| Literature DB >> 31616540 |
Minjing Ke1, Cheong-Meng Chong1, Huanxing Su2.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) is an age-related neurodegenerative disease caused by the progressive loss of dopaminergic (DA) neurons in the substantia nigra. As DA neurons degenerate, PD patients gradually lose their ability of movement. To date no effective therapies are available for the treatment of PD and its pathogenesis remains unknown. Experimental models that appropriately mimic the development of PD are certainly needed for gaining mechanistic insights into PD pathogenesis and identifying new therapeutic targets. Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) could provide a promising model for fundamental research and drug screening. In this review, we summarize various iPSCs-based PD models either derived from PD patients through reprogramming technology or established by gene-editing technology, and the promising application of iPSC-based PD models for mechanistic studies and drug testing. ©The Author(s) 2019. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Dopaminergic neurons; Induced pluripotent stem cells; Parkinson’s disease; Somatic cell reprogramming
Year: 2019 PMID: 31616540 PMCID: PMC6789186 DOI: 10.4252/wjsc.v11.i9.634
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Stem Cells ISSN: 1948-0210 Impact factor: 5.326
Figure 1Potential applications of induced pluripotent stem cells for study of Parkinson’s disease. Somatic cells are extracted from either normal individuals or patients and then reprogrammed to induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). Gene editing technology enables one to generate knockin mutant Parkinson’s disease (PD) iPSCs and isogenic control cell lines. Dopamine (DA) neurons can be successfully differentiated from iPSCs. Both patient-derived and gene-editing iPSCs could be powerful tools for modeling PD for mechanistic studies and drug discovery. Healthy or corrected iPSCs could serve as normal controls and cell sources for cell therapy. iPSCs: Induced pluripotent stem cells; DA: Dopaminergic.
Patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell-based modeling of Parkinson’s disease
| A53T | Familial | DA neurons | Not demonstrated | [ |
| Triplication | Familial | DA neurons | Elevated levels of SNCA mRNA Increased cellular and secreted α-synuclein protein | [ |
| Triplication | Familial | DA neurons | Elevated α-synuclein protein expression Increased expression of oxidative stress-related genes Increased susceptibility to oxidative stress | [ |
| Familial | Forebrain cortical neurons | Nitrosative stress Accumulation of ERAD substrates ER stress | [ | |
| Triplication | Familial | Neural precursor cells | High vulnerability to stress Increased ROS production | [ |
| Triplication | Familial | Neural precursor cells/DA neurons | Impaired neuronal differentiation and maturation pSer129-aSyn accumulation Increased susceptibility to oxidative stress | [ |
| Familial | ||||
| Familial | DA, GABAergic,and glutamatergic neurons | Protein aggregation (thioflavin S and pSer129-aSyn) Axonal neuropathology Altered expression of synaptic transcripts | [ | |
| Familial | DA neurons | Reduced neurite outgrowth Dysregulated autophagy system Increased cell death in response to neurotoxins Elevated αsynuclein protein level Dysregulation of genes related to DA neurodegeneration | [ | |
| Familial | Neural stem cells | Increased sensitivity to stress Progressive impairment in nuclear envelope organization Defective self-renewal and neuronal differentiation | [ | |
| Familial | DA and nonDA neurons, and immature cells | Increased vulnerability to stress Dysfunction of mitochondria | [ | |
| Familial | [ | |||
| Familial | DA neurons | Increased neuronal death Degenerated dendrites Impaired AKT signaling | [ | |
| Familial | [ | |||
| Familial and Sporadic | DA neurons | Increased apoptosis Reduced neurite numbers and complexity Increased autophagic vacuoles | [ | |
