| Literature DB >> 28293168 |
Hisham Bahmad1, Ola Hadadeh1, Farah Chamaa1, Katia Cheaito1, Batoul Darwish1, Ahmad-Kareem Makkawi1, Wassim Abou-Kheir1.
Abstract
With the help of several inducing factors, somatic cells can be reprogrammed to become induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSCs) lines. The success is in obtaining iPSCs almost identical to embryonic stem cells (ESCs), therefore various approaches have been tested and ultimately several ones have succeeded. The importance of these cells is in how they serve as models to unveil the molecular pathways and mechanisms underlying several human diseases, and also in its potential roles in the development of regenerative medicine. They further aid in the development of regenerative medicine, autologous cell therapy and drug or toxicity screening. Here, we provide a comprehensive overview of the recent development in the field of iPSCs research, specifically for modeling human neurological and neurodegenerative diseases, and its applications in neurotrauma. These are mainly characterized by progressive functional or structural neuronal loss rendering them extremely challenging to manage. Many of these diseases, including Parkinson's disease (PD), Huntington's disease (HD), Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) have been explored in vitro. The main purpose is to generate patient-specific iPS cell lines from the somatic cells that carry mutations or genetic instabilities for the aim of studying their differentiation potential and behavior. This new technology will pave the way for future development in the field of stem cell research anticipating its use in clinical settings and in regenerative medicine in order to treat various human diseases, including neurological and neurodegenerative diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease (AD); Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS); Huntington's disease (HD); Parkinson's disease (PD); induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs); neuronal differentiation; spinal cord injuries (SCI)
Year: 2017 PMID: 28293168 PMCID: PMC5329035 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2017.00050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Figure 1Schematic diagram showing the methods used to generate induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from human somatic cells as skin fibroblasts or blood cells. The hiPSCs derived from a patient carrying a certain genetic mutation in a neurodegenerative disease have the capacity to differentiate into different neurons. Those patient-specific hiPSCs and hiPS-derived neurons can be expanded and further differentiated into mature neural subtypes specific to certain neurodegenerative diseases.
Parkinson's disease modeled with patient-specific hiPSCs.
| Soldner et al., | Human skin fibroblasts | PD Patient-Derived hiPSCs | EB formation method in EB medium on non-adherent culture plates for 8 days, then selecting neural precursor cells and culturing them in ITS medium containing fibronectin, growth factors FGF2, FGF8, and SHH, followed by withdrawal of growth factors for 8 days to attain terminal differentiation |
| Cooper et al., | Human skin fibroblasts | PD Patient-Derived hiPSC lines | Using a high activity form of SHH and FGF8a, rather than FGF8b, and specific regionalization by RA, directly from EB stage, to produce DA neurons with maintained stability defined by an expression marker code of FOXA2/TH/β-tubulin |
| Devine et al., | Human skin fibroblasts | PD Patient-Derived hiPSC lines with triplication ofSNCA | Feeder-free floor plate induction, and dual SMAD inhibition for 1 day by Noggin, SB431542 and dorsomorphin, followed by SHH, WNT1 and DKK1 blocking antibody treatment for 8 days, then switching culture conditions to promote maturation of DA neurons |
| Sánchez-Danés et al., | Epidermal keratinocytes and dermal fibroblasts | PD Patient-Derived hiPSC lines | Lentiviral vector-mediated engineering of hiPSCs to overexpress Lmx1a in neural progenitors in order to generate enriched populations of neurons with the characteristics of A9 ventral midbrain DA neurons |
PD, Parkinson's disease; hiPSCs, human induced pluripotent stem cells; EB, embryoid body; SHH, sonic hedgehog; RA, retinoic acid; DA, dopaminergic; Lmx1a, LIM homeobox transcription factor 1a; DKK1, Dickkopf WNT signaling pathway inhibitor 1; SNCA, α-synuclein gene.
Huntington's disease modeled with patient-specific hiPSCs.
| Park et al., | Human dermal fibroblasts | Patient specific HD-iPSCs with 72 CAG repeats in huntingtin gene | Resuspending HD-iPSC colonies in EB differentiation medium in the absence of doxycycline |
| Zhang et al., | Human dermal fibroblasts | Patient specific HD-iPSCs | Treating HD-NSCs with SHH, DKK1, BDNF and ROCK inhibitor Y27632 for 8–10 days (stage 1), then with BDNF, cAMP, VPA, and Y27632 for an additional 1-3 days (stage 2) |
| Camnasio et al., | Human skin fibroblasts | Patient specific HD-iPSCs | (Chambers et al., |
hiPSCs, human induced pluripotent stem cells; HD, Huntington's disease; EB, embryoid body; SHH, sonic hedgehog; DKK1, Dickkopf WNT signaling pathway inhibitor 1; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; VPA, valproic acid; HD-NSCs: HD, specific neural stem cells.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis modeled with patient-specific hiPSCs.
| Dimos et al., | Human skin fibroblasts | Patient-specific iPSCs carrying SOD1 gene mutation (with L144F dominant allele) | Allowing iPSCs to form EBs in suspension culture, then treating them with RA and recombinant SHH to induce neural differentiation, and finally plating them on a laminin-coated surface and culturing for 7–15 days |
| Chestkov et al., | Human skin fibroblasts | iPS cell lines from patients with SOD1- associated ALS | Adding RA and SHH to mTeSR1 culture medium 12 days after iPSCs generation, then maturation of the produced motor neurons using BDNF and GDNF |
| Li et al., | Human skin fibroblasts | Familial ALS patient-specific iPSCs, carrying different ALS mutations, including SOD1 and FUS | Differentiation to NPCs by inhibition of SMAD pathway via EB formation assay |
iPSCs, induced pluripotent stem cells; SOD1, superoxide dismutase 1; ALS, Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; FUS, fused in sarcoma gene; EB, embryoid body; RA, retinoic acid; SHH, sonic hedgehog; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; GDNF, glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor; NPCs, neuroprogenitor cells.
