| Literature DB >> 26237606 |
Dmitry A Ovchinnikov1, Ernst J Wolvetang2.
Abstract
Reprogramming of somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) has opened the way for patient-specific disease modelling. Following their differentiation into neuronal cell types, iPSC have enabled the investigation of human neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). While human iPSCs certainly provide great opportunities to repeatedly interrogate specific human brain cell types of individuals with familial and sporadic forms of the disease, the complex aetiology and timescale over which AD develops in humans poses particular challenges to iPSC-based AD models. Here, we discuss the current state-of-play in the context of these and other iPSC model-related challenges and elaborate on likely future developments in this field of research.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; disease modelling; induced pluripotent stem cells; reprogramming
Year: 2014 PMID: 26237606 PMCID: PMC4470188 DOI: 10.3390/jcm3041357
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
iPSc models of Alzheimer’s disease.
| Genetic Defect | Affected Process(es) | Disease Type, iPS/hES | Transgene-Free? | Investigated Cell Type(s) | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aβ production and aggregation, MAPT | Familial early-onset ( | N | Neurons | [ | |
| Aβ production, ER stress | Familial early-onset ( | Y | Cortical neurons, astrocytes | [ | |
| β-amyloid processing | Early-onset AD, OE model in | Y/N | Neurons | [ | |
| β-amyloid processing | Early-onset AD, | N | Neurons | [ | |
| Aβ levels | Early and late-onset DA, familial ( | N | Basal forebrain cholinergic neuron | [ | |
| Aβ production and aggregation, MAPT | Familial AD, | N | Neural stem cells, neurons | [ | |
| Aβ production and processing | OE models of familial AD mutations | N | Neural precursor cells, neurons | [ |
OE, Overexpression; * N, Number of analysed individuals (unrelated, unless stated otherwise), i.e., population size; n, Number of independently-generated iPS clones, i.e., sample size, N = No; Y = Yes; Y/N = Undetermined.
Figure 1Modelling Alzheimer disease with iPSC-derived cell types has the potential to reveal cell-cell and paracrine signalling events underlying disease aetiology.
Figure 2A Day 70 neuronal culture from control iPSCs, imaged 30 min after one cell was micro-injected with NeuroBiotin™ and detected using Streptavidin-Cy3, reveals the highly interconnected nature of neurons and astrocytes generated in vitro. Image courtesy of Patrick Fortuna and Refik Kanjhan (University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia).