Chen Chen1, Peng Jiang2, Haipeng Xue3, Suzanne E Peterson4, Ha T Tran4, Anna E McCann5, Mana M Parast6, Shenglan Li7, David E Pleasure8, Louise C Laurent9, Jeanne F Loring9, Ying Liu3, Wenbin Deng10. 1. 1] Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis, California 95817, USA [2] Institute for Pediatric Regenerative Medicine, Shriners Hospitals for Children, Sacramento, California 95817, USA [3] Department of Neurology, Institute of Neurology, Tianjin General Hospital, Tianjin Medical University, Tianjin 300070, China [4]. 2. 1] Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis, California 95817, USA [2] Institute for Pediatric Regenerative Medicine, Shriners Hospitals for Children, Sacramento, California 95817, USA [3]. 3. 1] Department of Neurosurgery, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas 77030, USA [2] Center for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, The Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine for the Prevention of Human Diseases, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas 77030, USA [3] Department of Reproductive Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92037, USA [4] Center for Regenerative Medicine, Department of Chemical Physiology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA. 4. Center for Regenerative Medicine, Department of Chemical Physiology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA. 5. 1] Center for Regenerative Medicine, Department of Chemical Physiology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA [2] Present address: Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA. 6. Department of Pathology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093, USA. 7. 1] Department of Neurosurgery, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas 77030, USA [2] Center for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, The Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine for the Prevention of Human Diseases, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, Texas 77030, USA. 8. Institute for Pediatric Regenerative Medicine, Shriners Hospitals for Children, Sacramento, California 95817, USA. 9. 1] Department of Reproductive Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92037, USA [2] Center for Regenerative Medicine, Department of Chemical Physiology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA. 10. 1] Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis, California 95817, USA [2] Institute for Pediatric Regenerative Medicine, Shriners Hospitals for Children, Sacramento, California 95817, USA.
Abstract
Down's syndrome (DS), caused by trisomy of human chromosome 21, is the most common genetic cause of intellectual disability. Here we use induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from DS patients to identify a role for astrocytes in DS pathogenesis. DS astroglia exhibit higher levels of reactive oxygen species and lower levels of synaptogenic molecules. Astrocyte-conditioned medium collected from DS astroglia causes toxicity to neurons, and fails to promote neuronal ion channel maturation and synapse formation. Transplantation studies show that DS astroglia do not promote neurogenesis of endogenous neural stem cells in vivo. We also observed abnormal gene expression profiles from DS astroglia. Finally, we show that the FDA-approved antibiotic drug, minocycline, partially corrects the pathological phenotypes of DS astroglia by specifically modulating the expression of S100B, GFAP, inducible nitric oxide synthase, and thrombospondins 1 and 2 in DS astroglia. Our studies shed light on the pathogenesis and possible treatment of DS by targeting astrocytes with a clinically available drug.
Down's syndrome (DS), caused by trisomy of human chromosome 21, is the most common genetic cause of intellectual disability. Here we use induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from DS patients to identify a role for astrocytes in DS pathogenesis. DS astroglia exhibit higher levels of reactive oxygen species and lower levels of synaptogenic molecules. Astrocyte-conditioned medium collected from DS astroglia causes toxicity to neurons, and fails to promote neuronal ion channel maturation and synapse formation. Transplantation studies show that DS astroglia do not promote neurogenesis of endogenous neural stem cells in vivo. We also observed abnormal gene expression profiles from DS astroglia. Finally, we show that the FDA-approved antibiotic drug, minocycline, partially corrects the pathological phenotypes of DS astroglia by specifically modulating the expression of S100B, GFAP, inducible nitric oxide synthase, and thrombospondins 1 and 2 in DS astroglia. Our studies shed light on the pathogenesis and possible treatment of DS by targeting astrocytes with a clinically available drug.
Down’s syndrome (DS) is a developmental disorder caused by trisomy of human
chromosome 21 (HSA21), and is characterized by intellectual disability, epilepsy and
early onset Alzheimer’s disease. Studies on human tissues and transgenicmouse models have revealed impaired neurogenesis, reduced brain volume and neuronal
density, as well as abnormal dendritic and synaptic morphology in DS12345. However, human DS fetal brain tissues are relatively
inaccessible and the triplication of HSA21 is incomplete in the context of the mouse
models, which hinders the elucidation of the pathology of DS. Moreover, the human brain
is far more complicated than the rodent brain, in which the complexity of astrocytes is
among the key characteristics that differentiate human brains from rodent brains6. Therefore, a model system of human origin for studying the biology of DS
is highly desirable for better understanding of disease pathogenesis and for developing
therapeutics to treat DS.The advent of induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology has provided a new approach
to the establishment of human cellular models for studying neurodevelopmental and
neurodegenerative diseases. Recent studies78910 further demonstrate
the utility of iPSCs derived from individuals with DS as a valid human cellular model
that enables detailed functional studies of DS pathogenesis and potentially provides a
simple way to screen for new drugs. However, previous reports have mainly focused on
neuronal abnormalities and ignored glial cells as pathogenetic components in disease
phenotypes/pathogenesis, and as drug targets. Since impairment in astroglial function is
increasingly being recognized as an important factor to neuronal dysfunction in the
brain1112131415, it is imperative to examine the complex
interactions between the interconnected cell types (neurons and glia) in DS. After all,
altered protein expression due to trisomic HSA21 is not only restricted to the affected
neuronal populations but also occurs in the astroglia.Astrocytes exert profound effects on neuronal development as they provide support for
neuronal survival, axon and dendrite outgrowth, and synaptogenesis. Such effects are
largely mediated by a variety of factors that are expressed in and released by
astrocytes. Numerous studies have shown that astrocytes promote neuritogenesis and
synaptogenesis in neurons1617, and that oxidative stress impairs their
ability to promote neurite outgrowth18. To investigate the role of
astroglia in the development of abnormal neurobiology in DS, we reprogrammed DS patient
fibroblasts to iPSCs and subsequently differentiated these disease-specific human iPSCs
(hiPSCs) to astroglia (DS astroglia) and neurons (DS neurons) in high purity. Taking
advantage of this unique in vitro iPSC-based neural differentiation model for DS,
we dissected the pathological phenotypes of DS neurons and DS astroglia, and examined
the interaction between DS astroglia and DS neurons or neural progenitor cells (NPCs) by
exposing them to DS astroglia-secreted factors. We demonstrated that S100B preferentially and markedly accumulated in
DS astroglia, where it caused astroglial dysfunction and oxidative stress without
affecting astroglial viability. Furthermore, we showed that DS astroglia negatively
interact with DS neurons in regard to the regulation of neurite outgrowth, neuronal ion
channel maturation, synaptic activity formation and non-cell-autonomous toxic effects on
neurons. In addition, we transplanted DS iPSC-derived astroglia into neonatal brain and
provided in vivo evidence further supporting that defects or alterations of
astroglial function contributed to the impaired brain function in DS. We also explored
potential therapeutic strategies based on modulating the function of iPSC-derived
astroglia. We found that minocycline, a
clinically available antibiotic drug that shows neuroprotective properties in a variety
of experimental models of CNS19, was able to partially restore impaired
neurogenesis, prevent neuronal loss and promote maturation of neurons. Taken together,
this study provides novel insights into the role of astrocytes in the pathogenesis of DS
and suggests a possible treatment strategy for DS by targeting astroglia.
Results
Generation and differentiation of DS patient-specific hiPSCs
To establish an in vitro human cellular model for DS and to investigate
neuron-astrocyte interactions, we first generated DS hiPSC lines using the
canonical ‘Yamanaka’ reprogramming method by transducing
DS patients’ fibroblasts (Coriell Medical Institute) with
retroviruses encoding OCT4,
SOX2, KLF4 and c-MYC (Supplementary Fig. 1A). The age-matched hiPSC
lines from healthy individuals were used as controls. We then differentiated the
DS and control hiPSCs to neurons and astroglia via directed or spontaneous
differentiation procedures shown in Fig. 1a. The hiPSC
lines expressed pluripotent makers OCT4, SSEA4, NANOG and TRA1-81 (Fig. 1b,c), and
were able to form teratomas that showed structures corresponding to three germ
layers (Supplementary Fig. 1B). The
iPSCs and fibroblasts had distinct gene expression pattern, as demonstrated by
analyses of their gene expression profiles (Supplementary Fig. 1C,D). As shown in Supplementary Fig. 1E, the
pluripotency of the iPSCs was also evidenced by the results of PluriTest, an
algorithm built upon a global gene expression database of a total of 264 PSC
lines (223 hESC (human embryonic stem cell) and 41 iPSC lines), which has been
used to predict pluripotency accurately and effectively20. Two of
the iPSC lines generated from DS patientsDS1 and DS2 (Supplementary Table 1) maintained a stable
trisomic chromosome 21 karyotype during serial passaging and after neural
differentiation (Supplementary Fig.
1F), and thus were first used in this study. The control and DS hiPSC
lines generated NPCs at high efficiency, as indicated by expressing NPC markers,
Pax6 and Nestin (Fig. 1d
and Supplementary Fig. 2A).
Subsequently, under directed neuronal differentiation condition, neuronal
progenitors were further selected and cultured in the presence of neurotrophic
factors brain-derived neurotrophic
factor (BDNF) and glial
cell-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) (Fig. 1a).
Both control and DS hiPSC-derived NPCs were efficiently induced to generate
neurons (>85%; Fig. 1e and Supplementary Fig. 2B,C). In parallel, under
directed astroglial differentiation condition by adding bone morphogenetic protein 4
(BMP4; Fig.
1a)21, the NPCs started to express glial precursor
marker A2B5 at early stage (Fig. 1f), and later generated
astroglia after 20 days in culture, as identified by astroglial markers
glial fibrillary acidic
protein (GFAP) and S100B (>95%; Fig. 1g and Supplementary Fig. 2D,E). Nearly all
the hiPSC-derived astroglia also expressed CD44, a marker used to identify astrocyte-restricted
precursor cells, consistent with our recent study on astroglial differentiation
of hESCs22, and vimentin, a major cytoskeletal protein expressed in immature
astrocytes23 (Fig. 1g). The robust
co-expression of CD44/vimentin and GFAP/S100B
indicated that the majority of hiPSC-derived astroglia were immature, rather
than mature astrocytes, which better mimic early developmental stages of the DS
pathology in the human brain. No significant difference was observed in the
efficiency of neuronal and astroglial differentiation between DS and control
hiPSC lines (Supplementary Fig.
