| Literature DB >> 29374149 |
Hao Zhao1, Yan Zhao2, Zili Li2, Qi Ouyang1,2,3, Yi Sun1,2,3,4, Di Zhou1,2,4, Pingyuan Xie1,2, Sicong Zeng1,2,4, Lingfeng Dong1, Hua Wen1,2,4, Guangxiu Lu1,2,4, Ge Lin1,2,3,4, Liang Hu5,6,7,8.
Abstract
Rationale-endothelial cells (ECs) play important roles in various regeneration processes and can be used in a variety of therapeutic applications, such as cardiac regeneration, gene therapy, tissue-engineered vascular grafts and prevascularized tissue transplants. ECs can be acquired from pluripotent and adult stem cells. To acquire ECs from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) in a fast, efficient and economic manner. We established a conditional overexpression system in hESCs based on 15 transcription factors reported to be responsible for hematopoiesis lineage. Among them, only overexpression of FLI1 could induce hESCs to a hematopoietic lineage. Moreover, simultaneous overexpression of FLI1 and activation of PKC rapidly and efficiently induced differentiation of hESCs into induced endothelial cells (iECs) within 3 days, while neither FLI1 overexpression nor PKC activation alone could derive iECs from hESCs. During induction, hESCs differentiated into spindle-like cells that were consistent in appearance with ECs. Flow cytometric analysis revealed that 92.2-98.9% and 87.2-92.6% of these cells were CD31+ and CD144+, respectively. Expression of vascular-specific genes dramatically increased, while the expression of pluripotency genes gradually decreased during induction. iECs incorporated acetylated low-density lipoproteins, strongly expressed vWF and bound UEA-1. iECs also formed capillary-like structures both in vitro and in vivo. RNA-seq analysis verified that these cells closely resembled their in vivo counterparts. Our results showed that co-activation of FLI1 and PKC could induce differentiation of hESCs into iECs in a fast, efficient and economic manner.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29374149 PMCID: PMC5833666 DOI: 10.1038/s41419-017-0162-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Death Dis Impact factor: 8.469
Fig. 1Overexpression of FLI1 induced hematopoietic differentiation
a Schematic illustration of transduction into hESCs via FLI1. b Screening results of CD34 on day 3 after transducing 15 hematopoiesis lineage-relevant genes into hESCs. Columns show the means ± s.d. n = 5 independent experiments. c Representative images of hESCs-FLI1 after FLI1 overexpression by DOX on days 0, 1, 3, and 5. Scale bar, 100 μm. d Percentage of CD34+/CD38− cells on day 0 (left) and day 6 (right) after FLI1 overexpression. e The percentage of CD34+/CD38− cells gradually increased after FLI1 overexpression. f Expression levels of FLI1, GATA2, CD133, CD34, SOX2 and NANOG genes in hESCs, hESCs + FLI1, hESCs + FLI1 + DOX and umbilical cord blood (UCB) cells
Fig. 2FLI1 and PKC co-activation mediated hESCs differentiation into iECs
a Schematic illustration of the EC differentiation strategy from hESCs. b Typical morphological images of hESC-EC differentiation on days of 0, 1, 2, and 3. Scale bar, 100 μm. c The ratio of CD31+/CD144+ cells gradually increased during induction. Columns represent the mean ± SD; n = 5 independent differentiation experiments. d Representative results of the percentage of CD31+/CD144+ cells during the induction process detected by FCM. e Overexpression of FLI1 and activation of PKC in different hESC lines (hESC-254 or hESC-137) induced iECs. f Overexpressing FLI1 with different PKC activators (PMA or prostratin) yielded iECs. g Expression levels of VEGF, GATA2, CD31 and CD144 genes in hESCs, human fibroblasts (HFs), iECs and EPCs. Columns represent the mean ± SD; n = 5 independent differentiation experiments
Fig. 3RNA-seq analyses confirmed the vascular cell identity of the iECs
Heat map of marker gene panels for endothelium (a), pluripotency (b), the three germ layers (c, d, e), PKC-related genes (f according to KEGG), FLI-related genes (g according to Ingenuity Pathway Analysis) and small nuclear RNA (h) in hESCs (D0), iECs (D1, D2 and D3) and EPCs. Columns represent genes, and rows are samples. Column Z-score transformation was performed on log2 values for each gene with blue denoting a lower and red denoting a higher expression level than the average expression level. Hierarchical clustering of genes and samples are based on average linkage and correlation distance. i Dynamic gene expression of representative spatio-temporally regulated genes during hESC-EC differentiation. The mean minimal cycle threshold values were calculated from triplicate reactions
Fig. 4In vitro and in vivo characterization of iECs
a iECs strongly expressed vWF and bound with UEA-1 b. Scale bar, 50 μm. c Uptake of fluorescently labeled Ac-LDL by iECs and EPCs. Representative images of three independent experiments. Scale bar, 50 μm. d Tubes formed by iECs and EPCs on Matrigel in vitro. Representative image from ten independent experiments. Scale bar, 100 μm. e iECs formed vessel-like structures in vivo. Representative images of fibrinogen grafts 14 days after implantation; hematoxylin and eosin staining was conducted for five mice per condition with two implants per mouse (ten implants per condition). Scale bar, 100 μm
Fig. 5PKC inhibitor inhibits the generation of iECs
a GFX partially inhibits the generation of iECs from hESCs detected by UEA-1 binding assays. Scale bar, 50 μm. b GFX nearly inhibited the production of CD31+/CD144+ cells as detected by flow cytometric. c The addition of only DOX or PMA did not induce CD31+/CD144+ cells