4.7 Article

Efficient derivation and inducible differentiation of expandable skeletal myogenic cells from human ES and patient-specific iPS cells

Journal

NATURE PROTOCOLS
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages 941-958

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nprot.2015.057

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Telethon Italy and of the EuroBioBank network [GTB12001]
  2. German ministry of education and research (BMBF, Bonn, Germany) [01GM0862]
  3. European Union's Seventh Framework Programme [602423]
  4. Takeda New Frontier Science program
  5. UK Medical Research Council (MRC)
  6. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
  7. Duchenne Parent Project Onlus
  8. Muscular Dystrophy UK
  9. Duchenne Children's Trust
  10. Duchenne Research Fund
  11. Fund for Scientific Research (FWO)
  12. Association Francaise contre les Myopathies
  13. Willy Gepts Fund (VUB)
  14. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council [1352025] Funding Source: researchfish
  15. Muscular Dystrophy UK [RA4/3023] Funding Source: researchfish

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keletal muscle is the most abundant human tissue; therefore, an unlimited availability of myogenic cells has applications in regenerative medicine and drug development. Here we detail a protocol to derive myogenic cells from human embryonic stem (ESES) and induced pluripotent stem (iPSPS) cells, and we also provide evidence for its extension to human iPSPS cells cultured without feeder cells. The procedure, which does not require the generation of embryoid bodies or prospective cell isolation, entails four stages with different culture densities, media and surface coating. Pluripotent stem cells are disaggregated to single cells and then differentiated into expandable cells resembling human mesoangioblasts. Subsequently, transient Myod1 induction efficiently drives myogenic differentiation into multinucleated myotubes. Cells derived from patients with muscular dystrophy and differentiated using this protocol have been genetically corrected, and they were proven to have therapeutic potential in dystrophic mice. Thus, this platform has been demonstrated to be amenable to gene and cell therapy, and it could be extended to muscle tissue engineering and disease modeling.

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