Endothelial-Ercc1 DNA repair deficiency provokes blood-brain barrier dysfunction
Aging of the brain vasculature plays a key role in the development of neurovascular and neurodegenerative diseases,thereby contributing to cognitive impairment. Among other factors,DNA damage strongly promotes cellular aging,however,the role of genomic instability in brain endothelial cells (EC) and its potential effect on brain homeostasis is still largely unclear. We here investigated how endothelial aging impacts blood-brain barrier (BBB) function by using excision repair cross complementation group 1 (ERCC1)-deficient human brain ECs and an EC-specific Ercc1 knock out (EC-KO) mouse model. In vitro,ERCC1-deficient brain ECs displayed increased senescence-associated secretory phenotype expression,reduced BBB integrity,and higher sprouting capacities due to an underlying dysregulation of the Dll4-Notch pathway. In line,EC-KO mice showed more P21+ cells,augmented expression of angiogenic markers,and a concomitant increase in the number of brain ECs and pericytes. Moreover,EC-KO mice displayed BBB leakage and enhanced cell adhesion molecule expression accompanied by peripheral immune cell infiltration into the brain. These findings were confined to the white matter,suggesting a regional susceptibility. Collectively,our results underline the role of endothelial aging as a driver of impaired BBB function,endothelial sprouting,and increased immune cell migration into the brain,thereby contributing to impaired brain homeostasis as observed during the aging process.
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产品号#:
100-0276
100-1130
产品名:
mTeSR™ Plus
mTeSR™ Plus
(Sep 2024)
Stem Cell Research & Therapy 15 8
Prostatic lineage differentiation from human embryonic stem cells through inducible expression of NKX3-1
BackgroundUnderstanding the lineage differentiation of human prostate not only is crucial for basic research on human developmental biology but also significantly contributes to the management of prostate-related disorders. Current knowledge mainly relies on studies on rodent models,lacking human-derived alternatives despite clinical samples may provide a snapshot at certain stage. Human embryonic stem cells can generate all the embryonic lineages including the prostate,and indeed a few studies demonstrate such possibility based on co-culture or co-transplantation with urogenital mesenchyme into mouse renal capsule.MethodsTo establish a stepwise protocol to obtain prostatic organoids in vitro from human embryonic stem cells,we apply chemicals and growth factors by mimicking the regulation network of transcription factors and signal transduction pathways,and construct cell lines carrying an inducible NKX3-1 expressing cassette,together with three-dimensional culture system. Unpaired t test was applied for statistical analyses.ResultsWe first successfully generate the definitive endoderm,hindgut,and urogenital sinus cells. The embryonic stem cell-derived urogenital sinus cells express prostatic key transcription factors AR and FOXA1,but fail to express NKX3-1. Therefore,we construct NKX3-1-inducible cell line by homologous recombination,which is eventually able to yield AR,FOXA1,and NKX3-1 triple-positive urogenital prostatic lineage cells through stepwise differentiation. Finally,combined with 3D culture we successfully derive prostate-like organoids with certain structures and prostatic cell populations.ConclusionsThis study reveals the crucial role of NKX3-1 in prostatic differentiation and offers the inducible NKX3-1 cell line,as well as provides a stepwise differentiation protocol to generate human prostate-like organoids,which should facilitate the studies on prostate development and disease pathogenesis.Supplementary InformationThe online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13287-024-03886-y.
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产品号#:
85850
85857
产品名:
mTeSR™1
mTeSR™1
(Sep 2024)
Human Genetics and Genomics Advances 5 4
Non-coding cause of congenital heart defects: Abnormal RNA splicing with multiple isoforms as a mechanism for heterotaxy
SummaryHeterotaxy is a disorder characterized by severe congenital heart defects (CHDs) and abnormal left-right patterning in other thoracic or abdominal organs. Clinical and research-based genetic testing has previously focused on evaluation of coding variants to identify causes of CHDs,leaving non-coding causes of CHDs largely unknown. Variants in the transcription factor zinc finger of the cerebellum 3 (ZIC3) cause X-linked heterotaxy. We identified an X-linked heterotaxy pedigree without a coding variant in ZIC3. Whole-genome sequencing revealed a deep intronic variant (ZIC3 c.1224+3286A>G) predicted to alter RNA splicing. An in vitro minigene splicing assay confirmed the variant acts as a cryptic splice acceptor. CRISPR-Cas9 served to introduce the ZIC3 c.1224+3286A>G variant into human embryonic stem cells demonstrating pseudoexon inclusion caused by the variant. Surprisingly,Sanger sequencing of the resulting ZIC3 c.1224+3286A>G amplicons revealed several isoforms,many of which bypass the normal coding sequence of the third exon of ZIC3,causing a disruption of a DNA-binding domain and a nuclear localization signal. Short- and long-read mRNA sequencing confirmed these initial results and identified additional splicing patterns. Assessment of four isoforms determined abnormal functions in vitro and in vivo while treatment with a splice-blocking morpholino partially rescued ZIC3. These results demonstrate that pseudoexon inclusion in ZIC3 can cause heterotaxy and provide functional validation of non-coding disease causation. Our results suggest the importance of non-coding variants in heterotaxy and the need for improved methods to identify and classify non-coding variation that may contribute to CHDs. Coding variants in the transcription factor ZIC3 cause X-linked heterotaxy,a laterality defect causing congenital anomalies. Functional genomic analyses of a ZIC3 intronic variant identified in an X-linked heterotaxy pedigree demonstrated pseudoexon inclusion leading to RNA-splicing disruption,highlighting the importance of whole-genome sequencing to identify potential disease-causing variants.
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产品号#:
85850
85857
产品名:
mTeSR™1
mTeSR™1
(Apr 2025)
Frontiers in Genome Editing 7
Efficient GBA1 editing via HDR with ssODNs by outcompeting pseudogene-mediated gene conversion upon CRISPR/Cas9 cleavage
IntroductionCRISPR/Cas9-edited induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are valuable research models for mechanistic studies. However,gene conversion between a gene-pseudogene pair that share high sequence identity and form direct repeats in proximity on the same chromosome can interfere with the precision of gene editing. Mutations in the human beta-glucocerebrosidase gene (GBA1) are associated with Gaucher disease,Parkinson’s disease,and Lewy body dementia. During the creation of a GBA1 KO iPSC line,we detected about 70% gene conversion from its pseudogene GBAP1. These events maintained the reading frame and resulted from GBA1-specific cleavage by CRISPR/Cas9,without disrupting the GBA1 gene.MethodTo increase the percentage of alleles with out-of-frame indels for triggering nonsense-mediated decay of the GBA1 mRNA,we supplied the cells with two single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotide (ssODN) donors as homology-directed repair (HDR) templates.ResultsWe demonstrate that HDR using the ssODN templates effectively competes with gene conversion and enabled biallelic KO clone isolation,whereas the nonallelic homologous recombination (NAHR)-based deletion rate remained the same.DiscussionHere,we report a generalizable method to direct cellular DNA repair of double strand breaks at a target gene towards the HDR pathway using exogenous ssODN templates,allowing specific editing of one gene in a gene-pseudogene pair without disturbing the other.
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产品号#:
100-0483
100-0484
100-0276
100-1130
产品名:
Hausser Scientificᵀᴹ 明线血球计数板
ReLeSR™
mTeSR™ Plus
mTeSR™ Plus
(Apr 2025)
Journal of Neuroinflammation 22 7341
Microglia determine an immune-challenged environment and facilitate ibuprofen action in human retinal organoids
Prenatal immune challenges pose significant risks to human embryonic brain and eye development. However,our knowledge about the safe usage of anti-inflammatory drugs during pregnancy is still limited. While human induced pluripotent stem cells (hIPSC)-derived brain organoid models have started to explore functional consequences upon viral stimulation,these models commonly lack microglia,which are susceptible to and promote inflammation. Furthermore,microglia are actively involved in neuronal development. Here,we generate hIPSC-derived microglia precursor cells and assemble them into retinal organoids. Once the outer plexiform layer forms,these hIPSC-derived microglia (iMG) fully integrate into the retinal organoids. Since the ganglion cell survival declines by this time in 3D-retinal organoids,we adapted the model into 2D and identify that the improved ganglion cell number significantly decreases only with iMG presence. In parallel,we applied the immunostimulant POLY(I:C) to mimic a fetal viral infection. While POLY(I:C) exposure alters the iMG phenotype,it does not hinder their interaction with ganglion cells. Furthermore,iMG significantly enhance the supernatant’s inflammatory secretome and increase retinal cell proliferation. Simultaneous exposure with the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) ibuprofen dampens POLY(I:C)-mediated changes of the iMG phenotype and ameliorates cell proliferation. Remarkably,while POLY(I:C) disrupts neuronal calcium dynamics independent of iMG,ibuprofen rescues this effect only if iMG are present. Mechanistically,ibuprofen targets the enzymes cyclooxygenase 1 and 2 (COX1/PTGS1 and COX2/PTGS2) simultaneously,from which iMG mainly express COX1. Selective COX1 blockage fails to restore the calcium peak amplitude upon POLY(I:C) stimulation,suggesting ibuprofen’s beneficial effect depends on the presence and interplay of COX1 and COX2. These findings underscore the importance of microglia in the context of prenatal immune challenges and provide insight into the mechanisms by which ibuprofen exerts its protective effects during embryonic development.Supplementary InformationThe online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12974-025-03366-x.
