| Literature DB >> 30227641 |
Ruhel Ahmad1, Vincenza Sportelli2, Michael Ziller3, Dietmar Spengler4, Anke Hoffmann5.
Abstract
Schizophrenia (SCZ) is a devastating mental disorder that is characterized by distortions in thinking, perception, emotion, language, sense of self, and behavior. Epidemiological evidence suggests that subtle perturbations in early neurodevelopment increase later susceptibility for disease, which typically manifests in adolescence to early adulthood. Early perturbations are thought to be significantly mediated through incompletely understood genetic risk factors. The advent of induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology allows for the in vitro analysis of disease-relevant neuronal cell types from the early stages of human brain development. Since iPSCs capture each donor's genotype, comparison between neuronal cells derived from healthy and diseased individuals can provide important insights into the molecular and cellular basis of SCZ. In this review, we discuss results from an increasing number of iPSC-based SCZ/control studies that highlight alterations in neuronal differentiation, maturation, and neurotransmission in addition to perturbed mitochondrial function and micro-RNA expression. In light of this remarkable progress, we consider also ongoing challenges from the field of iPSC-based disease modeling that call for further improvements on the generation and design of patient-specific iPSC studies to ultimately progress from basic studies on SCZ to tailored treatments.Entities:
Keywords: differentiation; early neurodevelopment; micro-RNA; mitochondria; neuroleptics; neurotransmission; patient-specific iPSCs; schizophrenia
Year: 2018 PMID: 30227641 PMCID: PMC6162757 DOI: 10.3390/cells7090140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Tracing early neurodevelopment. Key morphogens in anterior–posterior patterning are WNT (wingless), FGF (fibroblast growth factors), and RA (retinoid acid). Gradients of these morphogens regulate differentiation into specific types of neural progenitor cells of forebrain (purple), midbrain (orange), hindbrain (yellow), and anterior spinal cord (green). Key morphogens in dorsal–ventral patterning are gradients of BMP (bone morphogenetic proteins), WNT, SHH (sonic hedgehog), and Nodal. BMP and WNT determine the dorsal fates of neural progenitor cells, whereas SHH and Nodal determines ventral fates. Different types of neural cells for tracing early neurodevelopment in schizophrenia (SCZ) are shown: Ventral midbrain progenitors give rise to tyrosine hydroxylase-positive dopaminergic neurons. Neural progenitor cells (green) from the ventricular zone (VZ) of the dorsal telencephalon generate all excitatory glutamatergic pyramidal neurons. Dorsal progenitors use radial glia cells (red) as scaffold to migrate radially to the cortical plate (CP) and from there to destined cortical layers. Interneurons (green) are derived from the ventral neurogenic zone termed medial ganglion eminence (MGE) and migrate tangentially to the pallium. There, interneurons can use radial glia cells to ascend to the cortical plate as is the case for inhibitory GABA-ergic interneurons or to descend to the ventricular zone. Differential interactions between subsets of interneurons and the radial glial scaffold are indicated by shades of green and red, respectively. On top of this, local guidance cues that are indicated by a gradient of pink can influence interneuron positioning as shown by blue arrows. Part of Figure 1 is reprinted from K. Sue O’Shea and Melvin G. McInnis, Neurodevelopmental origins of bipolar disorder: iPSC models; published by Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience, volume 73, pp. 63–83, 2016, with permission from Elsevier.
Figure 2Temporal course of selected neurodevelopmental processes. The x axis depicts time from fertilization to young adulthood and the y axis shows the relative percentage of the maximum. The average age of schizophrenia (SCZ) onset in males and females in late adolescence and early adulthood, respectively, is indicated. Neurogenesis and subsequent migration of neurons to the cortex begin within a few weeks of gestation in humans and is completed around birth. Dendritic arborization and myelination continue postnatally towards adolescence and beyond. The progressive reduction of grey-mater volume detected with longitudinal neuroimaging (top) is thought to result from the combined effect of pruning of the neural arbor and myelin deposition. The formation of prefrontal excitatory synapses reaches a maximum in childhood at five years and declines thereafter until adolescence. By contrast, the formation of prefrontal inhibitory synapses strongly increases from 15 years onward through adolescence and levels off in early adulthood. Deregulation of the cortical excitatory-inhibitory balance is hypothesized to contribute to the development and manifestation of SCZ. Adapted from Thomas R. Insel, Rethinking Schizophrenia, published by Nature, 2010.
