학술논문

Process-based expansion and neural differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells for transplantation and disease modeling.
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of neuroscience research. 91(10)
Subject
Cell Culture Techniques: methods
Cell Differentiation: physiology
Cell Proliferation
Flow Cytometry
Humans
Immunohistochemistry
Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells: cytology
Neural Stem Cells: cytology
Neurons: cytology
physiology
transplantation
Patch-Clamp Techniques
Cellular models of disease
Cellular therapy
CGMP
Differentiation
Drug discovery
Glia
IPSCs
Methods
Neural stem cells
Neurons
Nomenclature4 (1 aminoethyl) n (4 pyridyl)cyclohexanecarboxamide
ascorbic acid
beta catenin
beta tubulin
bone morphogenetic protein
brain derived neurotrophic factor
chemokine receptor CXCR4
cyclic AMP
cyclic GMP
glial cell line derived neurotrophic factor
green fluorescent protein
kruppel like factor 4
nerve cell adhesion molecule
nestin
noggin
Notch receptor
octamer transcription factor 4
protein S100B
transcription factor NANOG
transcription factor PAX6
transcription factor Sox1
transcription factor Sox2
transforming growth factor beta
Wnt protein
article
cell survival
coculture
continuous culture
culture medium
culture technique
disease model
DNA modification
embryoid body
embryonic stem cell
feeder cell
female
flow cytometry
genotype
glia cell
hematopoietic stem cell
HLA typing
human
human cell
immunocytochemistry
immunofluorescence microscopy
male
nerve cell differentiation
nerve potential
neural stem cell
neural stem cell transplantation
oncogene c myc
phenotype
plating medium
pluripotent stem cell
priority journal
quality control
Sendai virus
signal transduction
skin fibroblast
somatic cell
stem cell expansion
tissue distribution
umbilical cord blood
Language
Abstract
Robust strategies for developing patient-specific, human, induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-based therapies of the brain require an ability to derive large numbers of highly defined neural cells. Recent progress in iPSC culture techniques includes partial-to-complete elimination of feeder layers, use of defined media, and single-cell passaging. However, these techniques still require embryoid body formation or coculture for differentiation into neural stem cells (NSCs). In addition, none of the published methodologies has employed all of the advances in a single culture system. Here we describe a reliable method for long-term, single-cell passaging of PSCs using a feeder-free, defined culture system that produces confluent, adherent PSCs that can be differentiated into NSCs. To provide a basis for robust quality control, we have devised a system of cellular nomenclature that describes an accurate genotype and phenotype of the cells at specific stages in the process. We demonstrate that this protocol allows for the efficient, large-scale, cGMP-compliant production of transplantable NSCs from all lines tested. We also show that NSCs generated from iPSCs produced with the process described are capable of forming both glia defined by their expression of S100β and neurons that fire repetitive action potentials.