| Literature DB >> 31856864 |
Anna M Speicher1, Heinz Wiendl1, Sven G Meuth1, Matthias Pawlowski2.
Abstract
Microglia play an essential role for central nervous system (CNS) development and homeostasis and have been implicated in the onset, progression, and clearance of numerous diseases affecting the CNS. Previous in vitro research on human microglia was restricted to post-mortem brain tissue-derived microglia, with limited availability and lack of scalability. Recently, the first protocols for the generation of microglia from human pluripotent stem cells have become available, thus enabling the implementation of powerful platforms for disease modeling, drug testing, and studies on cell transplantation. Here we give a detailed and comprehensive overview of the protocols available for generating microglia from human pluripotent stem cells, highlighting the advantages, drawbacks, and operability and placing them into the context of current knowledge of human embryonic development. We review novel insights into microglia biology and the role of microglia in neurological diseases as drawn from the new methods and provide an outlook for future lines of research involving human pluripotent stem cell-derived microglia.Entities:
Keywords: Differentiation; Embryonic development; Human in vitro models; Human microglia; Human pluripotent stem cells; Neurodegeneration; Neuroinflammation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31856864 PMCID: PMC6921408 DOI: 10.1186/s13024-019-0347-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Neurodegener ISSN: 1750-1326 Impact factor: 14.195
Fig. 1Schematic overview of protocols for generating microglia-like cells from human pluripotent stem cells
Detailed summary of media compositions used for the differentiation of hPSCs into microglia-like cells
| hPSCs | Differentiation to Hematopoietic Progenitors | Differentiation to Microglia Precursors | Differentiation to Microglia-like Cells | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Protocol 1 Muffat et al. | Day − 1 – 0 DMEM/F12 + FBS (15%) +KOSR (5%) +FGF2 (4 ng/ml) | Day 0–14 Neurobasal Medium + N2 (100x) + B27 (50x) + CSF1 (10 ng/ml) + IL-34 (10 ng/ml) | Day 14–44 Neurobasal Medium + N2 (100x) + B27 (50x) + CSF1 (10 ng/ml) + IL-34 (10 ng/ml) | Day 44–74 Neurobasal Medium + N2 (100x) + B27 (50x) + CSF1 (5 ng/ml) + IL-34 (100 ng/ml) | |||||
Protocol 2 Pandya et al. | Day − 2 – 0 mTeSR1 | Day 0–4 STEMdiff APEL + VEGF (30 ng/ml) + BMP4 (30 ng/ml) + SCF (40 ng/ml) + Activin A (50 ng/ml) | Day 4–15 STEMdiff APEL + BMP4 (25 ng/ml) + SCF (300 ng/ml) + IL-3 (10 ng/ml) + IL-6 (10 ng/ml) + Flt3L (300 ng/ml) + CSF3 (50 ng/ml) | Day 15–29 (Astrocyte-MGL coculture) IMDM + FBS (10%) + IL-3 (20 ng/ml) + CSF1 (20 ng/ml) + CSF2 (20 ng/ml) | |||||
Protocol 3 Abud et al. | Day − 1 – 0 TeSR-E8 | Day 0–2 IMDM/F12 (1:1) + ITSG-X (2%) + FGF2 (50 ng/ml) + BMP4 (50 ng/ml) + Activin A (12.5 ng/ml) + RhoKI (1 μM) + LiCl (2 mM) | Day 2–4 IMDM/F12 (1:1) + ITSG-X (2%) + FGF2 (50 ng/ml) + VEGF (50 ng/ml) | Day 4–10 IMDM/F12 (1:1) + ITSG-X (2%) + FGF2 (50 ng/ml) + VEGF (50 ng/ml) + TPO (50 ng/ml) + SCF (10 ng/ml) + IL-3 (10 ng/ml) + IL-6 (50 ng/ml) | Day 10–14 DMEM/F12 (1:1) + ITSG (2%) + insulin (5 μg/ml) + N2 (0.5%l) + B27 (2%) + CSF1 (25 ng/ml) + IL-34 (100 ng/ml) + TGF-β (50 ng/ml) | Day 14–35 DMEM/F12 (1:1) + ITSG (2%) + insulin (5 μg/ml) + N2 (0.5%l) + B27 (2%) + CSF1 (25 ng/ml) + IL-34 (100 ng/ml) + TGF-β (50 ng/ml) | Day 35–38 DMEM/F12 (1:1) + ITSG (2%) + insulin (5 μg/ml) + N2 (0.5%l) + B27 (2%) + CSF1 (25 ng/ml) + IL-34 (100 ng/ml) + TGF-β (50 ng/ml) + CD200 (100 ng/ml) + CXCL1 (100 ng/ml) | ||
