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Combining NGN2 Programming with Developmental Patterning Generates Human Excitatory Neurons with NMDAR-Mediated Synaptic Transmission

Authors :
Lindy E. Barrett
John L. Sherwood
Rolf Adolfsson
Stephen J. Haggarty
Davide Cacchiarelli
Ying Zang
Olli Pietilainen
Sulagna Ghosh
Guoping Feng
Francesco Limone
Ralda Nehme
Emanuela Zuccaro
Alexander Meissner
Matthias Müller
Kathleen A. Worringer
Chenchen Li
Jon M. Madison
Kevin Eggan
Zhanyan Fu
Paola Arlotta
Sravya Kommineni
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences
Feng, Guoping
Nehme, Ralda
Zuccaro, Emanuela
Ghosh, Sulagna Dia
Li, Chenchen
Sherwood, John L.
Pietilainen, Olli
Barrett, Lindy E.
Limone, Francesco
Worringer, Kathleen A.
Kommineni, Sravya
Zang, Ying
Cacchiarelli, Davide
Meissner, Alex
Adolfsson, Rolf
Haggarty, Stephen
Madison, Jon
Muller, Matthia
Arlotta, Paola
Fu, Zhanyan
Eggan, Kevin
Source :
Elsevier, Cell Reports, Vol 23, Iss 8, Pp 2509-2523 (2018), Cell reports, Cell Reports
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Umeå universitet, Psykiatri, 2018.

Abstract

SUMMARY Transcription factor programming of pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) has emerged as an approach to generate human neurons for disease modeling. However, programming schemes produce a variety of cell types, and those neurons that are made often retain an immature phenotype, which limits their utility in modeling neuronal processes, including synaptic transmission. We report that combining NGN2 programming with SMAD and WNT inhibition generates human patterned induced neurons (hpiNs). Single-cell analyses showed that hpiN cultures contained cells along a developmental continuum, ranging from poorly differentiated neuronal progenitors to well-differentiated, excitatory glutamatergic neurons. The most differentiated neurons could be identified using a CAMK2A::GFP reporter gene and exhibited greater functionality, including NMDAR-mediated synaptic transmission. We conclude that utilizing single-cell and reporter gene approaches for selecting successfully programmed cells for study will greatly enhance the utility of hpiNs and other programmed neuronal populations in the modeling of nervous system disorders.<br />In Brief Nehme et al. combine two strong neuralizing factors (transcription factor programming and small molecule patterning) to generate human excitatory neurons from stem cells. They further undertake single-cell and reporter gene approaches to select highly differentiated neurons with increased functionality, augmenting their utility in the modeling of nervous system disorders.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Elsevier, Cell Reports, Vol 23, Iss 8, Pp 2509-2523 (2018), Cell reports, Cell Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c234acc62b5124d34fca1748593c822b