2B–E) under the directed differentiation conditions. In
addition, similar to hESC-derived astroglia21, all hiPSC
astroglial preparations expressed mRNAs encoding the astrocyte-specific
glutamate transporters, glutamate-aspartate
transporter (GLAST) and glutamate
transporter-1 (GLT-1), as detected by quantitative reverse
transcription–PCR (qPCR; Supplementary Fig. 2F). While GLT-1 was expressed at a relatively low level in both
control and DS astroglia, GLAST was expressed at a higher level in DS astroglia than
that in control astroglia (P<0.05, n=3–4 from
each cell line). Interestingly, we found that the DS neurons derived under
directed neuronal differentiation condition showed indistinguishable morphology
with control neurons (Supplementary Fig.
2C,G). We used whole-cell patch-clamp recording to measure the
spontaneous neuronal activities, and showed that both control and DS neurons at
10-week time point fired action potentials and exhibited spontaneous
postsynaptic currents (sPSCs; Supplementary Fig. 2H).
Figure 1
Generation and neural differentiation of DS iPSCs.
(a) A schematic procedure for directed and spontaneous differentiation
of DS iPSCs to neurons and astroglia. Insets (from left to right):
representatives bright-field images showing the embryoid bodies (EBs),
neural rosette, neurosphere and differentiated neurons, and astroglia under
directed and spontaneous differentiation conditions. Scale bars,
200 μm. (b,c) Representatives of iPSCs
derived from DS patients expressing pluripotent markers Oct4 and SSEA4, as well as
Nanog and Tra-1-81.
(d) Representative of DS iPSC-derived NPCs expressing
Pax6 and
Nestin.
(e,f) Representatives of βIII-tubulin+ neurons and
A2B5+ glial progenitors derived from DS NPCs under directed differentiation
conditions. (g) Representatives of astroglia differentiated under
directed astroglial differentiation condition from control (Cont) and DS
iPSCs expressing CD44 and
vimentin, as well as
S100B and
GFAP. (h)
Representatives of βIII-tubulin+ neurons and S100B+ astroglia derived from DS
and Cont NPCs under spontaneous differentiation conditions. Scale bars,
50 μm. (i,j) Quantification of pooled
data from Cont and DS lines showing the percentage of βIII-tubulin+ neurons and
S100B+ astroglia
derived from DS and Cont NPCs (n=3–5 from each cell line),
and the length of the longest neurites of neurons (n=10 from each
cell line) under spontaneous differentiation conditions.
Student’s t-test, *P<0.05 and
**P<0.01. Blue, 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole
dihydrochloride (DAPI)-stained nuclei. Data are presented as
mean±s.e.m.
Reduced neurogenesis of DS NPCs was observed from developing DS human brains1 and cultured DS human NPCs derived from fetal tissues24. To further examine the neurogenesis of DS iPSC-derived NPCs, we
differentiated the DS NPCs under a spontaneous differentiation condition in
which neurotrophic factors were not present (Fig. 1a). We
found that DS NPCs gave rise to fewer βIII-tubulin+ neurons and more S100B+ astroglia (19.7±0.9% and
78.2±0.7%, respectively), compared with control NPCs (Fig. 1h,i, 33.4±2.0% and 60.9±2.0%, respectively;
P<0.05; n=3–5 from each cell line, with each
experiment being performed in triplicate). Interestingly, DS neurons generated
under the spontaneous differentiation condition exhibited decreased neurite
length compared with control neurons (Fig. h,j, 57.4±2.1 and
85.4±4.5 μm for DS and control neurons,
respectively; P<0.01; n=10 from each cell line). These
findings demonstrated that under the spontaneous rather than the directed
neuronal differentiation condition, DS neurons showed an abnormal morphology of
neurite outgrowth, which coincided with the production of a higher percentage of
astrocytes from the DS NPCs, compared with control NPCs.
Phenotypes of DS astroglia and effects of minocycline
We further hypothesized that DS astroglia might critically contribute to the
aforementioned abnormal DS NPC differentiation and the abnormal maturation of DS
neurons. To test this hypothesis, we first examined the gene expression in the
DS and control astroglia by qPCR. S100B is an astrocyte marker, and the humanS100B gene maps to HSA21 and is
triplicated in DS. Consistently, we found that DS astroglia expressed much
higher level of S100B
than control astroglia (Fig. 2a1). GFAP was also expressed at a
higher level in DS astroglia (Fig. 2a2), which is
consistent with previous observations of elevated expression of GFAP in the brain of Ts65Dnmouse, a
mouse model for DS25. To validate these findings, we also
examined the expression of S100B and GFAP in postmortem human brain tissue by immunostaining. The
immunoreactivity of GFAP and
S100B was much stronger in
the brain tissues of DS patients than in the normal controls. Moreover,
astrocytes in the DS brain tissues exhibited an activated morphology, with more
branching and thicker branches, compared with astrocytes in the normal brain
tissues (Supplementary Fig. 3).
Previous reports showed that overexpression of S100B induced the expression of
nitric oxide synthase
(iNOS) and stimulated
nitric oxide
(NO) generation from
astrocytes26. Consistently, we observed that iNOS was expressed at a higher
level in DS astroglia than in control astroglia (Fig.
2a3). To confirm our findings, we maintained the astroglia in minimal
medium, and factors they secreted were collected as astroglial cell-conditioned
medium (ACM). As shown in Fig. 2a7, the ACM collected from
DS astroglia (DS ACM) contained higher concentration of nitrite/nitrate than the ACM collected from
control astroglia (control ACM). Moreover, we examined the expression of
NFE2L2, the
gene encodes erythroid 2-related factor
2 (Nrf2),
activation of which induces production of glutathione and confers astroglia non-cell-autonomous
neuroprotective effects on neurons against oxidative insult2728, and the expression of genes encoding the secreted factors thrombospondins 1
and 2 (TSP-1 and TSP-2), which are known to promote
synapse formation of neurons29. Interestingly, DS astroglia
expressed lower levels of NFE2L2, TSP-1 and TSP-2 (Fig. 2a4), indicating
their potentially compromised neuroprotective and neurotrophic properties. Note
that variability of neural differentiation of different hiPSC lines was
reported30. We showed that variations were found within the
DS astroglia and control astroglia derived from different hiPSCs (Fig. 2a). For example, compared with the control astroglia, DS1
astroglia had a prominent increase of S100B gene expression (>74-fold), whereas DS2
had a smaller increase (~2.5-fold). To ensure the reliability of our
observations, each sample was prepared in triplicate and experiments were
repeated for at least three times. Conclusions were drawn only when each DS line
showed the same trends of change with statistical significance when compared
with each control line.
Figure 2
Identification and correction of pathological phenotypes of DS
astroglia.
(a1–6) qPCR analysis of S100B, GFAP, iNOS, TSP-1, TSP-2 and NFE2L2 mRNA expression in
DS and control (Cont) astroglia. (a7) Quantification of nitrite/nitrate concentration in ACM
collected from DS and Cont astroglia. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA)
test, ♣P<0.05, ♣♣P<0.01 and
♣♣♣P<0.001, comparison between two DS astroglia with Cont 1
astroglia. #P<0.05,
##P<0.01 and
###P<0.001, comparison between two DS astroglia
with Cont 2 astroglia. Student’s t-test, *P<0.05, *P<0.01 and *♣P<0.001, comparison between two DS astroglia or two
Cont astroglia. n=3–4 for each cell line. (b)
Representative and quantification of ROS production in Cont and DS
astroglia. Green fluorescence marks cells that undergo oxidation.
Student’s t-test, **P<0.01.
n=3–4 from each cell line. (c) Quantification of
pooled data showing the proliferation rate of Cont and DS astroglia.
Student’s t-test, **P<0.01.
n=3–4 from each cell line. (d) Glutamate uptake analysis showing
that both DS and Cont astroglia were capable of glutamate uptake. Notice that DS
astroglia show glutamate
uptake at a higher rate at the 30- and 60-min time point than Cont
astroglia. Student’s t-test, **P<0.01 and
***P<0.001, n=4 from each cell line. (e)
Representatives showing intracellular uptake of the BLOCK-iT Fluorescent
Oligo at 24 h after transfection of DS astroglia. Scale bar,
50 μm. (f) qPCR analysis of pooled data showing
the expression of S100B gene in DS astroglia at 48 h
after transfection with Cont and S100B siRNA. Student’s t-test,
**P<0.01, n=3–5 from each cell line.
(g) Representatives and quantification of pooled data showing ROS
production in DS astroglia determined at 48 h after transfection
with Cont and S100B siRNA. Student’s t-test,
*P<0.05, n=5 from each cell line.
(h,i) Quantification of pooled data showing the
concentration of nitrite/nitrate in the ACM and proliferation rate of DS
astroglia at 48 h after transfection with Cont and S100B siRNA. Student’s
t-test, *P<0.05, n=3–4 from each
cell line. (j) qPCR analysis of S100B, iNOS
and NEF2L2
mRNA expression in DS1 astroglia after the treatment of resveratrol, cucurmin or minocycline for 72 h.
One-way ANOVA test, *P<0.05, **P<0.01 and
***P<0.001; n=3–5 for each group.
(k) Quantitative analysis of the proliferation rate of DS1 and 2
astroglia after the treatment of minocycline. Student’s t-test,
*P<0.05, n=3–4 for each cell line.
(l) qPCR analysis of GFAP, TSP-1 and TSP-2 mRNA expression in DS astroglia after the
treatment of minocycline.
Student’s t-test, *P<0.05 and
**P<0.01; n=3–4 for each group. Data are
presented as mean±s.e.m.
We also examined reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in DS astroglia and
found that significantly more DS astroglia (33.78±1.21%) produced ROS
compared with control astroglia (Fig. 2b,
14.43±0.52%; P<0.01; n=3–4 for each
cell line). As shown in Fig. 2c, DS astroglia exhibited
higher proliferation rate than control astroglia. Interestingly, although
reduced glutamate uptake in
peripheral tissues (fibroblasts and platelets) from DS patients was
reported31, our data showed that DS iPSC-derived astroglia
were competent to take up glutamate from media over time at a higher rate than control
astroglia (Fig. 2d), consistent with the higher expression
level of the glutamate transporter GLAST in DS astroglia than that in control astroglia
(Supplementary Fig. 2F).
Together, these results demonstrate that, different from control astroglia, DS
astroglia exhibited pathological oxidative phenotypes.To further investigate whether the increased expression of iNOS and production of
NO were caused by
overexpression of S100B
in DS astroglia, we inhibited S100B expression by small interfering RNA (siRNA).
Based on the uptake of the BLOCK-iT Fluorescent Oligo, efficient transfection
(~90%) was achieved in DS astroglia (Fig. 2e).
qPCR analysis showed that, at 48 h after transfection of
S100B siRNA,
the expression of S100B
was significantly reduced compared with DS astroglia transfected with control
siRNA (Fig. 2f). In addition, ROS generation was
significantly decreased in DS astroglia with S100B knockdown (Fig. 2g, 22.6±1.0% and 15.7±0.9% for DS astroglia
transfected with control and S100B siRNA, respectively; P<0.01;
n=5 for each cell line). Consistently, nitrite/nitrate production at 48 h
after siRNA transfection was also reduced (Fig. 2h,
4.4±0.1% and 2.4±0.1% for DS astroglia transfected with
control and S100B
siRNA, respectively; P<0.05; n=3-4 for each cell line).
Moreover, significantly decreased proliferation of DS astroglia was also
observed in S100B
knockdown group (Fig. 2i). Collectively, these results
suggest that overexpression of S100B is responsible for in the pathological
phenotypes of DS astroglia.To explore whether pharmacological agents could attenuate pathological phenotypes
of DS astroglia, we treated DS astroglia with the antioxidant and
anti-inflammatory compounds such as minocycline, resveratrol and curcumin, and examined the gene expression of
S100B,
iNOS and
NFE2L2.
Interestingly, we found that after 72-h treatment, minocycline suppressed the expression of
S100B and
iNOS in DS1
astroglia, whereas resveratrol
or curcumin increased the
expression of S100B and
iNOS (Fig. 2j). Moreover, minocycline and curcumin increased the expression of NFE2L2 (Fig.
2j), whereas resveratrol did not have this effect. Similar effects of
minocycline on
S100B,
iNOS and
NFE2L2
expression were observed in experiments repeated in both DS1 and DS2 astroglia
(Supplementary Fig. 4).
Furthermore, decreased proliferation rate was also found in minocycline-treated DS1 and DS2
astroglia (Fig. 2k). Minocycline also significantly decreased GFAP expression, and increased
TSP-1 and
TSP-2
expression levels in the DS astroglia (Fig. 2l). Hence,
these results indicate that minocycline treatment might modulate DS astroglial function
by inhibiting S100B
accumulation and increasing the expression of neuroprotective and synaptogenic
genes, NFE2L2,
TSP-1 and
TSP-2.
Effects of DS astroglia on neurogenesis and neuron survival
Accumulative studies have shown that astrocytes promote neuronal differentiation
from NPCs, and regulate neurite outgrowth and synaptogenesis via releasing
soluble factors1732333435. To further test the hypothesis
that DS astroglia contributes to the reduced neurogenesis of NPCs, we fed NPCs
derived from DS iPSCs with concentrated DS ACM or control ACM for 1 week. The
percentage of βIII-tubulin+ neurons and S100B+ astroglia generated from DS NPCs
was then quantified. As shown in Fig. 3a,c, similar to DS
NPCs cultured under spontaneous differentiation condition (Fig.
1h,i), DS NPCs cultured with DS ACM gave rise to low percentage of
βIII-tubulin+
neurons (19.7±1.3%) and high percentage of S100B+ astroglia (78.2±1.2%;
n=3–4 for each cell line). Interestingly, the addition of
control ACM restored the reduced neurogenesis of DS NPCs (33.0±2.4% and
66.3±2.5% for βIII-tubulin+neurons and S100B+ astroglia, respectively;
P<0.01; n=3–4 for each cell line). Moreover,
we analysed the neurite length of the differentiated DS neurons and found that
the average length of the longest neurites of the neurons generated from NPCs in
DS ACM (Fig. 3d;
65.8±4.7 μm) was significantly shorter than those
of the neurons generated from NPCs in control ACM (Fig.
3d, 81.0±2.7 μm; P<0.05;
n=10 from each cell line). To further examine whether the
overexpression of S100B in DS
astroglia contributed to these effects, we fed the DS NPCs with ACM collected
from DS astroglia transfected with S100B siRNA (DS S100BsiRNA ACM). Compared with the
NPCs cultured with DS ACM, the addition of DS S100BsiRNA ACM rescued the reduced
neurogenesis from DS NPCs (Fig. 3a,c, 28.8±1.3%
and 70.3±2.6% for βIII-tubulin+ neurons and S100B+ astroglia, respectively;
P<0.05; n=3-4 from each cell line). However, the
neurite length was not significantly different between the cells fed with DS ACM
and DS S100BsiRNA ACM (Fig. 3d,
71.2±2.1 μm; P>0.05; n=10
from each cell line). Consistent with the effect of minocycline on correcting the gene
expression of DS astroglia, the addition of ACM collected from minocycline-treated DS astroglia
(DS-Mino ACM) had effects
similar to the addition of control ACM (Fig. 3c,
29.4±2.5% and 70.1±2.2% for βIII-tubulin+ neurons and
S100B+ astroglia,
respectively; n=3–4 from each cell line, and Fig. 3d, 81.9±2.3 μm for the average
length of the longest neurites; n=10 from each cell line).
Figure 3
The effects of DS astroglia on the DS NPC differentiation and DS neuron
survival.
(a) Representatives of DS NPC differentiated into βIII-tubulin+ neurons and
S100B+ astroglia
under spontaneous differentiation condition in the presence of DS ACM,
control (Cont) ACM, DS S100BsiRNA ACM and DS-Mino ACM. (b) βIII-tubulin and
activated caspase3
co-staining of DS neurons cultured with different ACM. Blue, 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole
dihydrochloride(DAPI)-stained nuclei. Scale bars,
50 μm. (c,d) Quantification of pooled
data showing the percentage of βIII-tubulin+ neurons and S100B+ astroglia derived from DS
NPCs (n=3–4 from each cell line), and the length of the
longest neurites of neurons (n=10 from each cell line) under
spontaneous differentiation conditions in the presence of different ACM.
(e) Quantification of pooled data showing the percentage of
βIII-tubulin+ and activated caspase3+ cells among the groups
with different treatments (n=3–5 from each cell line).
One-way analysis of variance test, *P<0.05 and
**P<0.01. Data are presented as mean±s.e.m. NS, not
significant.
Previous studies demonstrated that overexpression of S100B and the resulting production of
NO in astrocytes led to
apoptotic neuronal cell death2636. We then examined whether DS
astroglia could induce cell death of DS neurons. To test this hypothesis, we fed
6- to 7-week-old DS neurons with DS ACM, control ACM, DS S100BsiRNA ACM or
DS-Mino ACM for 3 days,
and then quantified the apoptosis by co-staining of active caspase-3 and βIII-tubulin. DS neurons fed
with DS ACM showed significantly increased apoptosis compared with neurons fed
with control ACM, DS S100BsiRNA ACM and DS-Mino ACM (Fig. 3b,e, the percentages
of active caspase-3+/
βIII-tubulin+
neurons were 17.3±1.2%, 5.1±0.8%, 7.8±1.1% and
5.7±0.6% for DS ACM, control ACM, DS S100BsiRNA ACM and
DS-Mino ACM treatment
groups, respectively; P<0.05 or P<0.01;
n=3–5 from each cell line). Although differences in fold
changes of gene expression levels (for example, S100B gene) was observed in DS1
and DS2 astroglia as compared with control astroglia (Fig.
2a), the effects of DS1 and DS2 astroglia on NPCs and neurons was
similar. We also cultured NPCs and neurons derived from control iPSCs with DS
ACM, control ACM and DS-Mino
ACM, and similar observations were made (Supplementary Fig. 5). Together, these results demonstrate that DS
astroglia impair neurogenesis and induce neuronal cell death, and that
overexpression of HSA21-located S100B in DS astroglia critically contributes to
these effects.
Effects of DS astroglia on neuron synapses and ion channels
A previous study37 showed that hESC-derived neurons could mature
over time in culture and exhibited passive and active electrophysiological
properties. During brain development, astroglia have crucial roles in promoting
neuronal maturation38, and astrocyte-secreted factors powerfully
induce the formation of functional synapses between neurons1617. To investigate whether DS astroglia regulate the maturation of neurons in
vitro, under directed neuronal differentiation condition, we added ACM
(control ACM, DS ACM, DS S100BsiRNA ACM and DS-Mino ACM) to the 4-week-old control or
DS neurons, and examined the electrophysiological properties of neurons at 6- to
7-week time point. We first examined the electrophysiological properties of the
neurons cultured in the presence and absence of different ACM by measuring cell
membrane capacitance (Cm), input resistance
(Rin), resting membrane potential (RMP) and action
potential evoked by depolarizing current pulses. As shown in Fig.
4a–c, in the absence of ACM, DS neurons had similar
Cm, Rin and RMP to control neurons
(Cm=20.8±2.4 and 18.1±1.5 pF;
Rin=3.6±0.5 and
3.0±0.5 GΩ; and RMP= −30.8±3.2
and −32.1±2.3 mV for control neuron only and DS
neuron only, respectively; P>0.05; n=10 for each group).
Adding DS ACM did not significantly change these properties compared with
control neurons alone or DS neurons alone
(Cm=19.1±1.7 pF,
Rin=3.4±0.7 GΩ and RMP=
−33.4±1.9 for control neurons fed with DS ACM;
Cm=16.5±1.8 pF,
Rin=3.8±0.6 GΩ and RMP=
−130.7±2.7 mV for DS neurons fed with DS ACM;
P>0.05; n=10 for each group). Interestingly, fed with
control ACM or DS-Mino ACM,
the neurons had larger Cm, higher Rin and
more negative RMP compared with control neurons alone, DS neurons alone and DS
neurons fed with DS ACM (Cm=40.3±6.5 pF,
Rin=1.1±0.5 GΩ and
RMP=−46.4±5.7 mV for DS neurons fed with control
ACM; Cm=41.6±5.3 pF,
Rin=1.0±0.5 GΩ and
RMP=−44.6±6.2 mV for control neurons fed with
control ACM; Cm=33.4±3.8 pF,
Rin=1.1±0.2 GΩ and
RMP=−45.3±2.1 mV for DS neurons fed with
DS-Mino ACM,
respectively; P<0.05; n=10 for each group). However, we did
not observe any significant changes in these properties of neurons when adding
DS S100BsiRNA ACM, indicating that overexpression of S100B in DS astroglia may not affect
the maturation of electrophysiological properties of DS neurons. Next, we
recorded the spontaneous synaptic activity of neurons cultured in the presence
of different ACM. As shown in Fig. 4d,e, no synaptic
activities were recorded from 6-week-old control neurons, consistent with a
previous study on the synaptic activity of hESC-derived neurons37. Similarly, DS neurons, DS neurons fed with DS ACM and control neurons fed
with DS ACM did not show any synaptic activities. Interestingly,
~81.8% (9 of 11) of control neurons fed with control ACM, 87.5% (7 of
8) of DS neurons fed with control ACM, and 54.5% (6 of 11) of DS neurons fed
with DS-Mino ACM showed
synaptic activities. Moreover, DS neurons fed with control ACM and
DS-Mino ACM showed more
robust action potential firings compared with control neurons alone, control
neurons fed with DS ACM, DS neurons alone and DS neurons fed with DS ACM (Fig. 4f and Supplementary Fig. 6).