Methods for Schizophrenia-induced pluripotent stem cell (SCZ-iPSC) generation and quality control.
| Ref. | Source | Factors | Met | N° | Auth | Karyo | Pluripotency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | fibroblast | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
| [ | [ | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
| [ | [ | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
| [ | keratinocyte | OKSM | LV | 1 | nd | G-B | ICC, PCR, PluriTest, EB |
| [ | [ | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
| [ | [ | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
| [ | [ | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
| [ | [ | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
| [ | fibroblast | OKSM | RV | 2 | nd | G-B | ICC, PCR, EB |
| [ | [ | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
| [ | [ | OKSM | LV | 1 | nd | G-B | ICC, PCR, PluriTest, EB |
| [ | fibroblast | APM | LV | na | na | na | ICC |
| [ | fibroblast | OKSM | LV | dns | nd | G-B | ICC, PluriTest, EB |
| [ | [ | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
| fibroblast | OKSM | Sen | 2–3 | nd | G-B | PCR, FACS | |
| [ | [ | OKSML | LV | ≥5 | nd | G-B | ICC, Tera |
Abbreviations are: APM, reprogramming factors ASCL1, POU3F2, MYT1L; Auth, authentication; EB, embryoid body formation combined with ICC; dns, data not shown; Epi, episomal plasmid; G-B, chromosomal G-banding; ICC, immunocytochemistry; Karyo, karyotype; LV, lentiviral transduction; Met, methods; N°, numbers of independent clones per donor; na, non-applicable; nd, not determined; OKSM, reprogramming factors OCT4, KLF4, SOX2, MYC, OKSML plus Lin28; PCR, quantitative reversed transcribed polymerase chain reaction; PluriTest, a bioinformatic tool to asses pluripotency; Sen, Sendai virus; Ref, reference; RV, retroviral; Tera, teratoma formation.
Study design, cellular model, and neuronal cell types.
| Ref. | Study Design | SCZ vs. Controls | Model | Major Cell Type(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Familial SCZ | 4 vs. 3 | iPSC | Forebrain, mixed glutamatergic-GABAergic neurons and NPCs |
| [ | [ | 4 vs. 3 | iPSC | Forebrain, mixed glutamatergic- GABAergic neurons |
| [ | [ | 4 vs. 6 | iPSC | Forebrain NPCs |
| [ | Paranoid SCZ | 3 vs. 2 | iPSC | Midbrain dopaminergic and forebrain glutamatergic neurons |
| [ | [ | 4 vs. 3 | iPSC | Forebrain, mixed glutamatergic-GABAergic neurons |
| [ | [ | 4 vs. 3 | iPSC | FOXA2-positive midbrain dopaminergic neurons |
| [ | [ | 4 vs. 3 | iPSC | Dentate gyrus-like granule neurons |
| [ | [ | 4 vs. 3 | iPSC | CA3 and dentate gyrus neurons |
| [ | CR-SCZ | 1 vs. 1 | iPSC | Retinoic acid-induced NPCs |
| [ | [ | 4 vs. 6 | iPSC | Forebrain NPCs |
| [ | [ | 1 vs. 1 | iPSC | Forebrain glutamatergic neurons |
| [ | 3 mar vs. 3 mir | iNLC | Early neuron-like cells FACS-purified | |
| [ | 2 vs. 1 vs. 2 ig | iPSC | Induced forebrain glutamatergic neurons | |
| [ | [ | 4 vs. 6 | iPSC | Forebrain NPCs |
| Childhood-onset SCZ | 10 vs. 10 | iPSC | Forebrain NPCs | |
| [ | [ | 3 vs. 3 | iPSC | Neuron committed forebrain NPCs |
Abbreviations are: CR-SCZ, Clozapin resistant patient with SCZ; FACS, fluorescence activated cell sorting; ig, isogenic cell line; iNLC, induced neuron-like cell; iPSC, induced pluripotent stem cell; mar, major risk allele; mir, minor risk allele; NPC, neural progenitor cell.
Major differentiation methods.
| Ref. | Neural Induction | Patterning/Neural Progenitor Cells → Neural Cells |
|---|---|---|
| [ | EB-/rosette formation | N2, B27-RA, FGF2 → N2, B27-RA, BDNF, GDNF, cAMP, AA |
| [ | EB-/rosette formation | N2, B27-RA, FGF2 → N2, B27-RA, BDNF, GDNF, cAMP, AA |
| [ | EB-/rosette formation | N2, B27-RA, FGF2 |
| [ | Nog, SB431542 | SHH → SHH, FGF8, BDNF, AA |
| [ | EB-/rosette formation | N2, B27-RA, FGF2 → N2, B27-RA, BDNF, GDNF, cAMP, AA |
| [ | LDN193189, SB431542 | SHH8 + FGF8 → BDNF, GDNF, cAMP, AA SHH8 + FGF8, CHIR99021 → BDNF, GDNF, cAMP, AA |
| [ | DKK1, SB431542, Nog, Cyc | N2, B27, FGF2 → N2, B27, BDNF, Wnt3a, cAMP, AA |
| [ | DKK1, SB431542, Nog, Cyc | N2, B27, FGF2 → N2, B27, BDNF, Wnt3a, cAMP, AA |
| [ | Nog, bFGF | RA → FGF2 |
| [ | EB-/rosette formation | N2, B27-RA, FGF2 |
| [ | Nog, SB431542 | SHH → SHH, FGF8, BDNF, AA |
| [ | Lentiviral transduction | N2, bFGF |
| [ | Dorsomorphin or Nog, SB431542 | N2, B27 or B27-RA, FGF2 |
| [ | LDN193189, SB431542 | N2, B27-RA, FGF2 |
| [ | EB-/rosette formation | N2, B27-RA, FGF2 → N2, B27-RA, BDNF, GDNF, cAMP, AA |
Abbreviations are: AA, ascorbic acid; BDNF, brain derived neurotrophic factor; cAMP, cyclic adenosine monophosphate; Cyc, cyclopamine; DKK1, Dickkopf-related protein 1; EB, embryoid body; GDNF, glial cell derived neurotrophic factor; FGF, fibroblast growth factor; Nog, Noggin; RA, retinoic acid; SHH, sonic hedgehog; Wnt, wingless.
