| Literature DB >> 26626326 |
Seok-Man Ho1, Brigham J Hartley2, Julia Tcw3, Michael Beaumont4, Khalifa Stafford5, Paul A Slesinger4, Kristen J Brennand6.
Abstract
Since the discovery of somatic reprogramming, human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) have been exploited to model a variety of neurological and psychiatric disorders. Because hiPSCs represent an almost limitless source of patient-derived neurons that retain the genetic variations thought to contribute to disease etiology, they have been heralded as a patient-specific platform for high throughput drug screening. However, the utility of current protocols for generating neurons from hiPSCs remains limited by protracted differentiation timelines and heterogeneity of the neuronal phenotypes produced. Neuronal induction via the forced expression of exogenous transcription factors rapidly induces defined populations of functional neurons from fibroblasts and hiPSCs. Here, we describe an adapted protocol that accelerates maturation of functional excitatory neurons from hiPSC-derived neural progenitor cells (NPCs) via lentiviral transduction of Neurogenin 2 (using both mNgn2 and hNGN2). This methodology, relying upon a robust and scalable starting population of hiPSC NPCs, should be readily amenable to scaling for hiPSC-based high-throughput drug screening.Entities:
Keywords: Directed differentiation; Modeling neuropsychiatric disease; Neuronal induction; hiPSC; iNeuron
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26626326 PMCID: PMC4860098 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymeth.2015.11.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Methods ISSN: 1046-2023 Impact factor: 3.608