Figure 4
Electrophysiological properties of DS neurons.
(a–c) Quantification of membrane capacitance, input
resistance (Rin) and resting membrane potential (RMP)
recorded from control (Cont) neurons (Neu), DS neurons, Cont neurons fed
with Cont ACM or DS ACM, and DS neurons fed with DS ACM, Cont ACM or
DS-Mino ACM. One-way
analysis of variance test, *P<0.05. n=10. (d)
Summarized data showing that more neurons display synaptic activity when fed
with Cont ACM or DS-Mino
ACM than those without being fed with ACM or fed with DS ACM. (e)
Representative tracing showing that synaptic activities were recorded from
Cont neurons fed with Cont ACM, DS neurons fed with Cont ACM or
DS-Mino ACM, but not
from Cont neuron alone or Cont neurons fed with DS ACM, and DS neuron alone
or DS neuron fed with DS ACM. (f) Representative tracing showing at
RMP, DS neurons fed with Cont ACM or DS-Mino ACM fire action potentials more robustly than DS
neurons alone.
The development of the aforementioned electrophysiological properties is largely
dependent on the maturation of voltage-gated ionic currents1537. To explore whether DS neurons express functional voltage-gated ionic
currents similar to control neurons, we next recorded the voltage-gated sodium
current (INa) and potassium current (IK)
from 6- to 7-week-old control and DS neurons. As shown in Fig.
5a left panel, the whole-cell voltage-gated ionic currents from a DS
neuron were induced by voltage steps from a holding potential of
−60 mV. The rapidly inactivated inward
INa was completely blocked by 1 μM
tetrodotoxin
(TTX; Fig.
5a middle panel). The INa was revealed by digitally
subtracting the currents recorded in the presence of TTX from the currents recorded in the
absence of TTX (Fig. 5a, right panel). To examine the outward
IK, we then recorded the whole-cell voltage-gated ionic
currents in the presence of 1 μM TTX with a prepulse to
−80 mV (Fig. 5b, left panel).
Previous studies3739 showed that two distinct
IK current components, transient component of inactivating
A-type potassium current (IKA) and sustained component of
delayed rectifier potassium current (IKD) were recorded from
hESC-derived neurons, and that the two components of IK could
be separated by different prepulse stimulation40. We also
observed these two components of IK in DS neurons (Fig. 5b, middle and right panels). As shown in Supplementary Fig. 7, the
IKA component was highly sensitive to potassium channel
blocker 4-aminopyridine,
thereby leaving the sustained IKD currents. The
IKD component was then further inhibited by potassium
channel blocker tetraethylammonium
chloride. The current–voltage
(I–V) relationship for INa,
IKD and IKA of DS neurons and control
neurons were shown in Fig. 5c–e, respectively.
The current density of INa, IKD and
IKA were not significantly different between DS neurons
and control neurons (n=10 for each group, P>0.05),
suggesting the normal intrinsic maturation of INa and
IK of DS neurons. To examine whether the voltage-gated ion
channels in DS neurons could be modulated by DS astroglia, we further recorded
the currents from 6- to 7-week-old DS and control neurons fed with DS ACM,
control ACM or DS-Mino ACM
starting at 4-week-old. Interestingly, as shown in Fig.
5f, INa, IKD and
IKA recorded from DS and control neurons fed with control
ACM and DS-Mino ACM had
significantly larger current density than those recorded from neurons fed with
DS ACM (n=10 for each group; P<0.05). The
I–V curves for INa,
IKD and IKA were shown in Fig. 5g–i, respectively. Taken together, these results
demonstrate that DS neurons possess intrinsic INa and
IK similar to control neurons, and exhibit similar passive
and active electrophysiological properties to control neurons, and that DS
astroglia fail to promote the cellular maturation and synapse formation of the
iPSC-derived neurons.
Figure 5
The effects of DS astroglia on the maturation of voltage-gated ion
channels.
(a) Representative tracings showing that the inward sodium currents
(INa) were recorded from a DS neuron (left panel). The
INa can be blocked by 1 μM
TTX (middle panel).
The tracing of right panel was obtained by digitally subtracting the middle
panel from the left panel to show the INa component. The
INa was elicited by a series of depolarizing voltage
steps (inset, from −70 to −50 mV) after a
prepulse to −100 mV for 100 ms. Similar
results were observed from 10 other cells. (b) Representative
tracings showing potassium currents (IK) recorded from a
DS neuron in the presence of TTX. Left panel, the overall IK
recorded with voltage clamp at voltages from −70 to
−50 mV (inset, 200 ms duration,
20 mV increments) preceded by a prepulse conditioning potential
of −80 mV, 300 ms. With a prepulse to
−80 mV, the overall IK includes
IKA and sustained outward current IKD.
Middle panel, IKD recorded with voltage clamp at voltages
from −70 to −50 mV (inset,
200 ms duration, 20 mV increments) preceded by a
prepulse conditioning potential of +20 mV, 300 ms. The
prepulse to +20 mV inactivates IKA component.
Right panel, the IKA component obtained by digitally
subtracting the IKD, middle panel from the
IK, left panel. (c–e) The
I–V relationship of INa,
IKD and IKA recorded from DS neurons
and control (Cont) neurons. Pooled data, n=10 for each group.
(f) Representative tracings showing the INa,
IKD and IKA recorded from Cont
neurons cultured with DS ACM and Cont ACM, and DS neurons cultured with DS
ACM, Cont ACM and DS-Mino
ACM. (g–i) I–V
relationship of INa, IKD and
IKA recorded from DS and Cont neurons fed with
different ACM. The current densities of INa,
IKD and IKA recorded from neurons
fed with DS ACM were smaller than those recorded from neurons fed with Cont
ACM and DS-Mino ACM;
one-way analysis of variance test, *P<0.05, comparison between
Cont Neu+DS ACM group with other groups fed with Cont ACM and
DS-Mino ACM.
#P<0.05 comparison between DS Neu+DS ACM
group with other groups fed with Cont ACM and DS-Mino ACM. n=10 for each
group. Data are presented as mean±s.e.m.
Gene expression analysis of DS and control astroglia
Differentiation of astroglia in high purity allows us to reliably compare the
gene expression profiles of DS and control astroglia. We performed global gene
expression microarray to further explore the possible mechanisms underlying the
effects of DS astroglia on NPCs and neurons. As shown in Fig.
6a, the dendrogram demonstrated that two control astroglia and two DS
astroglia clustered closer to each other, respectively, indicating that they had
similar biological properties within the same group, while the gene expression
of DS astroglia with trisomy 21 was distinct from that of control astroglia.
Consistent with the qPCR results, NFE2L2 gene transcript was expressed at a much
higher level in control astroglia than in DS astroglia from microarray analysis
(Fig. 6b). However, the other genes involved in the
response to oxidative stress were expressed higher in DS astroglia (for example,
GPX and PRX gene families), indicating the compensatory
responses to the oxidative stress (for example, ROS production in Fig. 2b) that observed in DS astroglia. We then focused on analysing
the gene transcripts encoding secreted factors, including factors that promote
synaptogenesis (for example, glypicans (GPCs), TSPs and neuroligin; Fig. 6c), and factors that promote differentiation and
maturation of neurons (for example, BDNF, BMPs, fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) and Wnt
ligands; Fig. 6d). The detailed information of these genes
and the fold changes were shown in Supplementary Table 2. Notably, heatmaps in Fig.
6c,d showed the higher gene expression level for TSP-1, TSP-2 and GPC6, consistent with the qPCR
results (Fig. 2a). Although both DS and control astroglia
highly expressed the genes encoding synaptogenic factors, the differential
expression profile may underlie the deficit of DS astroglia in promoting
synaptogenesis, particularly the lower expression of the factors that strongly
promote synaptogenesis in DS astroglia, such as BDNF41, APOE4243,
TSP-1 and TSP-2 (refs 29, 44), and GPC6 (ref. 31). We also noticed that DS astroglia expressed higher levels of
genes encoding BMPs (for example, BMP
5, 6, 7 and 11) and FGFs (for example, FGF 11, 12, 13, 18 and 9), which may
largely contribute to the effect of DS astroglia on impaired neurogenesis from
NPCs because BMPs promote astroglia differentiation both in vitro45 and in vivo46, and the extra production of
FGFs may act as mitogens, preventing NPCs from differentiating to neurons.
Figure 6
Gene expression analysis of DS and control astroglia.
(a) Dendrogram showing that two control astroglia (Cont 1 and 2) and
two DS astroglia (DS 1 and 2) cluster closer to each other, respectively.
(b–d) Heatmaps focusing on gene transcripts
encoding antioxidants and key factors in the reactive oxidative stress
(b), and factors secreted by astroglia that have roles in synapse
formation (c), and neurogenesis and maturation of neurons (d).
High expressions relative to mean are coloured red. Low expressions are
coloured green.
Confirmation of phenotypes of DS astroglia by isogenic iPSCs
Previous studies reported the generation of disomic and trisomic subclones either
from the same parental iPSC lines during serial passage47 or from
reprogramming mosaic DS fibroblasts9. In our study, we also
observed the loss of one copy of chromosome 21 in one DS iPSC line generated
from patient no. DS3. Since we did not observe mosaicism in the fibroblasts from
patient DS3, the disomic subclones might be generated during passaging. The
isogenic disomic and trisomic DS3 iPSCs were isolated by clonal expansion. We
named them Di-DS3 (disomy DS3) and Tri-DS3 (trisomy DS3) iPSCs. Like DS1 and DS2
iPSCs, Di-DS3 and Tri-DS3 iPSCs were pluripotent cells and had distinct gene
expression profile from the fibroblasts from which they were reprogrammed (Supplementary Fig. 1A–E).
The isogenic pair is a perfect tool for us to scrutinize this complex multigene
disorder because the Di-DS3 has the same genetic background as Tri-DS3 except
for the extra chromosome 21 (refs 9, 47). To verify the findings from DS 1 and DS2 astroglia,
we next differentiated both Di- DS3 and Tri-DS3 iPSCs to astroglia and asked
whether, compared with Di-DS3 astroglia as well as control astroglia, Tri-DS3
astroglia would also show the abnormal phenotypes revealed by DS1 and DS2
astroglia. As shown in Fig. 7a, astroglia from both Di-DS3
and Tri-DS3 iPSCs were identified by the expression of CD44, vimentin, GFAP and S100B, and their copy number of HSA21
was verified by fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis. We noticed
that Di-DS3 astroglia appeared smaller in size than Tri-DS3 astroglia (Fig. 7a). However, the size for astroglia from control 1,
control 2, DS1 and DS2 iPSCs appeared very similar (Fig.
1g). Thus, there seemed no significant correlation between the size
of astroglia and the DS disease condition. The qPCR results showed that compared
with Di-DS3 astroglia, Tri-DS3 astroglia expressed much higher levels of
S100B,
GFAP and
iNOS, and
expressed lower levels of TSP-1 and TSP-2 (Fig. 7b). To further
confirm our findings in isogenic lines, we compared the expression of these
genes in Tri-DS3 astroglia with those of control 1 and 2 astroglia (Fig. 2a). Similar changes of gene expression were observed
(Fig. 7b). Consistent with the observation in DS1 and
DS2 astroglia, minocycline
treatment corrected the abnormal expression of these genes in Tri-DS3 astroglia
(Fig. 7b). In addition, as shown in Fig. 7c,f, under spontaneous differentiation condition, Tri-DS3 NPCs
gave rise to fewer βIII-tubulin+ neurons and more S100B+ astroglia (21.6±3.0%
and 76.8±2.4%, respectively), compared with Di-DS3 NPCs
(30.9±3.5% and 67.1±2.2%, respectively; P<0.05;
n=3–4 from each cell line) and control NPCs
(P<0.01; compared with Fig. 1i). Tri-DS3
neurons generated under the spontaneous differentiation condition also exhibited
decreased neurite length compared with Di-DS3 neurons (61.3±4.3 and
82.8±3.7 μm for Di-DS3 and Tri-DS3 neurons,
respectively; P<0.05; n=10 from each cell line) and control
neurons (P<0.05; compared with Fig. 1j). As
shown in Fig. 7d,g, treating the DS NPCs with Di-DS3 ACM,
but not Tri-DS3 ACM restored the reduced neurogenesis of DS NPCs to a level
similar to the treatment with control ACM. To further examine the interaction of
Di-DS3 astroglia with neurons, we fed 6- to 7-week-old DS neurons with Di-DS3
ACM, Tri-DS3 ACM and Tri-DS3-Mino ACM for 3 days and examined the apoptosis by
co-staining of activated caspase-3 and βIII-tubulin. Consistently, as shown in Fig. 7e,h, addition of Tri-DS3 ACM caused more neuronal cell
death compared with the addition of Di-DS3 ACM (the percentage of active
caspase-3+/βIII-tubulin+ neurons was
7.5±0.5% and 21.0±1.9% for Di-DS ACM and Tri-DS ACM treatment
groups, respectively; P<0.01, n=3–6 from each
cell line) and control ACM (P<0.05; compared with Fig. 3e). Addition of Tri-DS3-Mino ACM induced significantly less neuronal cell death than
the addition of Tri-DS3 ACM (the percentage of active caspase-3+/βIII-tubulin+ neurons was
10.4±0.5% for Tri-DS-Mino ACM treatment group; P<0.05,
n=3–6). Moreover, we recorded the sPSCs of 6- to 7-week-old
neurons cultured in the presence of different ACM for 3 weeks. As shown in Fig. 7i,j, no synaptic activities were recorded from any of
the Di-DS3 and Tri-DS3 neurons cultured with Tri-DS3 ACM, while
~72.7% (8 of 11) of Di-DS3 neurons fed with Di-DS3 ACM, 69.2% (9 of
13) of Tri-DS3 neurons fed with Di-DS3 ACM, and 42.9% (6 of 14) of Tri-DS3
neurons fed with Tri-DS3-Mino
ACM showed synaptic activities.
Figure 7
Pathological phenotypes observed in astroglia generated from di- and trisomic
DS iPSC lines.
(a) Representative images showing that Di-DS3 astroglia and Tri-DS3
astroglia express CD44,
vimentin,
S100B and
GFAP, and also
exhibit disomy and trisomy of HAS21 by fluorescence in situ
hybridization (FISH) analysis, respectively. (b) qPCR analysis of
S100B,
GFAP,
TSP-1,
iNOS and
TSP-2 mRNA
expression in control (Cont) 1 and 2 astroglia, Di-DS3 astroglia and Tri-DS3
astroglia with or without the treatment of minocycline. Student’s
t-test, *P<0.05, **P<0.01, and
***P<0.001, comparison between Tri-DS3 Astro with other
individual group, n=3–4 for each group. (c)
Representative images showing NPCs from Di-DS3 and Tri-DS3 iPSCs
differentiated into βIII-tubulin+ neurons and S100B+ astroglia under spontaneous
differentiation condition. (d) Representative images showing DS NPCs
differentiated into βIII-tubulin+ neurons and S100B+ astroglia in the presence or
absence of Di-DS3 ACM or Tri-DS3 ACM. (e) Representative images of
βIII-tubulin+ and activated caspase3+ cells among the groups
with treatment of Di-DS3 ACM, Tri-DS3 ACM and Tri-DS3-Mino ACM. Scale bars,
50 μm (in all the images). Blue, 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole
dihydrochloride (DAPI)-stained nuclei. (f) Quantification of
βIII-tubulin+ neurons and S100B+ astroglia derived from
Di-DS3 and Tri-DS3 NPCs (n=3–4 from each cell line), and
the length of the longest neurites of neurons (n=10 from each cell
line) under spontaneous differentiation condition. (g) Quantification
of βIII-tubulin+ neurons and S100B+ astroglia derived from DS
NPCs (n=3–4 from each cell line), and the length of the
longest neurites of neurons (n=10 from each cell line) in the
presence of Di-DS3 ACM or Tri-DS3 ACM. (h) Quantification of pooled
data showing the percentage of βIII-tubulin+ and activated caspase3+ cells among the groups
with different treatments (n=3–6 from each cell line).
One-way analysis of variance test, *P<0.05 and
**P<0.01. NS, no significant difference. (i,j)
Quantification and representative tracing showing that synaptic activities
were recorded from Di-DS3 neurons fed with Di-DS3 ACM, Tri-DS3 neurons fed
with Di-DS3 ACM or Tri-DS3-Mino ACM, but not from Di-DS3 neurons and Tri-DS3
neurons fed with Tri-DS3 ACM.
Effects of DS astroglia in vivo
To further examine the pathological phenotypes of DS astroglia in vivo, we
transplanted isogenic Di-DS3 and Tri-DS3 astroglia into the lateral ventricles
(LVs) of P0 rag1−/− immunodeficient mouse brains. Six
weeks later, no tumour formation or overgrowth of the transplanted cells was
observed. As shown in Fig. 8a, both Di-DS3 and Tri-DS3
astroglia survived in the mouse brain and were identified by human nuclei (hN)
staining. The majority of the transplanted cells were found integrated into the
host tissue and located at the bottom of the LVs. The engraftment efficiency was
similar between the two astroglia transplantation groups (Fig.
8b). Six weeks after transplantation, <1% of the hN+
transplanted cells expressed NG2, suggesting that the vast majority of the transplanted
cells did not give rise to oligodendroglial lineage cells (Supplementary Fig. 8A). Occasionally, hN+
cells were found in the dorsal subventricular zone (SVZ) and vertical medial
wall of LV (Supplementary Fig. 8B).
But none of them expressed DCX, a marker for immature neurons, indicating that the
transplanted cells did not generate any neurons. These transplanted cells
maintained their astroglial lineage properties, as indicated by expressing humanCD44 (Fig.
8c). Moreover, about half of the transplanted cells expressed
GFAP (Fig.
8d, 45.6±4.4% and 47.1±5.3% for Di-DS3 astroglia
and Tri-DS astroglia, respectively; n=4–5). Consistent with a
recent transplantation study using human glial progenitors isolated from fetal
brain tissues48, many of the transplanted astroglia were large in
size and their processes were often long and tortuous (Fig.
8e,f), similar to the properties of astroglia in adult human and ape
brain6. Next, to explore the effect of DS astroglia on
neurogenesis in vivo, we examined the DCX+ cells in the dorsal SVZ, where newly generated
neuroblasts accumulated. Interestingly, as shown in Fig.
8g, grafted Di-DS3 astroglia, but not Tri-DS3 astroglia significantly
promoted the endogenous neurogenesis, as indicated by DCX staining (Fig.
8h, the numbers of DCX+ cells per section were 116.8±12.7,
290.0±27.9 and 141.0±27.0 for control phosphate-buffered
saline (PBS) vehicle, Di-DS3 astroglia and Tri-DS3 astroglia groups,
respectively; P<0.01, n=4–6). Intriguingly,
treating the Tri-DS3 astroglia-recipient animals with minocycline promoted neurogenesis in
the dorsal SVZ (Fig. 8g,h, the number of DCX+ cells per section was
230.0±25.4; P<0.05 compared with the control vehicle
group and the group received Tri-DS3 alone, n=4–6). The number
of proliferating cells identified by Ki67 staining in the dorsal SVZ was also significantly
increased by the transplanted Di-DS3 astroglia compared with the control group
(Fig. 8g,i, the cell numbers per section were
113.8±9.7 and 160.2±13.9 for control and Di-DS3 astroglia
groups, respectively; P<0.01, n=4–6). However,
transplantation of Tri-DS3 astroglia alone or plus minocycline treatment did not change
the number of Ki67+ cells
(Fig. 8g,i, the cell numbers per section were
91.4±8.7 and 84.7±3.8 for Tri-DS3 astroglia and Tri-DS
astroglia plus minocycline
treatment groups, respectively; P>0.05, n=4–6).
