| Literature DB >> 26966440 |
Erin C Hedges1, Vera J Mehler1, Agnes L Nishimura1.
Abstract
In recent years several genes have linked amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) as a spectrum disease; however little is known about what triggers their onset. With the ability to generate patient specific stem cell lines from somatic cells, it is possible to model disease without the need to transfect cells with exogenous DNA. These pluripotent stem cells have opened new avenues for identification of disease phenotypes and their relation to specific molecular pathways. Thus, as never before, compounds with potential applications for regenerative medicine can be specifically tailored in patient derived cultures. In this review, we discuss how patient specific induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have been used to model ALS and FTD and the most recent drug screening targets for these diseases. We also discuss how an iPSC bank would improve the quality of the available cell lines and how it would increase knowledge about the ALS/FTD disease spectrum.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26966440 PMCID: PMC4761393 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9279516
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Genes associated with both ALS and FTD.
| Gene | Locus | Protein | Putative function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| 3p11 | Charged multivesicular body protein 2B | Vesicle trafficking | [ |
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| 1p36 | TAR DNA binding protein 43 | RNA metabolism | [ |
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| 9p13 | Valosine | Ubiquitination; proteasomal degradation | [ |
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| Xp11 | Ubiquilin 2 | Ubiquitination; proteasomal degradation | [ |
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| 9p21 | Chromosome 9 open reading frame 72 | Intracellular trafficking | [ |
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| 2q35 | Tubulin, alpha 4A protein | Cytoskeleton dynamics | [ |
Observations from stem cell derived models of known ALS/FTD genes.
| Aberrant gene | Differentiated cell type | Main observations | Associated disease | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| hiPSC derived neurons | RNA foci, RAN translation products, and increased susceptibility to cellular stress caused by autophagy inhibition | ALS/FTD | [ |
| hiPSC derived neurons | Specific susceptibility to glutamate excitotoxicity and mitigation of | ALS/FTD | [ | |
| hiPSC derived MNs | Transcriptional changes and presence of RNA foci | ALS/FTD | [ | |
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| hiPSC derived MNs | Neuronal hyperexcitability followed by progressive loss of action potential output and synaptic activity | ALS/FTD | [ |
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| hiPSC derived neurons | Increased sensitivity to kinase inhibition, reduced S6K2 levels, and neurite degeneration in absence of glia | FTD | [ |
| hiPSC derived neurons | Identification and validation of small molecules with therapeutic potential | FTD | [ | |
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| hiPSC derived MNs | Mislocalization of TDP-43, decreased MN survival rate, and increased vulnerability to inhibition of the PI3K pathway | ALS/FTD | [ |
| hiPSC derived MNs | Identification of the histone acetyltransferase inhibitor anacardic acid as able to reverse disease phenotype | ALS/FTD | [ | |
| hiPSC derived MNs | TDP-43 aggregation and feasibility of hiPSCs derived MNs for drug screening | ALS/FTD | [ | |
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| mESC derived MNs/hiPSCs derived MNs | Kenpaullone, a GSK3-inhibitor, increased survival of MNs more so than two potential therapeutic compounds that failed in clinical trials (olesoxime and dexpramipexole) | ALS | [ |
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| hESC derived MNs/glia cells | MNs were shown to be selectively sensitive to toxic effects of cocultured | ALS | [ |
| hESC derived MNs/astrocytes | Selective MN toxicity correlates with increased inflammatory response in | ALS | [ | |
| hiPSC derived MNs | Identification of misregulated neurofilament | ALS | [ | |
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| hiPSC derived MNs | Potential correlation between | ALS | [ |
hiPSC = human induced pluripotent stem cell; mESC = mouse embryonic stem cell; hESC = human embryonic stem cell; MN = motor neuron.
Figure 1Overview representation of disease pathogenesis of ALS and FTD in cells derived from patient somatic lines. Neurons/motor neurons were differentiated from human induced pluripotent stem cells and varied phenotypes were observed: mutant protein may be mislocalized into a different cellular compartment (TDP-43 [17, 18]); overexpression and downregulation of mutant proteins were observed [18–20]; formation of cellular aggregates [21]; formation of repeat-associated non-ATG (RAN) peptides [22, 23]; formation of RNA foci [22–24]; glutamate toxicity [23]; mitochondria defects [20]; nuclear import/export impairment [25, 26]; formation of neurofilament inclusions [27] and axonal transport defects [20]. In the absence of glia, SOD1 models formed neurofilament inclusions which lead to neurite degeneration in motor neurons [27].