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产品号#:
05833
05838
08581
08582
85850
85857
产品名:
STEMdiff™神经前体细胞培养基
STEMdiff™神经祖细胞冻存液
STEMdiff™SMADi神经诱导试剂盒
STEMdiff™SMADi神经诱导试剂盒,2套
mTeSR™1
mTeSR™1
(Sep 2024)
Molecular Autism 15 8
Identifying SETBP1 haploinsufficiency molecular pathways to improve patient diagnosis using induced pluripotent stem cells and neural disease modelling
BackgroundSETBP1 Haploinsufficiency Disorder (SETBP1-HD) is characterised by mild to moderate intellectual disability,speech and language impairment,mild motor developmental delay,behavioural issues,hypotonia,mild facial dysmorphisms,and vision impairment. Despite a clear link between SETBP1 mutations and neurodevelopmental disorders the precise role of SETBP1 in neural development remains elusive. We investigate the functional effects of three SETBP1 genetic variants including two pathogenic mutations p.Glu545Ter and SETBP1 p.Tyr1066Ter,resulting in removal of SKI and/or SET domains,and a point mutation p.Thr1387Met in the SET domain.MethodsGenetic variants were introduced into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and subsequently differentiated into neurons to model the disease. We measured changes in cellular differentiation,SETBP1 protein localisation,and gene expression changes.ResultsThe data indicated a change in the WNT pathway,RNA polymerase II pathway and identified GATA2 as a central transcription factor in disease perturbation. In addition,the genetic variants altered the expression of gene sets related to neural forebrain development matching characteristics typical of the SETBP1-HD phenotype.LimitationsThe study investigates changes in cellular function in differentiation of iPSC to neural progenitor cells as a human model of SETBP1 HD disorder. Future studies may provide additional information relevant to disease on further neural cell specification,to derive mature neurons,neural forebrain cells,or brain organoids.ConclusionsWe developed a human SETBP1-HD model and identified perturbations to the WNT and POL2RA pathway,genes regulated by GATA2. Strikingly neural cells for both the SETBP1 truncation mutations and the single nucleotide variant displayed a SETBP1-HD-like phenotype.Supplementary InformationThe online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s13229-024-00625-1.
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产品号#:
08581
08582
05990
产品名:
STEMdiff™SMADi神经诱导试剂盒
STEMdiff™SMADi神经诱导试剂盒,2套
TeSR™-E8™
(Jul 2024)
Molecular Metabolism 88 12
Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinase 3 (TIMP3) mutations increase glycolytic activity and dysregulate glutamine metabolism in RPE cells
ObjectivesMutations in Tissue Inhibitor of Metalloproteinases 3 (TIMP3) cause Sorsby's Fundus Dystrophy (SFD),a dominantly inherited,rare form of macular degeneration that results in vision loss. TIMP3 is synthesized primarily by retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells,which constitute the outer blood-retinal barrier. One major function of RPE is the synthesis and transport of vital nutrients,such as glucose,to the retina. Recently,metabolic dysfunction in RPE cells has emerged as an important contributing factor in retinal degenerations. We set out to determine if RPE metabolic dysfunction was contributing to SFD pathogenesis.MethodsQuantitative proteomics was conducted on RPE of mice expressing the S179C variant of TIMP3,known to be causative of SFD in humans. Proteins found to be differentially expressed (P < 0.05) were analyzed using statistical overrepresentation analysis to determine enriched pathways,processes,and protein classes using g:profiler and PANTHER Gene Ontology. We examined the effects of mutant TIMP3 on RPE metabolism using human ARPE-19 cells expressing mutant S179C TIMP3 and patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell-derived RPE (iRPE) carrying the S204C TIMP3 mutation. RPE metabolism was directly probed using isotopic tracing coupled with GC/MS analysis. Steady state [U–13C6] glucose isotopic tracing was preliminarily conducted on S179C ARPE-19 followed by [U–13C6] glucose and [U–13C5] glutamine isotopic tracing in SFD iRPE cells.ResultsQuantitative proteomics and enrichment analysis conducted on RPE of mice expressing mutant S179C TIMP3 identified differentially expressed proteins that were enriched for metabolism-related pathways and processes. Notably these results highlighted dysregulated glycolysis and glucose metabolism. Stable isotope tracing experiments with [U–13C6] glucose demonstrated enhanced glucose utilization and glycolytic activity in S179C TIMP3 APRE-19 cells. Similarly,[U–13C6] glucose tracing in SFD iRPE revealed increased glucose contribution to glycolysis and the TCA cycle. Additionally,[U–13C5] glutamine tracing found evidence of altered malic enzyme activity.ConclusionsThis study provides important information on the dysregulation of RPE glucose metabolism in SFD and implicates a potential commonality with other retinal degenerative diseases,emphasizing RPE cellular metabolism as a therapeutic target. Highlights•SFD mice display alterations in proteins associated with metabolism.•SFD RPE cells have increased glycolytic activity and glucose contribution to the TCA cycle.•Glutamine contribution to energy metabolism is unaltered in SFD RPE cells however there is reduced malic enzyme activity.•SFD RPE cells display metabolic dysfunction potentially implicating metabolism as a viable therapeutic target.
