| Literature DB >> 34291049 |
Lakshmy Vasan1,2, Eunjee Park1,3, Luke Ajay David1,2, Taylor Fleming1, Carol Schuurmans1,2,3.
Abstract
Direct neuronal reprogramming is an innovative new technology that involves the conversion of somatic cells to induced neurons (iNs) without passing through a pluripotent state. The capacity to make new neurons in the brain, which previously was not achievable, has created great excitement in the field as it has opened the door for the potential treatment of incurable neurodegenerative diseases and brain injuries such as stroke. These neurological disorders are associated with frank neuronal loss, and as new neurons are not made in most of the adult brain, treatment options are limited. Developmental biologists have paved the way for the field of direct neuronal reprogramming by identifying both intrinsic cues, primarily transcription factors (TFs) and miRNAs, and extrinsic cues, including growth factors and other signaling molecules, that induce neurogenesis and specify neuronal subtype identities in the embryonic brain. The striking observation that postmitotic, terminally differentiated somatic cells can be converted to iNs by mis-expression of TFs or miRNAs involved in neural lineage development, and/or by exposure to growth factors or small molecule cocktails that recapitulate the signaling environment of the developing brain, has opened the door to the rapid expansion of new neuronal reprogramming methodologies. Furthermore, the more recent applications of neuronal lineage conversion strategies that target resident glial cells in situ has expanded the clinical potential of direct neuronal reprogramming techniques. Herein, we present an overview of the history, accomplishments, and therapeutic potential of direct neuronal reprogramming as revealed over the last two decades.Entities:
Keywords: astrocytes; direct neuronal reprogramming; epigenetics; fibroblasts; lineage conversion; micro-RNA; small molecules; transcription factors
Year: 2021 PMID: 34291049 PMCID: PMC8287587 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.681087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Timeline placing the concept of direct neuronal reprogramming in a historical context. The first evidence for somatic cell conversion was achieved in 1987 with the conversion of mouse fibroblasts to skeletal muscle cells. This procedure was adapted to the generation of iNeurons in 2002 and 2007 using astrocytes as a starting population, although not yet termed direct neuronal reprogramming. It was in 2006 that the field of cellular reprogramming was born with the demonstration that the Yamanaka factors could generate iPSCs. The formal launch of the direct neuronal reprogramming field came in 2010 with the identification of the BAM factors, which could convert fibroblasts, a non-neural cell type, to iNs without passing through a transient iPSC state.
FIGURE 2Methodologies used for direct neuronal reprogramming in vitro. (A) Direct neuronal reprogramming involves the direct conversion of somatic cells, usually astrocytes or fibroblasts, either directly into iNs or into iNSCs or iNPCs, which in turn can be differentiated into neurons. (B) Neuronal lineage conversion has been studies in murine and human cells for the most part, and involves the forced expression of lineage specifying transcription factors or miRNAs and the exposure to growth factors and other small molecules and chemicals that can make a pro-neurogenic environment.
In vitro reprogramming.
