| Literature DB >> 25993131 |
Laureen Jacquet1, Andreas Neueder2, Gabor Földes3, Panagiotis Karagiannis2, Carl Hobbs4, Nelly Jolinon2, Maxime Mioulane3, Takao Sakai5, Sian E Harding3, Dusko Ilic1.
Abstract
Huntington disease (HD; OMIM 143100), a progressive neurodegenerative disorder, is caused by an expanded trinucleotide CAG (polyQ) motif in the HTT gene. Cardiovascular symptoms, often present in early stage HD patients, are, in general, ascribed to dysautonomia. However, cardio-specific expression of polyQ peptides caused pathological response in murine models, suggesting the presence of a nervous system-independent heart phenotype in HD patients. A positive correlation between the CAG repeat size and severity of symptoms observed in HD patients has also been observed in in vitro HD cellular models. Here, we test the suitability of human embryonic stem cell (hESC) lines carrying HD-specific mutation as in vitro models for understanding molecular mechanisms of cardiac pathology seen in HD patients. We have differentiated three HD-hESC lines into cardiomyocytes and investigated CAG stability up to 60 days after starting differentiation. To assess CAG stability in other tissues, the lines were also subjected to in vivo differentiation into teratomas for 10 weeks. Neither directed differentiation into cardiomyocytes in vitro nor in vivo differentiation into teratomas, rich in immature neuronal tissue, led to an increase in the number of CAG repeats. Although the CAG stability might be cell line-dependent, induced pluripotent stem cells generated from patients with larger numbers of CAG repeats could have an advantage as a research tool for understanding cardiac symptoms of HD patients.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25993131 PMCID: PMC4438866 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0126860
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1HD-hESC lines characterization.
(A) Genotyping: Microsatellite markers specific for chromosomes 13, 18, 21, X and Y were amplified. The allele sizes in bp for markers on chromosomes 13, 18, and 21 are listed in the table. (B) Pluripotency markers: alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity, TRA-1–60, TRA-1–81, OCT4, and Nanog were detected in undifferentiated cells of all three hESC lines. (C) HD-hESC colonies have a typical morphology of normal hESC colonies.
Fig 2All three HD-hESC lines have stable number of CAG repeats upon directed cardiomyocyte differentiation in vitro.
(A) Beating cardiomyocytes were present in all three HD hESC lines examined in 2 independent rounds of differentiation. (B) Upon differentiation into cardiomyocytes for 30 days, expression of the pluripotency markers NANOG and OCT4 is nearly undetectable, whereas the cardiomyocyte marker TNNT2 was increased. There is no change in HTT expression. Data are given by normalised mean ± standard error of the mean (n = 3); statistical significance was calculated by an unpaired homoscedastic one-tailed Student's t-test. NS, p ≥ 0.5 (non-significant); *p = 0.01–0.05 (significant); ***p ≤ 0.05 (extremely significant). (C) Top: Analysis of CAG repeats in undifferentiated KCL027 cells at the start of differentiation [day 0] and 60-day after. Bottom: Number of CAG repeats in allele carrying HD mutation has not increased after 30–60 days differentiation into cardiomyocytes.
Fig 3All three HD-hESC lines have stable number of CAG repeats upon spontaneous in vivo differentiation.
(A) Differentiation into the three germ layers in vivo: Teratomas were encapsulated and did not invade surrounding tissue. Sections are counterstained with hematoxylin and eosin and specific stains are either light blue (Alcian blue) or brown (all immunohistochemistry). Germ layer markers: Alcian blue—and periodic acid–Schiff (PAS)-stained cartilage and desmin for mesoderm, neuron-specific β-III tubulin and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) for ectoderm, GATA4 and α- fetoprotein for endoderm. (B) Number of CAG repeats in allele carrying HD mutation did not increase during 10-week teratoma formation.
Pluripotent stem cell in vitro models of HD.
| Cell line | Species origin | Cell type | CAG repeat size | Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse | Neural stem cells | 140/140; | Impaired motility, increased ROS, dysregulated cholesterol | [ | |
| HD-iPS1 | Human | iPSC | 72 | [ | |
|
| Mouse | ESC | 7, 77 and 150 | Large CAG repeat sizes increase neurogenesis | [ |
| KCL005, KCL008 | Human | ESC | 46 | Increase in CAG repeats upon differentiation into astroglial precursors | [ |
| KCL012, KCL013, KCL027, KCL028, KCL036 | Human | ESC | 42, 46 | No phenotype reported | [ |
| R6/1 | Mouse | ESC | 127 | CAG expansion, impaired DNA repair, apoptosis | [ |
| Mouse | ESC | 20, 50, 91, 111 and | Dysregulation of 73 genes | [ | |
| TrES1 | Monkey | Pluripotent SC generated by the fusion of transgenic HD monkey skin fibroblast and a wild-type monkey oocyte | 84 | Presence of aggregates | [ |
| rHD-ESC | Monkey | ESC | [ | ||
| Human | ESC with exogenous exon1 expression? | Insoluble HTT aggregates and neurodegeneration | [ | ||
| SI-186, SI-187 | Human | ESC | 37 and 51 | Increase in CAG repeats upon neural differentiation; elevated glutamate-evoked responses | [ |
| SI-187, SIVF017, SIVF018, SIVF020, Huez2.3, VUB05 | Human | ESC | 40–51 | Downregulation of HTT, dysregulation of CHCHD2, TRIM4, and PKIB | [ |
| HD-iPShom 4F-1, HD-iPShom 4F-2, HD-iPShom 4F-3, HD-iPShom 3F-1, HD-iPShom 3F-2, HD-iPShet 3F-1 | Human | iPSC | 42/44, 39/42, 45 | Increase in lysosomal activity | [ |
| HD60n, HD60i.3, HD60i.4, HD109i.1, HD180n, HD180i.5, HD180i6, HD180i7 | Human | iPSC | 60, 109, 180 | Disease-associated changes in electrophysiology, metabolism, cell adhesion, and apoptosis | [ |
| Human | iPSC | 72 | Deregulated expression of oxidative stress proteins; aggregates | [ |