Protocol 4 Douvaras et al. | Day − 3 – 0 mTeSR1 | Day 0–4 mTeSR1 + BMP4 (80 ng/ml) | Day 4–6 StemPro-34 SFM + FGF2 (25 ng/ml) + VEGF (80 ng/ml) + SCF (100 ng/ml) | Day 6–14 StemPro-34 SFM + SCF (50 ng/ml) + TPO (5 ng/ml) + Flt3L (50 ng/ml) + IL-3 (50 ng/ml) + CSF1 (50 ng/ml) | Day 14–25/50 StemPro-34 SFM + Flt3L (50 ng/ml) + CSF1 (50 ng/ml) + CSF2 (25 ng/ml) | Day 25/50–45/65 RPMI-1640 + CSF2 (10 ng/ml) + IL-34 (100 ng/ml) | |||
Protocol 5 Haenseler et al. | Day − 2 – 0 mTeSR1 | Day 0–4 mTeSR1 + VEGF (50 ng/ml) + BMP4 (50 ng/ml) + SCF (20 ng/ml) | Day 4–14 X-VIVO15 + IL-3 (25 ng/ml) + CSF1 (100 ng/ml) | Day 14–28/56 X-VIVO15 + IL-3 (25 ng/ml) + CSF1 (100 ng/ml) | Day 28/56–42/70 Advanced DMEM/F12 + N2 (1%) + IL-34 (100 ng/ml) + CSF1 (10 ng/ml) | ||||
Protocol 6 Takata et al. | Day − 1 – 0 mTeSR1 | Day 0–2 StemPro-34 SFM + Transferrin (200 mg/ml) + BMP4 (5 ng/ml) + VEGF (50 ng/ml) + CHIR (2 μM) | Day 2–4 StemPro-34 SFM + Transferrin (200 mg/ml) + BMP4 (5 ng/ml) + VEGF (50 ng/ml) + FGF2 (20 ng/ml) | Day 4–6 StemPro-34 SFM + Transferrin (200 mg/ml) + VEGF (15 ng/ml) + FGF2 (5 ng/ml) | Day 6–12 StemPro-34 SFM + Transferrin (200 mg/ml) + VEGF (10 ng/ml) + FGF2 (10 ng/ml) + SCF (50 ng/ml) + IL-3 (20 ng/ml) + IL-6 (10 ng/ml) + DKK1 (30 ng/ml) | Day 12–16 StemPro-34 SFM + Transferrin (200 mg/ml) + FGF2 (10 ng/ml) + SCF (50 ng/ml) + IL-3 (20 ng/ml) + IL-6 (10 ng/ml) | Day 16–25 IMDM/F12 (3:1) + N2 (1%) + B27 (2%) + CSF1 (50 ng/ml) | Day 25–46 (Neuron-MGL coculture) not reported | |
Detailed summary of the molecular markers and functional tests used to characterize microglia-like cells
| Hematopoietic Progenitors | Microglia Precursors | Microglia-like Cells | Efficiency | Reproducibility | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protocol 1 – Muffat et al. | Morphology: cystic structure ICC: CD144 ( | Morphology: round, vacuolated cells, compact nucleus, filopodia, membrane ruffles ICC: CD11b ( Flow: CD11b, IBA1, CD45 ( Phagocytosis: latex bead assay Proliferation: EdU assay | Morphology: multiple thin first-order branches terminated by membrane ruffles ICC: TMEM119, P2Y12 ( Cytokines (CTRL, LPS + IFN-γ): Cytokine Array R&D Transcriptional Profile: RNA-Seq | Yield: 0.5-4x Purity: 97% | 15 hiPSC-lines 3 hESC lines |
| Protocol 2 - Pandya et al. | Morphology: floating cells ICC: CD34, CD43 ( | not reported | Flow: CD11b, IBA1, CD45, CX3CR1, HLA-DR; Negative: CD80, CD86, CD206, CD200R Cytokines (CTRL, LPS): TNF-α, kit unspecified Phagocytosis: pHrodo- ROS: CellROX assay Transcriptional Profile: Microarray | Yield: 0.8-3x Purity: 9% (in mixed glial culture) | 2 hiPSC lines |
Protocol 3 – Abud et al. | Morphology: endothelial cells Flow: CD41 ( | ICC: PU.1, TREM2 Flow: CD11b (9%), CD45 (65%), CX3CR1 (22%); negative: CD117 | Morphology: high nucleus to cytoplasm ratio ICC: PU.1, CX3CR1, TREM2, P2Y12, TGFBR1, PROS1, MERTK, ITGB5 Flow: CD11bint, CD45low-int Phagocytosis: pHrodo- Cytokines (CTRL, LPS, IL-1β, IFN-γ): V-PLEX cytokine 30-plex Calcium Signaling: ADP-response (P2Y12-negated) Transcriptional Profile: RNA-Seq Transplantation: into MITRG mice | Yield: 30-40x Purity: 97% | 10 hiPSC lines |