| Familial | DA neurons | Elevated αsynuclein aggregation and Lewy-body-like deposition Induced nitrosative and oxidative stress Increased vulnerability to mitochondrial toxin-induced cell death | [ | |
| Familial | DA neurons | Decreased αsynuclein tetramers Increased neurotoxicity | [ | |
| Familial | DA neurons | Increased oxidative stress, activated NRF2 pathway Abnormal mitochondrial morphology and turnover. Elevated αsynuclein accumulation | [ | |
| Familial | DA neurons | Increased oxidative stress Reduced dopamine uptake Enhanced spontaneous dopamine release | [ | |
| Familial | DA neurons | Impaired recruitment of Parkin to mitochondria Increased mitochondria copy number PGC1α upregulation | [ | |
| Familial | DA neurons | Reduced neurite complexity Diminished microtubule stability | [ | |
| Familial | DA neurons | Reduced capacity to differentiate into DA neurons Altered mitochondrial volume fraction | [ | |
| Familial/sporadic | DA neurons | Elevated oxidative stress response Increased sensitivity to stress-induced cell death | [ | |
| Familial/sporadic | DA neurons | Hypermethylation in gene regulatory regions Reduced expression of transcription factors related to disease | [ | |
| Familial/sporadic | DA neurons | Reduced dopamine storage and uptake Elevated α-synuclein and glucosylceramide levels Defective autophagic and lysosomal machinery Increased basal and induced calcium levels Enhanced vulnerability to ER stress | [ | |
| Familial/ sporadic | DA neurons | Elevated αsynuclein levels Reduced dopamine levels Induced MAOB expression Disrupted network activity | [ | |
| Familial/ sporadic | DA neurons | Decreased dopamine storage and uptake Elevated αsynuclein levels | [ | |
| Sporadic | Neurons | Disease-associated risk variant that regulates | [ | |
| Familial | DA neurons | Elevated nitrosative stress SNCAA53T or mitochondrial toxins induce S-nitrosylated (SNO)-MEF2C in DA neurons S-nitrosylation of MEF2C reduces PGC1α expression and impairs mitochondrial function | [ |
ERAD: Endoplasmic-reticulum-associated degradation; MAOB: Monoamine oxidase B; NRF2: Nuclear factor erythroid 2related factor 2; SNP: Single-nucleotide polymorphism; TH: Tyrosine hydroxylase.
Induced pluripotent stem cell-derived astrocytes in Parkinson’s disease modeling
| Bone marrow 2-3(BM2-3) hiPSCs | Astrocytes/DA neurons coculture system | Elevated DA neuron identities Stablization of mitochondrial function Downregulation of mitoROS Increased mitochondrial length (normalized to non-co-culture DA neurons) | [ |
| iPSCs and ESCs | Astrocytes/DA neurons coculture system | Non-activated astrocytes co-culture system improved DA neurons survival Non-activated astrocytes co-culture system increased DA neurons neurite lengths (normalized to inflammatory-activated astrocytes coculture system) | [ |
| PD Astrocytes/normal DA neurons coculture system | Non-cell-autonomous damage is triggered by impaired autophagy in PD astrocytes Dysfunctional PD astrocytes accumulate and transfer α-synuclein to healthy DA neurons CMA activator drug prevents α-synuclein accumulation and neurodegeneration (normalized to the single culture system) | [ |
iPSCs: Induced pluripotent stem cells; ESCs: Embryonic stem cells; hiPSCs: Human induced pluripotent stem cells; PD: Parkinson’s disease; DA: Dopaminergic.
Pluripotent stem cell-based genome-editing Parkinson’s disease models
| CRISPR/CAS 9 | hiPSC | Not demonstrated | Locus mutation | [ | |
| ZFN | hiPSC | Not demonstrated | Gene correction | [ | |
| CRISPR/CAS 9 | hiPSC | Synaptic defect, fraction of TH+/S129P-αS+ neurons was significantly reduced | Locus mutation | [ | |
| ZFN | hESC | Not demonstrated | Locus mutation | [ | |
| ZFN | hiPSC | Not demonstrated | Gene correction | [ | |
| CRISPR/CAS 9 | hiPSC | Not demonstrated | Locus mutation | [ | |
| CRISPR/CAS 9 | hiPSC | Not demonstrated | Locus mutation | [ | |
| ZFN | hiPSC | Basic phenotypes: autophagy defects, synaptic defects, increased apoptosis, accumulation of τ and α-synuclein. Phenotypes were alleviated after genetic correction | Gene correction | [ |
hiPSC: Human induced pluripotent stem cell.