| Human astrocytes | DA | 18.2 ± 1.5% | Dopamine release, electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | ||
| Human fibroblast | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 16 ± 4.3% (embryonic) 4.3 ± 1.1% (postnatal) | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | ||
| BAM, | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 2–4% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, form synapses | ||
| BAM | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 19.5–20% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, form synapses | ||
| BAM, | Dopaminergic (DA) | 10% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, dopamine synthesis | ||
| DA | 6–10% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |||
| DA | 1–2% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, Transplanted to striatum in PD rat model. | |||
| Cholinergic motor neurons | 86–96% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |||
| Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 4–8% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, form synapses | |||
| Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 80% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |||
| Medium spiny neurons | 76–93%, 80% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |||
| Human vascular pericytes | Cholinergic neurons | 80% | Not tested | ||
| Human cord blood cells | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 80% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | ||
| Human pericytes | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 48% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, form synapses | ||
| Human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 50% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | ||
| Mouse astrocytes | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 85% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, limited synapse formation | ||
| Glutamatergic | 70% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |||
| GABAergic | 70% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |||
| Glutamatergic | 54–73% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, transplantation to SVZ | |||
| Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 40%; 60% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |||
| Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 60–80% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |||
| Mouse cerebellar astrocytes | GABAergic neurons | 54–73% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, engrafted in SVZ, and migrated to olfactory bulb | ||
| Astrocytes and fibroblasts | Nor-adrenergic neurons | 41.8% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | ||
| Mouse fibroblasts | BAM | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 20% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |
| Mouse adult fibroblasts | BAM, | Motor neurons | 80.6% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, engrafted in chick neural tube | |
| MEF, adult tail tip fibroblasts (TTF) | DA | 18.2 ± 1.5% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, dopamine release | ||
| Mouse TTF | ANL, | DA | 5–9% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, transplantation in striatum | |
| MEF | GABAergic | 9.4% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, transplanted to hippocampus | ||
| Mouse adipocyte progenitor cells and hepatocytes | BAM | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 3–6% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |
| Mouse IPSC derived cardiomyocytes | BAM, | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 35.5% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | |
| Mouse olfactory ensheathing cells | Glutamatergic | 80% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, form synapses | ||
| Mouse-cochlear non-sensory epithelial cells, Spiral ganglion non-neuronal cells | Primary auditory neurons | 49–55% | iNs extend projections | ||
| Mouse microglia | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 25–35% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | ||
| Rat fibroblast | ANL | DA | 7% | 90% of the DA transplanted into rat model. | |
| Rat fibroblast | BAM | iN | 0.4–5.9% | Transplant to striatum or hippocampus | |
| Proliferating Glial cells | Glutamatergic | 72 ± 5% | Not tested | ||
| Astrocytes | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 50% (cortex), 30% (cerebellum), 20% (SC) | Not tested | ||
| Astrocytes | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 80% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, form synapses, long distance axonal projections | ||
| Striatal astrocytes | DA | 16% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, motor behavioral recovery | ||
| Striatal Neurons | DA | 79% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, dopamine restoration | ||
| Cortical astrocytes | Glutamatergic neurons | 92.8% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | ||
| NG2 glia | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 42.5% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials | ||
| Striatal microglia | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 25–35% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, and spontaneous synaptic currents | ||
| Reactive astrocytes | Glutamatergic and GABAergic | 70% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, motor behavior improvement | ||
| Striatal non-reactive astrocytes | Glutamatergic neurons | 80% | Not tested | ||
| Astrocytes | Glutamatergic | 20–27% | Improved locomotor activities and functional recovery | ||
| Striatal astrocytes | GABAergic medium spiny neurons | 80% | Electrophysiologically active, generate action potentials, extension of life span, and improved motor functions | ||
Small molecules used in iN lineage conversion strategies in rodent cells.
Small molecules used in iN lineage conversion strategies in human cells.
FIGURE 3Pathways activated by small molecules to aid direct neuronal reprogramming. A summary of the agonists/antagonists used in neuronal reprogramming cocktails that activate critical signaling pathways or cellular processes.
FIGURE 4Signaling pathways blocked by small molecules to aid direct neuronal reprogramming. A summary of the agonists/antagonists used in neuronal reprogramming cocktails that inhibit critical signaling pathways or cellular processes.
FIGURE 5Applications of in vitro direct neuronal reprogramming. The generation of iNs in a dish has great potential for disease modeling, but several considerations must be made when using host cells from aged individuals, including changes to the epigenetic clock, mitochondrial age and activity of the REST repressive complex. Diseases that have been modeled with in vitro neuronal lineage conversion beginning with patient cells include AD, ALS, PD, HD, Niemann-Pick disease type C, and neuro-psychiatric disorders.
FIGURE 6Applications of in vivo direct neuronal reprogramming to treat injury and/or neurodegenerative disease. Direct neuronal reprogramming has therapeutic potential for brain injury (e.g., glial scars, stroke) and neurodegenerative diseases, such as PD, HD, and ALS. The advantage of this approach is that endogenous glial cells can be directly reprogrammed to replace lost neurons at the site of injury or trauma.