| Protocol 4 - Douvaras et al. | Morphology: adherent endothelial cells Flow: CD309 ( | Morphology: floating cells Flow: CD14, CD45, CX3CR1 (70%) | Morphology: ramified cells with motile processes ICC: CD11c, IBA1, P2Y12, TMEM119 Flow: CD11b, CD11c, CX3CR1, P2Y12 Phagocytosis: latex beads Cytokines (CTRL): Human XL Cytokine Array Kit Calcium Signaling: ADP-response Transcriptional Profile: RNA-Seq | Yield: 2x Purity: 68% (CD14+) | 14 hiPSC lines 2 hESC lines |
| Protocol 5 - Haenseler et al. | Flow: CD34 | Morphology: large, vesicle-rich, floating cells Flow: CD14, CD16, CD45, CD86, CD163, HLA-DR Phagocytosis: pHrodo-zymosan | Morphology: ramified (secondary branches) Flow: CD11b, CD11c, CD14, CD45, (CD33), (MERTK); Negative: HLA-DR Cytokines (CTRL, LPS/IFN-γ): Human XL Cytokine Array Kit (R&D), Luminex 100 Bio-Plex System (BioRad) | Yield: 10-43x Purity: ~ 100% (CD14+) | 4 hiPSC lines |
| Protocol 6 - Takata et al. | not reported | Morphology: floating, round, vacuolated cells Flow: CD11b, CD14, CD45, CD163, CX3CR1 CyTOF: CD11b, CD14, CD45, CD48, CD62L, CD64, CD115, CD163, CX3CR1, HLA-DR, MARCO, MERTK Phagocytosis: latex beads, Aβ-TAMRA | Morphology: ramified cells ICC: IBA1 FLOW: CX3CR1 (increased expression compared to d25) Phagocytosis: latex beads, Aβ-TAMRA Cytokines (CTRL, LPS): Human Magnetic Luminex Assay (R&D) Transcriptional Profile: none | Yield: n.a. Purity: 94% (CD14+/CD45+) | 1 hiPSC line |
Summary of publications and preprints using the six basic protocols for the generation of microglia-like cells from human pluripotent stem cells for basic microglia research or translational applications
| First author / Year | MGL protocol | mutant hPSCs | main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Muffat et al. 2016 [ | Muffat-MGL | smaller microglia diameter. | |
| Gosselin et al. 2017 [ | Muffat-MGL | n/a | The transcriptome of MGLs closely resembles primary microglia cultured in vitro but differ significantly from microglia ex vivo. |
| Muffat et al. 2018 [ | Muffat-MGL | n/a | Infected primitive yolk sac macrophages may act as ZIKV reservoir during pregnancy and establish brain infection upon colonising the developing CNS. |
| Lin et al. 2018 [ | Muffat-MGL | ||
| Brownjohn et al. 2018 [ | Haenseler-MGL | loss of TREM2 surface expression; reduced mature isoforms; reduced TREM2 proteolysis. | |
| Garcia-Reitboeck et al. 2018 [ | Haenseler-MGL | reduced or absent soluble TREM2 in supernatants. | |
| Xiang et al. 2018 [ | Haenseler-MGL (modified) | normal TREM2 mRNA and protein expression and splicing patterns. | |
| Piers et al. 2019 [ | Haenseler-MGL (Xiang) | metabolic deficits: a reduced mitochondrial respiratory capacity and an inability to perform a glycolytic immunometabolic switch, due to dysregulated PPARγ/p38MAPK signalling. | |
| Hasselmann et al. 2019 [ | Abud-MGL (McQuade) | HPSC-derived hematopoietic progenitors engraft in the postnatal mouse brain and adopt the transcriptional identity of human primary microglia | |
| Claes et al. 2019 [ | Douvaras-MGL (modified) | Isogenic hetero- and homozygous TREM2 knockouts resulted in reduced phagocytosis of | |
| Mancuso et al. 2019 [ | Douvaras-MGL (modified) | n/a | HESC-derived monocytes engraft in the postnatal mouse brain and adopt the transcriptional identity of human primary microglia. |
| Takata et al. 2017 [ | Takata-MGL | increased secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines; increased ASC-speck formation. |