학술논문

Long-term calcium imaging reveals functional development in hiPSC-derived cultures comparable to human but not rat primary cultures
Document Type
Source
Stem Cell Reports StemTherapy: National Initiative on Stem Cells for Regenerative Therapy. 18(1):205-219
Subject
calcium imaging
functional connectivity
human cellular models
human iPSCs
neural stem cells
neuronal networks
Medicin och hälsovetenskap
Medicinska och farmaceutiska grundvetenskaper
Cell- och molekylärbiologi
Medical and Health Sciences
Basic Medicine
Cell and Molecular Biology
Language
English
ISSN
2213-6711
Abstract
Models for human brain-oriented research are often established on primary cultures from rodents, which fails to recapitulate cellular specificity and molecular cues of the human brain. Here we investigated whether neuronal cultures derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) feature key advantages compared with rodent primary cultures. Using calcium fluorescence imaging, we tracked spontaneous neuronal activity in hiPSC-derived, human, and rat primary cultures and compared their dynamic and functional behavior as they matured. We observed that hiPSC-derived cultures progressively changed upon development, exhibiting gradually richer activity patterns and functional traits. By contrast, rat primary cultures were locked in the same dynamic state since activity onset. Human primary cultures exhibited features in between hiPSC-derived and rat primary cultures, although traits from the former predominated. Our study demonstrates that hiPSC-derived cultures are excellent models to investigate development in neuronal assemblies, a hallmark for applications that monitor alterations caused by damage or neurodegeneration.