As shown in Fig. 8g, we also examined the endogenous
neural stem cells labelled by nestin in the dorsal SVZ among different groups. The
distribution areas of endogenous neural stem cells were expanded in groups
received cell transplant, particularly in the group transplanted with Di-DS3
astroglia, but quantification of fluorescence intensity of nestin staining did not show
significant difference among the different groups (Fig.
8j; P>0.05, n=4–6). As an additional
control, we also treated the animals that received PBS vehicle with
minocycline for 3 weeks.
Neither the number of DCX+
and Ki67+ cells nor the
fluorescence intensity of nestin staining was significantly changed, suggesting that
minocycline exerted its
effects by modulating the transplanted Tri-DS3 astroglia. Although DS ACM
increased neuronal cell death in vitro (Fig. 3b,e
and Fig. 7e,h), we did not see any significant neuronal
cell death in the animals that received astroglial transplant, as indicated by
double staining of NeuN and active caspase-3 (Supplementary Fig. 8C).
Figure 8
Transplantation of astroglia into the developing brains of Rag1−/−
mice.
(a) Representative images showing that at 6 weeks after
transplantation, the transplanted Di-DS3 Astros and Tri-DS3 Astros were
identified by human nuclei (hN) staining. Notably, the majority of the
transplanted astroglia (circled by dotted lines) were found integrated into
the tissue and located at the bottom of the LVs. LV, lateral ventricle;
DAPI, 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole
dihydrochloride. Scale bars, 500 μm.
(b) Quantitative results from brain sections showing that no
difference in engraftment success (hN+ cells) was noted between Di-DS3 Astro
and Tri-DS3 Astro transplantation groups (n=4–5). NS, no
significance. (c) A representative image showing that the
transplanted astroglia were labelled by human CD44. Scale bars,
50 μm. (d) A representative image showing that
about 50% of the transplanted hN+ cells were positive for GFAP staining. The squared area in
d was enlarged in e, showing the co-localization of hN and
GFAP. Scale bars, 50
and 25 μm in the original and enlarged images,
respectively. (f) Some transplanted astroglia showed long
GFAP+ processes, as
indicated by arrowheads. The arrow indicates the cell body. Scale bar,
50 μm. (g) Representative of DCX and Ki67/nestin staining in dorsal SVZ
performed on sections from control (Cont) group received PBS vehicle, groups
received Di-DS3 astroglia and Tri-DS3 astroglia transplant, and a group
received Tri-DS3 astroglia transplant plus minocycline treatment. Scale bars,
50 μm. (h,i) Quantitative analysis of the
number of DCX+ and
Ki67+ cells at dorsal
SVZ in the different groups. (j) Quantitative analysis of
fluorescence intensity of the nestin staining. One-way analysis of variance test,
n=4–6; *P<0.05, **P<0.01;
Data are presented as mean±s.e.m.
Discussion
Here we report novel pathological phenotypes of astroglia and protective effects of
minocycline revealed by the
differentiation of iPSCs from patients with DS. Using hiPSC-based differentiation
model, we investigate the pathogenic roles of astrocytes in the altered neurobiology
of DS (summarized in Supplementary Table
3). Through releasing extra S100B, DS astrocytes contribute to the reduced neurogenesis of
DS NPCs and induce cell death of DS neurons. DS astrocytes also fail to promote
maturation and synapse formation of DS neurons. By using this iPSC model of DS, we
show that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved antibiotic drug
minocycline corrects the
pathological phenotypes of DS astroglia and positively regulate the interaction
between DS astrocytes with DS NPCs or neurons.An early study in human tissue has shown that S100B level is markedly elevated in DS astrocytes and reactive
astrocytes are involved in the pathological changes49. Our results
reveal that compared with control astroglia, DS astroglia exhibit a higher
proliferating rate, express higher levels of S100B and GFAP, and produce elevated ROS, indicating that DS astroglia are
in a stress or reactive state. Consistent with the findings in iPSC-derived
astroglia, we also observe higher expression of GFAP/S100B
and an activated morphology of astrocytes in human brain tissues directly obtained
from DS patients by immunostaining. Thus, the DS iPSC differentiation model
established in this study recapitulates the pathological phenotypes of DS astroglia.
Previous studies show that overproduction of S100B induces neuronal cell death through NO release from astrocytes3650, and promotes a gliocentric shift and impaired neurogenesis in
DS neural progenitors derived from human fetal tissue35. In this
study, we observe increased neuronal apoptosis in DS neurons cultured with DS ACM
and reduced neurogenesis of NPCs cultured with DS ACM. Interestingly, DS S100BsiRNA
ACM collected from S100B
knockdown DS astroglia or control and DS-Mino ACM does not have these effects on neurons and NPCs. Thus,
the results from this work emphasize the role S100B in the interaction between DS astroglia and DS neurons or
NPCs. Furthermore, owing to the high efficiency and purity of the differentiating
astroglia derived from hiPSCs in this study, the microarray analysis on the
hiPSC-derived astroglia provides important information on the differential gene
expression between DS and control astroglia, particularly the genes encoding
secreted factors that are crucial for synapse formation.A number of previous studies in DS human tissue and DS mouse models document deficits
in trisomic NPCs and neurons, including decreased neurogenesis of NPCs and increased
oxidative stress, enhanced apoptosis and altered synaptic plasticity of neurons12345. Previous studies are mainly focused on the DS
hiPSC-derived neurons, showing differences in neurite outgrowth and deficit in
synapse formation as compared with control neurons789. In this
study, we surprisingly reveal the pathological roles of astroglia in DS. The
evidence for the critical contribution of DS astroglia to the abnormal phenotype of
DS neurons includes (1) under directed neuronal differentiation conditions where low
percentage of astroglia is derived (<15%), DS neurons show relatively normal
neuronal morphology and electrophysiological properties similar to control neurons;
(2) under spontaneous differentiation conditions, both control and DS NPCs give rise
to more astroglia (>60%). Coincidently, the otherwise seemingly normal DS
neurons show abnormal morphology in the presence of DS astroglia; (3) adding control
ACM restores the defects of DS neurons grown in the presence DS astroglia, such as
shorter neurite length and increased apoptosis; (4) unlike control ACM, DS ACM fails
to promote the maturation and synapse formation of DS neurons; and (5) treatment on
DS astroglia with minocycline
reverses the DS astroglia-mediated effects on neurons. Previous studies have shown
that astrocytes are involved in non-cell-autonomous mechanisms in diverse
neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental disorders that were classically thought of
as neuronal dysfunction diseases5152. Notably, recent lessons
learned from disease modelling using iPSCs indicate that non-cell-autonomous effects
of astroglia that contribute to detectable in vitro neuronal phenotypes might
be overlooked. Supported by the aforementioned evidence, our study demonstrates that
dysfunction of astrocytes has a critical role in the pathogenesis of DS, and may
represent a new target for potential therapeutic intervention strategy against
neuronal abnormalities in DS.Astrocytes regulate neurite outgrowth and promote synaptogenesis in the developing
brain29425354. In this study, we show that DS neurons
exhibit passive and active electrophysiological properties and possess intrinsic
INa and IK similar to control neurons.
Interestingly, unlike control ACM, and DS-Mino ACM, DS ACM fails to promote neurite outgrowth, cellular
maturation and synapse formation of iPSC-derived neurons. Mechanistically, the
microarray analysis and qPCR results suggest that these effects of DS ACM may be due
to the lower expression of genes encoding neurotrophic factors and growth factors,
and genes encoding factors involved in promoting synapse formation in DS astroglia
compared with those in control astroglia. Particularly, DS astroglia express much
lower levels of gene transcripts for TSPs that powerfully regulate synapse formation
and neuronal survival in the developing CNS16295556. In
addition, oxidative stress in DS astroglia would not be solely seen as a means to
apoptotic neuronal cell death, but rather as a mode of action leading to more subtle
perturbations of astrocyte homeostasis that hamper astroglial function in promoting
maturation and synapse formation of DS neurons. Moreover, in vivo
transplantation study shows that grafted astroglia modulate endogenous neurogenesis
and cell proliferation in the dorsal SVZ. Because the grafted astroglia are not
physically located in the dorsal SVZ, their effects may be largely mediated by the
factors released from the grafted astroglia (Fig. 6).DS hiPSC-based drug screening approaches are expected to greatly expand our capacity
to develop DS therapeutics. Patient-derived cells are powerful for constructing an
in vitro screening assay system that predicts a higher success rate for
patient-specific drug development. No single gene has been shown to be responsible
for all the DS symptoms. It is believed that the symptoms of DS are the results of
combined effects of critical HSA21 genes and indirect gene targets on other
chromosomes that have variable penetration. Thus, developing therapeutics based on
single or a small number of genes may have limited potential compared with
approaches where well-defined DS cellular phenotypes are targeted. As the importance
of astrocytes for brain development and function is increasingly recognized, these
cells are considered as potential drug targets for treating developmental
neuropathology. Therefore, we propose that a promising therapeutic approach would be
one based on regulating astroglial function, rather than the extremely challenging
task of rescuing vulnerable neurons. An iPSC-based differentiation system allows for
the study of astrocyte–neuron interactions, as well as drug testing. Our
results indicate that the toxic phenotypes of DS astrocytes are attenuated by the
treatment of minocycline, a
CNS-penetrating and clinically available drug that has a relatively safe profile in
the clinics. Minocycline
regulates the expression of a panel of genes in DS astroglia, not only inhibiting
the expression of S100B,
GFAP and
iNOS but also
restoring the expression of TSP genes. Minocycline also increases the expression of NFE2L2 gene that regulates a wide
range of antioxidant-related proteins and has been shown to protect neurons from
oxidative stress57. In addition, the DS-Mino ACM exhibits supportive effects on
neuronal maturation and synapse formation. These findings suggest that minocycline treatment may be an effective
and inexpensive way to treat DS. It is noteworthy that a previous study58 examines the effects of minocycline in Ts65Dnmice, and shows that minocycline prevents the cholinergic loss
and improves the behavioural performance of Ts65Dnmice on a working and reference
memory task. However, this study tests minocycline in aged Ts65Dnmice (18-month-old). Neural cells
derived from hiPSCs in vitro are reflective of cells at very early human
development59. The hiPSC-derived astroglia in this study are also
at an immature stage, as indicated by the marker expression profile (Figs 1g and 7b). Because minocycline has such positive regulatory
effects on the immature astroglia, better therapeutic effects might be achieved when
administrating minocycline at
early brain developmental stage.It is worth noting that minocycline causes tooth discolouration among several other side
effects. It is advised that minocycline not be used in children under the age of 8 years.