Alzheimer's disease modeled with patient-specific hiPSCs.
| Yagi et al., | Human skin fibroblasts | AD-derived iPS cell lines with PS mutations (PS1 and PS2 iPSCs) | PS mutations in familial AD shown not to affect neuronal differentiation |
| Yahata et al., | Human dermal fibroblasts | AD-derived iPSCs | Differentiation of hiPSCs into forebrain neurons achieved using protocol described by Chambers et al. ( |
| Nieweg et al., | Human cord blood-derived unrestricted somatic stem cells (Zaehres et al., | hiPSC line 8/25 derived from human cord blood-derived unrestricted somatic stem cells (Zaehres et al., | hiPSC line 8/25 cultured in mTeSr medium and differentiated into neural cells according to a modified protocol by Li et al. ( |
hiPSCs, human induced pluripotent stem cells; PS, Presenilin; AD, Alzheimer's disease.
Different outcomes of iPSCs differentiation in the different diseases and properties of the cells obtained.
| PD | Dopaminergic neurons | Similar Morphology to ESCs Morphological, proliferative, and clonogenic characteristics(patient derived) very similar to naive mouse ESCs (Hu et al., | β3-tubulin+, TH+, VMAT2+, NURR1+, GIRK2+, MAP2+, Nestin+, Foxa-2+, Lma1+ (Wenker et al., | Increased glucosylceramide and α-synuclein, Tau, MAPT Alterations of autophagic and lysosomal mechanisms Dysregulation of calcium homeostasis Altered Morphology Increased ROS and Oxidative stress (Wenker et al., | Vulnerable | Ameliorate or improve motor symptoms of PD - teratoma formation |
| AD | Cholinergic neurons, glutamatergic and other neurons | Apoptotic loss upon extended culturing especially with extrinsic Zic1 expression (Qiang et al., | NeuN+, Tau+, NCAM+, MAP2+, double vGLUT1+ AND MAP2 + (Qiang et al., | Altered processing and localization of APP Increased production of Aβ Typical neuronal Na+, K+, and Ca2+channel properties and functions Ca2+channel properties and functions Fire action potential in response to depolarizing injections -Exhibit normal electrophysiology (Israel et al., | More susceptible to glutamate-mediated cell death (Duan, | Improve cognitive function and spatial memory in animal models |
| HD | Striatal neurons (striatal medium spiny neurons (MSN)) | iPSCs and precursor cells show the same CAG mutation expansion as that from the HD patient whom the iPS cell line was established from (reference 44 in the original paper) -HD-NSCs showed enhanced caspase activity when deprived from growth factors compared to normal-NSCs -Higher lysosomal activity in HD-iPSCs | TUJ1+, GABA+, Calbindin+ and -Mature cells express DARPP-32+ (reference 44 in the original paper) | A lot of variables in differentiation efficiency and role of epigenetics traces or memory (Tousley and Kegel-Gleason, | – | – |
| ALS | Oligo-dendrocytes, motor neurons (upper and lower) | Co-expression of LIM homeodomain (LIM-HD) transcription factors: insulin gene enhancer 1 (ISL1), LIM homeobox 3 (LHX3), and pancreas homeobox 1 (Sances et al., | Non impaired and active maturation No significant or consistent variation in proliferation rates from control normal derived iPSCs No impairment in passive cell properties (Livesey, | Maintain viability (no difference from control) | – | |
| SCI | Oligodendrocytes progenitors or precursor cells, neuronal precursors, NSCs and neurons | Can differentiate to oligodendrocytes, and neurons | NeuN+ neurons, GFap+ astrocytes, 0–4 +oligodendrocytes | Differentiated cells were either GABAergic, glutamatergic, or cholinergic | Maintain viability | Functional recovery in rats: recovery of motor, sensory, autonomic and electrophysiological functions Improved re-enervation by host motor neurons -motor neuron regeneration and survival Form synapses with host neurons -downregulation of astroglial activation at site of injury and reduced inflammatory response Reduced apoptosis and enhanced angiogenesis in injured inflammatory response Reduced apoptosis and enhanced angiogenesis in injured areas (Tsuji et al., |
Figure 2Schematic diagram demonstrating the different applications of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from human somatic cells. The patient-specific hiPSCs and hiPS-derived neurons can serve as precursors for transplantation and tissue regeneration therapy. hiPSCs generated are also a copious resource for in vitro and in vivo disease modeling, drug and genetic screening, and regenerative medicine.