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产品号#:
100-0483
100-0484
100-0276
100-1130
产品名:
Hausser Scientificᵀᴹ 明线血球计数板
ReLeSR™
mTeSR™ Plus
mTeSR™ Plus
(Nov 2024)
Nature Communications 15
Constructing organoid-brain-computer interfaces for neurofunctional repair after brain injury
The reconstruction of damaged neural circuits is critical for neurological repair after brain injury. Classical brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) allow direct communication between the brain and external controllers to compensate for lost functions. Importantly,there is increasing potential for generalized BCIs to input information into the brains to restore damage,but their effectiveness is limited when a large injured cavity is caused. Notably,it might be overcome by transplantation of brain organoids into the damaged region. Here,we construct innovative BCIs mediated by implantable organoids,coined as organoid-brain-computer interfaces (OBCIs). We assess the prolonged safety and feasibility of the OBCIs,and explore neuroregulatory strategies. OBCI stimulation promotes progressive differentiation of grafts and enhances structural-functional connections within organoids and the host brain,promising to repair the damaged brain via regenerating and regulating,potentially directing neurons to preselected targets and recovering functional neural networks in the future. Damaged neural circuits could be improved by generalized BCIs via inputting information into the brains,which is restricted when a large injured cavity caused. Here,the authors construct BCIs mediated by organoid grafts to repair the damaged brain
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产品号#:
100-0276
100-1130
产品名:
mTeSR™ Plus
mTeSR™ Plus
(Oct 2024)
NPJ Parkinson's Disease 10
Direct and indirect regulation of ?-glucocerebrosidase by the transcription factors USF2 and ONECUT2
Mutations in GBA1 encoding the lysosomal enzyme ?-glucocerebrosidase (GCase) are among the most prevalent genetic susceptibility factors for Parkinson’s disease (PD),with 10–30% of carriers developing the disease. To identify genetic modifiers contributing to the incomplete penetrance,we examined the effect of 1634 human transcription factors (TFs) on GCase activity in lysates of an engineered human glioblastoma line homozygous for the pathogenic GBA1 L444P variant. Using an arrayed CRISPR activation library,we uncovered 11 TFs as regulators of GCase activity. Among these,activation of MITF and TFEC increased lysosomal GCase activity in live cells,while activation of ONECUT2 and USF2 decreased it. While MITF,TFEC,and USF2 affected GBA1 transcription,ONECUT2 might control GCase trafficking. The effects of MITF,TFEC,and USF2 on lysosomal GCase activity were reproducible in iPSC-derived neurons from PD patients. Our study provides a systematic approach to identifying modulators of GCase activity and deepens our understanding of the mechanisms regulating GCase.
