| Literature DB >> 31690065 |
Daniel Rodríguez Gutiérrez1, Anna Biason-Lauber2.
Abstract
Sex development is a complex process involving many genes and hormones. Defects in this process lead to Differences of Sex Development (DSD), a group of heterogeneous conditions not as rare as previously thought. Part of the obstacles in proper management of these patients is due to an incomplete understanding of the genetics programs and molecular pathways involved in sex development and DSD. Several challenges delay progress and the lack of a proper model system for the single patient severely hinders advances in understanding these diseases. The revolutionary techniques of cellular reprogramming and guided in vitro differentiation allow us now to exploit the versatility of induced pluripotent stem cells to create alternatives models for DSD, ideally on a patient-specific personalized basis.Entities:
Keywords: DSD; cell model; cellular reprogramming; germ cells; granulosa cells; iPSCs; induced pluripotent stem cells; patient-specific model; sertoli cell
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31690065 PMCID: PMC6862629 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20215495
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Human sex determination and differentiation: Gonadal somatic supporters, Sertoli cells and granulosa cells, play a central role in sexual development, orchestrating the differentiation of the other gonadal cells and secreting SOX9 and forkhead box L2 (FOXL2). Both factors counteract each other in a delicate equilibrium and its expression must be maintained through different stages of development to keep the final sexual faith into males or females respectively.
Figure 2Cellular reprograming and guided differentiation of hiPSCs: The scheme represents the four stages of the iPSCs-derived gonadal cell model generation for DSD patients. Isolation of fibroblasts, peripheral blood mononuclear cells or even urinary precursors directly from the patient have been considered as easy to obtain and patient-friendly cell sources. Up to date, three cellular reprogramming techniques are commonly used to generate hiPSCs from diverse cell sources: viral transduction of Yamanaka and Thomson reprograming factors; episomal transduction adding a EBNA1 factor and silencing expression of the TP53 gene; and synthetized RNA. Guided differentiation by expression specific factors can force transformation of cell into Sertoli-like (BMP4, Activin A, PDG2 and FGF9) Granulosa-like (Estradiol, AMH, FSH, inhibin α and inhibin β) or germ-like cells (DAZL, DAZ, BOULE, GDF9 and BMP15). Addition of both those factors into the culture medium and forced overexpression proved to induce differentiation of hiPSCs. Gonadal cell-like models directly derived from DSD patients suppose unique tools to perform patient-specific in vitro studies and open the door for more advances in cell therapy and personalized medicine for DSD patients. hiPSCs: human induced pluripotent stem cells, PBMCS: peripheral blood mononuclear cells, UPS: urinary progenitors.
Human PSCs-Derived Gonadal Cell Models.
| Cell Type | Cell Model | Differentiation Mechanism | Remarks | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sertoli cell | SLC | Unguided differentiation in co-culture with PGCs | Possible paracrine action of PGCs on differentiation of SLCs | Bucay et al., 2009 [ |
| SLC | 5-step differentiation protocol, including RA, LIF, GDNF, putrescine, testosterone and FSH | BMP4 secretion by undifferentiated cells | Shlush et al., 2017 [ | |
| SLC | Addition of BMP4, PGDS, bFGF, FGF9 and Activin-A to growth medium | Transcriptomic landscape resemble differentiating Sertoli cells | Rodríguez Gutiérrez et al., 2018 [ | |
| Granulosa cell | Ovarian steroidogenic cells | Redifferentiation of iPSCs derived from GCs into homotypic ovarian steroidogenic cells | Cellular origin have strong effect on final differentiation faith | Anchan et al., 2015 [ |
| GLC | Addition of all-trans-retinoic acid, estradiol, AMH, FSH, Inhibin α, Inhibin β and TGF –β to growth medium | GLCs can rescue ovarian failure when transplanted in POF mice. | Liu et al., 2016 [ | |
| GLC | Differentiation from human amniocytes without intervention of additional growth factors. | GLC able to synthetize E2 | Lipskind et al., 2018 [ | |
| Primordial germ cell | hPGCLCs | Differentiation induction by recombinant BMPs | BMPs induce differentiation of germ cells from hES cells | Kee et al., 2009 [ |
| Haploid Gamete-like Cells | Two step protocol: Culture in bFGF-depleted ES cell media followed by addition of RA | Epigenetic memory of the reprogrammed somatic cells | Eguizabal et al.,2011 [ | |
| Meiotic GCs | Overexpression of VASA and/or DAZL following differentiation on matrigel-coated plates | Differentiation of germ cells is dependent on post-translational regulation by RNA-binding proteins like VASA | Medrano et al., 2011 [ | |
| hPGCLCs | Addition of BMP2 or BMP4, LIF, SCF, EGF and ROCK inhibitor to growth medium | SOX17 is the key regulator of hPGCLC specification | Irie et al., 2015 [ | |
| hPGCLCs | (1) in vitro: same protocol as Irie et al., 2015 | hPGCLCs had the potential for meiotic progression in vitro | Yang et al., 2019 [ | |
| Spermatid | SpLC | Differentiation induction by BMPs followed by overexpression of DAZ, DAZL, and BOULE | hiPSC lines can differentiate to haploid cells with characteristic staining of ACROSIN for spermatid. | Panula et al., 2011 [ |
| SSC | Direct differentiation using mouse spermatogonial stem cell (SSC) medium | hPSCs differentiate into spermatogonia, spermatocytes and haploid spermatids | Easley et al., 2012 [ | |
| Oocyte | FLCs | Overexpression of DAZL and BOULE with recombinant human GDF9 and BMP15 | GDF9 and BMP15 induce ovarian follicle formation in hESCs | Jung et al.,2017 [ |
FLCs: follicle-like cells, GLC: Granulosa-like cells, hPGCLCs: human primordial germ cell-like cells, SLC: Sertoli-like cells, SpLC: spermatid-like cells, SSC: spermatogenic stem cells.
Figure 3Known factors involved in guided differentiation of hiPSCs into gonadal cells: Expression of growth factors can guide the differentiation of embryoids bodies into Sertoli, Granulosa or germ cell-like cells. Bone morphogenic protein 4 (BMP4), Activin A, prostaglandin 2 (PDG2) and fibroblast growth factor 9 (FGF9) and retinoid acid (RA) successfully differentiated into Sertoli-like cells are able to endogenously express SOX9, anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH), claudin-11 (CLDN11) and other Sertoli markers [37,98]. Granulosa-like cell differentiation has shown to be stimulated by estradiol, AMH, follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), inhibin α and inhibin β [109,110,111]. BMPs proteins together with GDNF, DAZL and BOULE are known to initiate differentiation into a meiotic primordial germ cell-like (PGCL) phenotype [55,102,103,104]. While complete spermatogenesis in human cells was not achieved yet, PGCs differentiated with SOX17, GDF9 and BMP15 factors showed the ability to induce folliculogenesis [108].