However, minocycline has the
potential to be used in childhood to combat DS when administrated in combination
with other drugs to reduce possible chance of side effects, for example,
vitamin B6, as reported in a
minocycline clinical trial in
children (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00409747). A recent study also reports
on using minocycline in treating
Fragile X syndrome60. In our study, we find that minocycline does not have significant
adverse effects on the electrophysiological properties of cell membrane of
hiPSC-derived neurons (Cm=21.3±3.5 pF,
Rin=3.1±0.4 GΩ and RMP=
−33.6±4.8 mV for 6- to 7-week-old DS neurons cultured
in the presence of minocycline
for 3 weeks; P<0.05 compared with DS neurons without minocycline treatment, n=10).
Minocycline has multiple
targets in the brain and is considered an anti-inflammatory drug by inhibiting
microglia activation. Recent studies also show that minocycline exerts its neuroprotective
effects through an inflammation-independent aspect of action19. In
this study, we find that minocycline can also regulate the function of astroglia. The
effects of minocycline on
astroglia may not be only implicated in DS but also in other disease conditions
where astrogliosis occurs, such as cerebral ischaemic injury and multiple sclerosis.
Intriguingly, our in vivo transplantation study recapitulates the effects of
DS astroglia on neurogenesis and the effects of minocycline. A previous study in human tissue61
demonstrates the enhanced neuronal cell death in the human fetal DS brain (35
weeks’ gestation). We do not observe significant neuronal cell death in
the animals that received Tri-DS3 astroglia transplant. This discrepancy could be
owing to the fact that the amount of survived astroglia after transplantation is
limited so that the toxic effect from DS astroglia is not strong enough to cause any
detectable neuronal death in vivo. A recent study48
demonstrates the feasibility of generating humanized mouse brain with human glial
progenitor cells. In the future, it is worthwhile to explore the possibility of
generating humanized chimeric mouse brain that is largely repopulated by
hiPSC-derived astroglia that may provide a novel in vivo hiPSC-based model
for studying pathogenesis of DS and other humanneurological diseases and for
screening drugs in an in vivo system with human neural cells for therapeutic
purposes.In summary, we describe a study to model DS pathogenesis using iPSCs from patients
with DS. We generate neurons and astrocytes from these patient-derived iPSCs, and
reveal a number of previously unrecognized defects in neural cells derived from DS
iPSCs, with an emphasis on the novel role of astroglia in DS pathology with abnormal
phenotypes and gene expression profiles. These pathological phenotypes of DS
astroglia can be attenuated by minocycline treatment, suggesting that minocycline could be a drug candidate for
DS therapy.
Methods
hiPSC generation
DS fibroblasts were obtained from Coriell Medical Institute (Supplementary Table 1). For producing viral
particles, Platinum-A retroviral packaging cells, Amphotropic (PLAT-A, Cell Biolabs
Inc.) were plated onto six-well plates coated with poly-D-lysine
at a density of 1.5 × 106 cells per well without
antibiotics and incubated overnight. Cells were transfected with
4 μg of moloney murineleukemia-based retroviral vectors
(pMXs) containing the human cDNA of POU5F1 (a.k.a.OCT4), SOX2, KLF4 or c-MYC (Addgene) using Lipofectamine 2000 (Life Technologies)
according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Viral supernatants were
collected at 48 and 72 h after transfection, and filtered through a
0.45-μm pore-size filter. For generating hiPSC, roughly1.2 ×
105–2 × 105 DS patient
fibroblasts were seeded onto each well of a six-well plate in fibroblast medium
containing Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium (DMEM) supplemented with 10% fetal
bovine serum (all from Life Technologies). Equal volumes of fresh viruses
harvested from POU5F1,
SOX2, KLF4 or c-MYC 48 wells were
polybrene-supplemented
(6 μg ml−1, Sigma)
and added onto the pre-seeded fibroblasts at 24 and 48 h post
seeding. On day 3, the transduced cells were split onto irradiated mouse
embryonic fibroblasts at a density of 104 cells per well of a
six-well plate in hiPSC medium supplemented with 0.5 mM valproic acid (Stemgent). The hiPSC
medium consisted of DMEM/F12, 20% knockout serum replacement, 0.1 mM
β-mercaptoethanol, 1 × nonessential amino
acid, 1 mM L-glutamine and basic
FGF
(12 ng ml−1, all from Life
Technologies). Cells were fed every other day with hiPSC medium and
valproic acid for 14
days. At 3 weeks post transduction, hiPSC colonies were picked, transferred onto
mouse embryonic fibroblasts and maintained in hiPSC medium. For feeder
depletion, hiPSC were passaged by collagenase (type IV,
1 mg ml−1, Invitrogen)
treatment, and then hiPSC colonies were plated on Matrigel (BD Biosciences)-coated plate
with mTeSR1 media (STEMCELL Technologies). All experiments conducted on hiPSCs
adhered to approved Stem Cell Research Oversight Committee at University of
California, Davis and Scripps Research Institute.
Characterization and quality control of hiPSCs
Karyotypying (Cell Line Genetics) was performed routinely. Fluorescence in
situ hybridization analyses were performed with a chromosome 21-specific
probe (Vysis LSI 21 probe; Abbott Molecular). Identification by DNA
fingerprinting STR (short tandem repeat) analysis was performed by using GenePrint PowerPlex 16 kit (Promega, performed by Cell Line Genetics, LLC) and
results of STRs of DS patient fibroblasts and iPSCs derived from them are
summarized in an Allele Table (Supplementary Table 4). Samples were run in duplicate and blinded to
the interpreter to confirm the results. Please note that two HSA21-located loci,
D21S11 (chr. 21q11–21q21) and Penta D (chr. 21q), were included and
examined. To perform teratoma analysis, 1 × 106 iPSCs
were harvested by Accutase (Life Technologies), re-suspended in a 1:1 mixture of
DMEM/F12 and Matrigel, and injected into the right testis of a C.B-17-Prkdcscid
mouse (Charles River). Six to eight weeks after injection, tumours were
dissected, fixed in 4% Paraformaldehyde (PFA), sectioned and stained with
haematoxylin and
eosin62.
Pluritest ( www.pluritest.org), a robust open-access bioinformatic assay of
pluripotency in human cells based on their gene expression profiles20, was also used to examine the pluripotency of the hiPSCs
generated in this study.
Neural differentiation of hiPSCs
Schematic diagram in Fig. 1a shows the directed and
spontaneous differentiation procedures. Embryoid bodies were grown in a
suspension culture in DMEM/F12, supplemented with 1 × N2 (Invitrogen)
for 1 week (week 1). Embryoid bodies were then plated on growth factor reduced
Matrigel (BD Biosciences)-coated plates in presence of neural induction medium
consisting of DMEM/F12, 1 × N2 and laminin
(1 μg ml−1;
Sigma). NPCs in the form of rosettes developed for another 1 week (week 2).
Next, rosettes were manually isolated from surrounding cells and expanded as
neurospheres in a suspension culture for 1 week (week 3) in NPC medium, composed
of DMEM/F12, 1 × N2, 1 × B27-RA (Invitrogen) and
20 ng ml−1
FGF2 (Millipore). For
neuronal differentiation, neurosphere at week 3 were plated again on growth
factor reduced Matrigel-coated plates in neural induction medium for 1 week. At
week 4, only the clusters from which neurons migrated out were picked (Fig. 1a), dissociated into single cells and then plated on
polyornithine (0.002%, Sigma) and laminin
(10 μg ml−1)
pre-coated plates in neuronal differentiation medium consisting of DMEM/F12, 1
× N2, 1 × B27-RA,
20 ng ml−1
BDNF (Peprotech),
20 ng ml−1
GDNF (Peprotech),
1 mM dibutyryl-cyclic
AMP(Sigma), 200 nM ascorbic acid (Sigma). Within another
week of culture in the neuronal differentiation medium, the majority of the
cells showed neuronal processes. Under this differentiation condition,
~85% of the total cells were βIII-tubulin+ neurons at 6-week time point (Supplementary Fig. 2B). For
ACM-treated groups, 4- or 6-week-old neurons were fed different ACM for various
period of time. At week 3, the neurospheres were also dissociated into single
cells and were attached with a substrate of poly-L-ornithine (0.002%) and
fibronectin
(10 μg ml−1;
Millipore) in the chemically defined and xeno-free astroglia medium containing
DMEM/F12, 1 × N2, 1 × B27, BMP4
(10 ng ml−1, Peprotech) and
FGF2
(20 ng ml−1) for directed
astroglia differentiation21 or attached with a substrate of
polyornithine (0.002%) and laminin
(10 μg ml−1) in
medium consisting of DMEM/F12, 1 × N2, 1 × B27-RA for
spontaneous differentiation. Medium was changed every other day. Cells were
passaged at least 6–8 times during directed astroglia
differentiation.
Drug treatment
Stock solutions of candidate drugs were directly applied to astroglia monolayers
in astroglia differentiation medium or minimal condition medium for 3 days.
Drugs used in the experiment were curcumin (5 μM, Merck Millipore),
resveratrol
(5 μM, Merck Millipore) and minocycline
(10 μM, Sigma).
Generation of ACM
To prepare ACM, DS astrocytes were cultured in 10-cm plates in astroglial
differentiation medium containing BMP4 and FGF2 until confluent. The cells were then plated in minimal
condition medium containing phenol-red-free DMEM/F12 and glutamine in the presence or absence of
antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compounds. After 3 days, ACM was collected,
cell debris were pelleted (4 °C, 1,000 r.p.m. for
5 min) and then placed in centrifugal concentrators (Millipore) with
a size cutoff filter of 3 kDa, which also can filter off the drug
minocycline owing to its
low molecular weight and small molecular size63. ACM was
concentrated 50-fold. Protein concentration was determined by Bradford assay.
For different experimental purposes, ACM was reconstituted in different media at
the final concentration of
100 μg ml−1. For
studying the neurogenesis effects of ACM on NPCs, ACM was reconstituted with a
medium composed of DMEM/F12, 1 × N2 and 1 × B27-RA
(Invitrogen). For studying the neurotoxic effect of ACM on DS neurons, ACM was
reconstituted in aforementioned neuronal differentiation medium.