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产品号#:
05230
05711
05796
05835
05838
05839
100-1281
100-0276
100-1130
产品名:
STEMdiff™ 三谱系分化试剂盒
NeuroCult™ SM1 神经添加物
BrainPhys™成像专用培养基
STEMdiff™ 神经诱导培养基
STEMdiff™神经祖细胞冻存液
STEMdiff™ 神经诱导培养基
NeuroCult™ SM1 神经添加物
mTeSR™ Plus
mTeSR™ Plus
(Jul 2025)
Bio-protocol 15 13
Derivation and Culture of Enriched Phrenic-Like Motor Neurons From Human iPSCs
The fatal motor neuron (MN) disease amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is characterized by progressive degeneration of the phrenic MNs (phMNs) controlling the activity of the diaphragm,leading to death by respiratory failure. Human experimental models to study phMNs are lacking,hindering the understanding of the mechanisms of phMN degeneration in ALS. Here,we describe a protocol to derive phrenic-like MNs from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC-phMNs) within 30 days. During spinal cord development,phMNs emerge from specific MN progenitors located in the dorsalmost MN progenitor (pMN) domain at cervical levels,under the control of a ventral-to-dorsal gradient of Sonic hedgehog (SHH) signaling and a rostro-caudal gradient of retinoic acid (RA). The method presented here uses optimized concentrations of RA and the SHH agonist purmorphamine,followed by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) of the resulting MN progenitor cells (MNPCs) based on a cell-surface protein (IGDCC3) enriched in hiPSC-phMNs. The resulting cultures are highly enriched in MNs expressing typical phMN markers. This protocol enables the generation of hiPSC-phMNs and is highly reproducible using several hiPSC lines,offering a disease-relevant system to study mechanisms of respiratory MN dysfunction. While the protocol has been validated in the context of ALS research,it can be adopted to study human phrenic MNs in other research fields where these neurons are of interest.
View Publication
产品号#:
85850
85857
产品名:
mTeSR™1
mTeSR™1
(Mar 2024)
Nature Communications 15
BHLHE40/41 regulate microglia and peripheral macrophage responses associated with Alzheimer’s disease and other disorders of lipid-rich tissues
Genetic and experimental evidence suggests that Alzheimer’s disease (AD) risk alleles and genes may influence disease susceptibility by altering the transcriptional and cellular responses of macrophages,including microglia,to damage of lipid-rich tissues like the brain. Recently,sc/nRNA sequencing studies identified similar transcriptional activation states in subpopulations of macrophages in aging and degenerating brains and in other diseased lipid-rich tissues. We collectively refer to these subpopulations of microglia and peripheral macrophages as DLAMs. Using macrophage sc/nRNA-seq data from healthy and diseased human and mouse lipid-rich tissues,we reconstructed gene regulatory networks and identified 11 strong candidate transcriptional regulators of the DLAM response across species. Loss or reduction of two of these transcription factors,BHLHE40/41,in iPSC-derived microglia and human THP-1 macrophages as well as loss of Bhlhe40/41 in mouse microglia,resulted in increased expression of DLAM genes involved in cholesterol clearance and lysosomal processing,increased cholesterol efflux and storage,and increased lysosomal mass and degradative capacity. These findings provide targets for therapeutic modulation of macrophage/microglial function in AD and other disorders affecting lipid-rich tissues. Factors regulating lipid and lysosomal clearance in microglia and peripheral macrophage are not known. Here,authors nominate and validate transcription factors BHLHE40 and BHLHE41 as regulators of these processes in health and disease.
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Acquisition of neurodegenerative features in isogenic OPTN(E50K) human stem cell-derived retinal ganglion cells associated with autophagy disruption and mTORC1 signaling reduction
The ability to derive retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) has led to numerous advances in the field of retinal research,with great potential for the use of hPSC-derived RGCs for studies of human retinal development,in vitro disease modeling,drug discovery,as well as their potential use for cell replacement therapeutics. Of all these possibilities,the use of hPSC-derived RGCs as a human-relevant platform for in vitro disease modeling has received the greatest attention,due to the translational relevance as well as the immediacy with which results may be obtained compared to more complex applications like cell replacement. While several studies to date have focused upon the use of hPSC-derived RGCs with genetic variants associated with glaucoma or other optic neuropathies,many of these have largely described cellular phenotypes with only limited advancement into exploring dysfunctional cellular pathways as a consequence of the disease-associated gene variants. Thus,to further advance this field of research,in the current study we leveraged an isogenic hPSC model with a glaucoma-associated mutation in the Optineurin (OPTN) protein,which plays a prominent role in autophagy. We identified an impairment of autophagic-lysosomal degradation and decreased mTORC1 signaling via activation of the stress sensor AMPK,along with subsequent neurodegeneration in OPTN(E50K) RGCs differentiated from hPSCs,and have further validated some of these findings in a mouse model of ocular hypertension. Pharmacological inhibition of mTORC1 in hPSC-derived RGCs recapitulated disease-related neurodegenerative phenotypes in otherwise healthy RGCs,while the mTOR-independent induction of autophagy reduced protein accumulation and restored neurite outgrowth in diseased OPTN(E50K) RGCs. Taken together,these results highlighted that autophagy disruption resulted in increased autophagic demand which was associated with downregulated signaling through mTORC1,contributing to the degeneration of RGCs.Supplementary InformationThe online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40478-024-01872-2.
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