| Literature DB >> 32293529 |
Ralda Nehme1,2, Lindy E Barrett3,4.
Abstract
Advances in human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC) biology coupled with protocols to generate diverse brain cell types in vitro have provided neuroscientists with opportunities to dissect basic and disease mechanisms in increasingly relevant cellular substrates. At the same time, large data collections and analyses have facilitated unprecedented insights into autism genetics, normal human genetic variation, and the molecular landscape of the developing human brain. While such insights have enabled the investigation of key mechanistic questions in autism, they also highlight important limitations associated with the use of existing hPSC models. In this review, we discuss four such issues which influence the efficacy of hPSC models for studying autism, including (i) sources of variance, (ii) scale and format of study design, (iii) divergence from the human brain in vivo, and (iv) regulatory policies and compliance governing the use of hPSCs. Moreover, we advocate for a set of immediate and long-term priorities to address these issues and to accelerate the generation and reproducibility of data in order to facilitate future fundamental as well as therapeutic discoveries.Entities:
Keywords: Differentiation; ESC; Human brain; In vivo; Regulatory policy; Sample size; Variance; hPSC; iPSC
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32293529 PMCID: PMC7087382 DOI: 10.1186/s13229-020-00322-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Autism Impact factor: 7.509
Fig. 1Timeline of seminal discoveries that have contributed to the current landscape of stem cell research
Examples of common sources of variance in hPSC models
| Common source of variance | Examples/considerations |
|---|---|
| hPSC derivation | ESC versus iPSC; iPSC reprogramming methodology, donor cell type, donor age |
| Culture induced genetic or epigenetic changes | Trisomies, CNVs, and SNVs acquired during reprogramming or with continued passage; X chromosome status in XX cell lines |
| Human genetic variation | Influence of genetic background on expression of phenotypes; selection of related or unrelated controls, sex |
| Method and timing of gene manipulation | Constitutive versus inducible; transient versus stable |
| Cell types/ratios | Monolayer versus organoid; pure versus mixed brain cell types; different subtypes of excitatory neurons, inhibitory neurons, and glia |
| Differentiation paradigm | Developmental patterning versus transcription factor overexpression; batch effects across differentiations |
| Culture conditions | Naïve versus primed pluripotent conditions; coculture with cells from other species, with or without genetic manipulation; substrate, density, and media composition |
| Time-point of analysis | Pluripotent, progenitor, or post-mitotic cell stages |
Fig. 2Examples of large iPSC collections in the USA (left) and Europe (right) analyzed by race. Percentage of samples from a collection categorized as Caucasian or European indicated in blue. Total number of iPSC lines in a collection shown in center of each collection
Fig. 3Examples of studies utilizing iPSC models to study nonsyndromic idiopathic ASD [18, 34, 49–56]. Studies are ordered by year with the most recent at the top and include the total number of XX and XY patient iPSCs used in the bar chart
Examples of large hPSC repositories around the world
| Repository | Website |
|---|---|
| Coriell Institute Stem Cell Biobank | |
| CIRM via Fujifilm | via |
| NYSCF | |
| WiCell | |
| NIMH Stem Cell Center at Rutgers University | |
| EBiSC | |
| HipSci | |
| ECACC European Collection of Authenticated Cell Cultures | |
| CellBank Australia | |
| Riken Bioresource Center |