Immunostaining
Cells fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde and brain sections were processed for
immunofluorescence staining57. The following primary antibodies
and dilutions were used: rabbit anti-Nanog (Cell Signaling), 1:500; mouse anti-Tra1-60
(Millipore), 1:1,000; mouse anti-humannestin (R&D), 1:400; goat anti-nestin (Santa Cruz), 1:100; rabbit
anti-Pax6 (GeneTex),
1:400; rabbit anti-βIII-tubulin (Covance), 1:3,000; mouse
anti-βIII-tubulin (Millipore), 1:400; rabbit anti-GABA
(Sigma), 1:1,000; rabbit anti-GFAP (Millipore) 1:2,000; mouse anti-S100B (Sigma), 1:2,000; mouse
anti-humanCD44 (Abcam),
1:1,000; mouse anti-A2B5 (Millipore), 1:400; rabbit anti-caspase-3 active (Promega), 1:200;
mouse anti-hN (Millipore), 1:200; rabbit anti-DCX (Cell Signaling), 1:150; and mouse
anti-Ki67 (Cell
Signaling) 1:400. Secondary antibodies (all from Invitrogen), including Alexa
488 and 594 anti-rabbit, Alexa 488 and 594 anti-mouse, and Alexa 488 anti-goat,
were all used at 1:1,000. Slides or coverslips were mounted with the anti-fade
Fluoromount-G medium containing 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole
dihydrochloride (Southern
Biotechnology). Images were captured using a Nikon Eclipse C1 or
Nikon A1 confocal laser-scanning microscope. The cells were counted with the
ImageJ software developed at National Institutes of Health (NIH). For cultured
cells, at least five fields of each coverslip were chosen randomly and three
coverslips in each group were counted. For mouse brain sections, at least four
consecutive sections from the same slice were evaluated for DCX and Ki67 staining, and the number of
positive cells for each section was counted after a Z projection. For the SVZ
analysis, images were taken between +1.18 to + 0.38 mm from Bregma.
The analysis of fluorescence intensity was performed using ImageJ software. The
relative fluorescence intensity was presented as normalized value to the vehicle
group. The sections of human brain tissues from DS patients and normal
individuals were kindly provided by Dr Lin Tian at University of California,
Davis. The human brain tissues are encoded with digital numbers and originally
obtained from the Human Brain and Spinal Fluid Resource Center at University of
California, Los Angeles (Supplementary
Fig. 3). All the human brain tissues were derived from the frontal
cerebral cortex of patients at the age of <6-month old.
RNA isolation and qPCR
Total RNA was prepared from cell pellets with RNAeasy kit (Qiagen)64.
Complementary DNA was prepared with a Superscript
III First-Strand kit (Invitrogen). The
qPCR was performed with SYBR Green ER qPCR
SuperMix (Life Technologies) or Taqman
primers (Life Technologies) on a Roche Lightcycler 480. All primers used are
listed in Supplementary Tables 5 and
6. All experimental samples were analysed and normalized with the
expression level of housekeeping gene glyceraldehyde- 3-phosphate dehydrogenase
(n=3 for each). Relative quantification was performed by applying the
2−ΔΔ method65.
Measurement of neuronal length
Neurite length is determined by manually tracing the length of the longest
neurite on individual neurons using the NIH Image J software. Neurons were
randomly selected from a minimum of three coverslips per experiment.
Cell proliferation assay
Cell proliferation was determined in 96-well plates using 3-(4, 5 dimethylthiazolyl-2)-2, 5-diphenyltetrazolium
bromide-based Cell
Proliferation Kit I (Roche
Diagnostics)64.
Detection of ROS production
Detection of ROS in live cells was performed using the Image-iT LIVE Green
Reactive Oxygen Species Detection Kit, according to the
manufacturer’s directions (Invitrogen). Briefly, this assay is based
on 5-(and-6)-carboxy-2′,7′-dichlorodihydrofluorescein
diacetate (carboxy-H2DCFDA), a reliable fluorogenic marker for ROS in live
cells. This nonfluorescent molecule is readily converted to a green-fluorescent
form when the acetate groups are removed by intracellular esterases and
oxidation (by the activity of ROS) occurs within the cell. The quantification of
the ROS production was addressed by counting the number of fluorescent cells in
randomly selected five fields in each group and was analysed and quantified
using the ImageJ software (NIH).
Quantification of NO
concentration
The concentration of nitrate
and nitrite in astroglial
supernatants was determined by nitrate/nitrite
colorimetric assay kit (Cayman
Chemical), according to the manufacturer’s protocol.
Briefly, astroglia were cultured in phenol-red-free astroglial differentiation medium for
72 h, with or without minocycline. Cell culture medium was then collected and
added into 96-well plate for experiment. Assays were performed in triplicates,
and each experiment was repeated three times.
Glutamate uptake assay
Astroglia were plated at a concentration of 20,000 cells per well in a 48-well
plate and cultured for an additional 2 days to reach confluence. Before the
assay, cultures were equilibrated in Hank's balanced salt solution (HBSS) buffer
for 10 min. L-Glutamate (20 μM) solutions
were prepared with HBSS and incubated with cells. After 30 and
60 min, the glutamate concentration remaining in the medium was measured
using Amplex Red Glutamic Acid/Glutamate
Oxidase Assay Kit (Invitrogen)
according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The decreased
glutamate was reported as
micromoles of glutamate per
micrograms of protein after being normalized to the total protein in each well.
The protein concentration was measured by Micro
BCA protein assay kit (Pierce).
siRNA transfection
DS astroglia were plated in six-well plates at 5 × 104
per well 24 h before transfection with 40 nM Stealth RNAi
or 40 nM Negative Universal Control Stealth or 40 nM
BLOCK-iT Fluorescent Oligo complexed with Lipofectamine RNAiMAX Reagent (all
from Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
Transfections were performed in triplicate for each treatment. After
24 h, transfection media was replaced at 24 h with fresh
growth media and incubation continued for an additional 24 h.
Transfection efficiency was then assessed by visualizing uptake of the BLOCK-iT
Fluorescent Oligo using fluorescence microscopy. In addition, at 48 h
after transfection, total RNA was harvested from individual wells of cells for
qPCR analysis. Also, at 48 h after transfection, additional duplicate
wells of cells were trypsinized, counted and re-plated for further
experiments.
Electrophysiology
Whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were performed at room temperature2164. The external solution consisted of NaCl 150 mM, KCl 5 mM, CaCl2 2 mM,
MgCl2
1 mM, HEPES
10 mM and glucose
10 mM, pH 7.4. The internal solution contained NaCl 30 mM, KCl 120 mM, MgCl2 1 mM,
CaCl2
0.5 mM, HEPES
10 mM, EGTA
5 mM and MgATP
2 mM, pH 7.2. A leak subtraction algorithm that was based on the
input resistance of individual cells was used to the I/V
relationships in order to more clearly detect voltage-gated ionic currents in
these cells. The inward voltage-gated Na+ currents were identified by their
sensitivity to specific blocker NaV channel blocker, TTX (1 μM; Ascent
Scientific). The potassium channel blockers tetraethylammonium chloride (5 mM) and
4-aminopyridine
(1 mM) were obtained from MP Biomedicals. The outward voltage-gated
K+ currents were recorded in the presence of TTX. For sPSCs recording, the internal solution contained
potassium gluconate
120 mM, KCl
10 mM, EGTA
10 mM and HEPES
10 mM, pH 7.2. The voltage-gated ionic currents and sPSCs were
recorded from 6- to 7-week-old DS neurons treated by different ACM starting from
the week 4 of the neuronal differentiation process.
Microarray analysis and heatmaps
Illumina bead array was performed for gene expression analysis6667. RNA was isolated from cultured cells using TRIzol (Invitrogen), and
100 ng total RNA was used for amplification and hybridization to
Illumina Human HT12_V4 chip according to the manufacturer’s
instructions (Illumina). Array was performed by the microarray core facility at
UTHSC. Array data were processed using Illumina GenomeStudio software
(Illumina). Background was subtracted and arrays were normalized using quantile.
Gene expression levels were considered significant only when their detection
P value ≤0.01. The dendrogram was made using
GenomeSteudio. Heatmaps of selected signalling pathway related genes were
generated using R (A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing) or TIGR
MultipleExperimentViewer (TMEV) programme in the TM4 software package.
Cell transplantation
Animal experiments were performed following protocols approved by the Animal Care
and Use Committees at the University of California, Davis. Postnatal day
0–1 (P0 to P1) newborn pups of rag1 (B6.129S7-Rag1tm1Mom on a C57/Bl6 background, Jackson Lab)
immunodeficient mice were used for cell transplantation experiments. The Di-DS3
and Tri-DS3 astroglial cells were suspended at a final concentration of 100,000
cells per microlitre in PBS. The pups were first cryoanaesthetized and
astroglial cells in 0.5 μl PBS were injected into the both
LVs. The transplantation sites were 1 mm from the midline between the
Bregman and Lambda and 1.1 to 1.3 mm depth. Glass micropipettes were
used to deliver cells by inserting directed through the skull into the target
site48. The pups were weaned at 3 weeks. At the age of 6
weeks, animals were deeply anaesthetized and transcaridally perfused with 4%
paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. The brains were
post-fixed, cryopreserved with 30% sucrose until they sank and frozen sectioned
(18 μm) in the coronal plane for immunohistochemistry68.A subgroup of mice was treated with minocycline for 3 weeks starting at the age of 3 weeks.
Minocycline was
administrated via intraperitoneal injection at
10 mg kg−1 per day, a dose
that has been reported to have neuroprotective effects in SOD1-mutant mice69 and R6/2 Huntington’s mice70.
Data analysis
All data represent mean±s.e.m. All assays were replicated at least three
times and each experiment was performed in triplicate. Assessments were analysed
using Student’s t-test when only two independent groups were
compared, or by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Tukey post hoc
test when three or more groups were compared.
Author contributions
C.C., P.J., Y.L. and W.D. designed experiments and interpreted data; P.J. and C.C.
carried out most of experiments with technical assistance from H.X., S.E.P., H.T.T.,
A.E.M., M.M.P. and S.L.; D.E.P., L.C.L and J.F.L. provided critical input to the
overall research direction; Y.L. performed the gene expression analysis; W.D. and
Y.L. jointly directed the project; C.C., P.J. Y.L. and W.D. wrote the paper with
input from all co-authors.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Chen, C. et al. Role of astroglia in
Down’s syndrome revealed by patient-derived human-induced pluripotent
stem cells. Nat. Commun. 5:4430 doi: 10.1038/ncomms5430 (2014).
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