| Literature DB >> 29517996 |
Anke Hoffmann1, Vincenza Sportelli2, Michael Ziller3, Dietmar Spengler4.
Abstract
Bipolar disease (BD) is one of the major public health burdens worldwide and more people are affected every year. Comprehensive genetic studies have associated thousands of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with BD risk; yet, very little is known about their functional roles. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are powerful tools for investigating the relationship between genotype and phenotype in disease-relevant tissues and cell types. Neural cells generated from BD-specific iPSCs are thought to capture associated genetic risk factors, known and unknown, and to allow the analysis of their effects on cellular and molecular phenotypes. Interestingly, an increasing number of studies on BD-derived iPSCs report distinct alterations in neural patterning, postmitotic calcium signaling, and neuronal excitability. Importantly, these alterations are partly normalized by lithium, a first line treatment in BD. In light of these exciting findings, we discuss current challenges to the field of iPSC-based disease modelling and future steps to be taken in order to fully exploit the potential of this approach for the investigation of BD and the development of new therapies.Entities:
Keywords: bipolar disease; calcium signaling; early neurodevelopment; lithium; neuronal excitability; patient-specific iPSC
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29517996 PMCID: PMC5877631 DOI: 10.3390/ijms19030770
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The life cycle of bipolar disease. The more severe form of bipolar disease (BD), called type I, firstly manifests a manic episode (red peak) followed by a depressive episode (blue peak). Following this first cycle, euthymic interphases (grey lines) progressively shorten until a relatively stable pattern of recurrence (single periods and/or entire cycles) develops over time. Concurrently, severity and duration of single episodes tends to increase, particularly for depressive episodes. This scheme illustrates the prototypical course of bipolar disease I whilst varying courses are common. First line treatments for manic episodes are neuroleptics and lithium. The latter can be also used for maintenance therapy of recurrent manic and/or depressive episodes.
Methods for iPSC generation and quality control in BD studies.
| Ref. | Source | Factors | Methods | N° | Auth | Karyo | Pluripotency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | FB | OKSM | RV | ≥5 | nd | nd | ICC, EB and TriL |
| [ | FB | miR/NAM | LV | na | na | na | ICC |
| [ | FB | OKSM | RV | ≥3 | SNP | G-Band | ICC, PluriTest, EB and ScoC, Tera |
| [ | FB | OKSM | SV | 2 | nd | G-Band | ICC, TriL |
| [ | FB | miR/NAM | LV | na | na | na | ICC |
| [ | FB | OKSM | SV | 3 | nd | G-Band | ICC, EB and TriL |
| [ | LCL | OKSM, LIN28 | Epi | ≥3 | STRP | nd | ICC |
| [ | FB, LB | OKSM | Epi, LV, RV | 1–3 | SNP | nd | ICC, PluriTest, EB, Tera |
| [ | AP | OKSM | Epi | 1 | nd | nd | ICC, EB and TriL |
AP, adipocytes; Auth, authentication; EB, undirected embryoid body formation; Epi, episomal plasmid; FB, fibroblast; G-Band, chromosomal G-banding; ICC, immunocytochemistry; Karyo, karyotype; LB, lymphoblast from blood; LCL, lymphoblastoid cell line; LV, lentiviral transduction; miR/NAM, miR9/9*-124, NEUROD2, ASCL1, and MYT1L; OKSM, OCT4, KLF4, SOX2, MYC; N°, numbers of independent clones per donor; na, not applicable; nd, not determined; PluriTest, a bioinformatic approach to asses pluripotency [72]; Tera, teratoma formation; TriL, analysis of trilineage formation by ICC and/or qRT-PCR; Ref, reference; RV, retroviral transduction; ScoC, lineage score card [73]; SNP, whole genome single nucleotide profiling; SV, Sendai virus transduction; STRP, short tandem repeat profile.
Study design, cellular model, and neuronal cell types.
