by cellular stress and has a pro-apoptotic function in non-proliferating differentiated cells such as neurons. In several neurodegenerative disorders,including Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease,elevated levels of RTP801 have been observed,which suggests a role for RTP801 in neuronal death. Neuronal death is also a pathological hallmark in Huntington's disease (HD),an inherited neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG repeat expansion in the huntingtin gene. Currently,the exact mechanisms underlying mutant huntingtin (mhtt)-induced toxicity are still unclear. Here,we investigated whether RTP801 is involved in (mhtt)-induced cell death. Ectopic exon-1 mhtt elevated RTP801 mRNA and protein levels in nerve growth factor (NGF)-differentiated PC12 cells and in rat primary cortical neurons. In neuronal PC12 cells,mhtt also contributed to RTP801 protein elevation by reducing its proteasomal degradation rate,in addition to promoting RTP801 gene expression. Interestingly,silencing RTP801 expression with short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) blocked mhtt-induced cell death in NGF-differentiated PC12 cells. However,RTP801 protein levels were not altered in the striatum of Hdh(Q7/Q111) and R6/1 mice,two HD models that display motor deficits but not neuronal death. Importantly,RTP801 protein levels were elevated in both neural telencephalic progenitors differentiated from HD patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells and in the putamen and cerebellum of human HD postmortem brains. Taken together,our results suggest that RTP801 is a novel downstream effector of mhtt-induced toxicity and that it may be relevant to the human disease.
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