Major analytical methods and findings in iPSC-based case/control studies in SCZ.
| Ref. | Major Methods | Major Findings in SCZ iPSCs Derived Cells |
|---|---|---|
| [ | Rabies virus transport, electrophysiology, calcium transients, microarray | Reduced neuronal connectivity, maintained synaptic function, altered gene expression in glutamate, cAMP, BMP, and WNT pathways; loxapine application normalizes alterations |
| [ | Potassium-induced depolarization, RNA-seq | Reduced activity-dependent transcription, coexpression modules are enriched for GWAS risk variants |
| [ | RNA-seq, reporter assay | Differentially expressed genes from WNT, SHH, BMP, and G-protein coupled signaling |
| [ | Cell imaging, HPLC, mitochondrial assays | Impaired dopaminergic differentiation and glutamatergic maturation, mitochondria show reduced membrane potential, respiration, and connectivity, and uneven network structure |
| [ | Potassium-induced depol-arization, HPLC, ICC | Increased basal and activity-dependent cortical secretion of dopamine, epinephrine, and norepinephrine |
| [ | ICC | SCZ/control-iPSCs differentiate equally well into FOXA2-positive midbrain dopaminergic neurons |
| [ | WCPC, calcium transients | Delayed differentiation of NPCs into DG-like neurons, reduced spontaneous neurotransmitter release |
| [ | RNA-seq, SCS, WCPC, MEA | Reduced spontaneous spike and network bursts in mature, but not in early, SCZ iPSC-DG-CA3 circuits |
| [ | Oxygen consumption, ROS production | Increased extra-mitochondrial oxygen consumption and ROS production that is normalized by valproate |
| [ | Microarray, mass spectrometry | Abnormal gene and protein expression related to cytoskeletal remodeling and oxidative stress, impaired NPC migration, differentiation, and mitochondrial membrane potential, and increased ROS levels |
| [ | Mitochondria transfer | Improved mitochondrial function and glutamatergic differentiation following mitochondria transfer |
| [ | Expression studies in iNs, electrophysiology | miR-137 downregulates presynaptic plasticity genes and vesicle secretion in iNs |
| [ | ATAC-seq, gene editing, SCS | Modification to a non-risk allele increases |
| [ | Nanostring, RNA-seq, mass spectrometry | Reduced miR-9 expression inhibits outgrowth migration of NPC neurospheres |
| [ | RNA-Seq, small RNA-seq, ChIP-Seq | Increased expression of miRNA networks, impaired miRNA dependent gene regulation |
Abbreviations are: ATAC-seq, sequencing assay for transposase-accessible chromatin; BMP, bone morphogenetic proteins; ChIP-Seq, chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing; iN, induced neurons; HPLC, high pressure liquid chromatography; ICC, immunocytochemistry; MEA, multiple-electrode array; Nanostring, digital expression profiling; NPC, neuronal progenitor cell; RNA-seq, RNA sequencing; ROS, reactive oxygen species; SHH, sonic hedgehog; SCS, single cell sequencing; WCPC, whole cell patch clamp; WNT, Wingless.
Figure 3Structure and function of the mitochondrion. Outer and inner double-layered membranes enclose the intermembrane space, the cristae space formed by infoldings of the inner membrane, and the matrix as the space within the inner membrane. The matrix hosts the circular mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and a large number of enzymes catalyzing various biochemical reactions. Blood-borne glucose is metabolized intracellularly to pyruvate and then to acetyl-CoA, the only substrate fueling the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. Oxidation of pyruvate produces reduced cofactors that transfer free electrons to the electron transport chain (ETC) hosted at the inner mitochondrial membrane. The ETC consists of complex I to V that build an electrochemical gradient (∆φm) across the inner mitochondrial membrane driving the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Electron leakage mainly at complex I and III (0.1 to 2%) reduces prematurely oxygen to superoxide anion (O2−) that is converted by mitochondrial superoxide dismutase MnSOD and CuZnSOD to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in the matrix or intermembrane space, respectively. Thereafter, H2O2 is oxidized to highly reactive hydroxyl (OH−) free radicals that cause mtDNA damage, reduced transcription, and oxidation of ETC proteins and membrane lipids. Radical production is counteracted by enzymatic defense mechanisms, including glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and catalase (CAT) that detoxify H2O2 into water. Ub = ubiquinone, also known as Coenzyme Q10; Cyt c = cytochrome c.