| Ref. | Study Design | BD vs. Controls | Model | Major Cell Type(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | BD I (LR)—control | 3 vs. 3 | iPSC | Forebrain, mixed glutamatergic—GABAergic neurons |
| [ | BD I—control | 12 vs. 6 | iNLC | NSC, NPC, neuronal-like cells |
| [ | Familial BD | 2 vs. 2 | iPSC | FACS-sorted NPCs, neurons |
| [ | BD I—control | 6 vs. 4 | iPSC | Hippocampal dentate gyrus-like granule neurons |
| [ | BD I—control | 1 vs. 1 | iPSC | NPC, NPC-derived neurons |
| [ | Familial BD | 4 vs. 4 | iPSC | PAX6-positive NPC, early and late cortical neurons |
| [ | BD I (LR-NR)—control | 3 vs. 3 vs. 4 | iPSC | Hippocampal dentate gyrus-like granule neurons |
| [ | BD I (LR-NR)—control—MDD—PD | 7 vs. 3 vs. 6 vs. 2 vs. 1 | iPSC | Forebrain, mixed glutamatergic—GABAergic neurons |
| [ | BD I—control | 6 vs. 4 | iPSC | Cortical stem and progenitor cells |
BD I, bipolar disease type I; FACS, fluorescence activated cell sorting; iNLC, induced neuron-like cells; iPSC, induced pluripotent stem cell; MDD, unipolar major depression; LR, lithium responder; NPC, neural progenitor cell; NSC, neural stem cell; NR, lithium non-responder; PD, Parkinson disease.
Major analytical methods and findings in BD-derived iPSCs.
| Ref. | Major Methods | Major Findings in BD-derived iPSCs |
|---|---|---|
| [ | Microarray, Ca2+ transients | Ventralization, increased expression of membrane bound receptors and ion channels, Li reduces wave altered length amplitude and Ca2+ transients |
| [ | Morphology, Res-Imag | Cellular adhesion associates with clinical response to Li |
| [ | NanoString, RNA-seq, WCPC | Impaired early NPCs proliferation that is normalized by GSK3β inhibitor, altered WNT/GSK3β signaling and ion channel expression in NPCs |
| [ | RNA-seq, WCPC | Altered neuronal excitability, altered mitochondrial function and size, Li reduces hyperexcitability in LR donors and partly normalizes mitochondrial function |
| [ | qRT-PCR, NanoString, reporter assays | Upregulation of miR-34a in NPC and neurons, reducing miR-34a expression enhances dendritic elaboration and maturation of NPCs |
| [ | Microarray | Deregulation of receptor-mediated signaling. RNA metabolism, and protein trafficking in late neurons, upregulation of GAD1 |
| [ | WCPC | Neurons differ according to LR and NR, larger fast after-hyperpolarization |
| [ | Proteomics | Li-response pathway in BD acts through GSK3β-dependent CRMP2 phosphorylation to alter dendrite and dendritic spine formation, Ca2+ fluxes and neuronal activity |
| [ | RNA-seq, WCPC | Upregulation of immune-regulatory NLRP2, GABA- and dopamine signaling |
CRMP2, collapsin response mediator protein-2; GAD, glutamate decarboxylase; GSK3β, glycogen synthase kinase 3; Li, lithium; LR, lithium responder; miR-34a, microRNA-34a; NanoString, digital expression profiling; NPC, neuronal progenitor cell; NR, lithium non-responder; NLRP2, NLR family pyrin domain containing 2; qRT-PCR, quantitative reverse transcribed real-time polymerase reaction; Res-Imag, resonance imaging; RNA, ribonucleic acid; RNA-seq, RNA sequencing; WCPC, whole cell patch clamp; WNT, Wingless-type MMTV integration site family.
Figure 2Model of the lithium-response pathway in bipolar disease. CRMP2 (collapsin response mediator protein-2) is a major target of GSK3β (glycogen synthase kinase). This enzyme catalyzes phosphorylation of the threonine (T) residue 154 in CRMP2. This step associates with CRMP2 inactivation in human neuronal progenitor cells and mature neurons. Conversely, inhibition of GSK3β by lithium prevents CRMP2 inactivation and supports its role in axon guidance and cytoskeletal dynamics. Interestingly, the ratio of CRMP2-pT154:CRMP2 is higher in neurons from lithium responsive (LR) patients and is normalized under lithium (Li) treatment.
Figure 3miRNA-34a in bipolar disease. miRNA-34a expression levels were selectively increased in the cerebellum from bipolar disease (BD) patients when compared to controls (Ctr) or patients that had received lithium treatment. Bioinformatic analysis predicted 25 miR-34a target genes including the GWAS loci ANK3, KLC2, CACNA1C, CACNB3, TENM4, and DDN. Transient reporter assays showed that miR-34a overexpression does silence ANK3, CACNA1C, and DDN expression. Conversely, inhibition of elevated miR-34a in neurons derived from BD iPSCs led to normalization of miR-34a target genes. In an orthogonal approach, Bavamian et al. [67] investigated the effects of miR-34a overexpression across iPSC differentiation on a panel of 131 genes with a potential role in BD or neurodevelopment. Among 70 differentially expressed transcripts, fourteen were encoded by GWAS loci. Furthermore, the corresponding proteins of these risk loci formed a highly connected protein interaction network.