4.7 Article

Detection of Pathological Markers of Neurodegenerative Diseases following Microfluidic Direct Conversion of Patient Fibroblasts into Neurons

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23042147

Keywords

transdifferentiation; induced neurons; neurodegeneration; biomarkers; microfluidics

Funding

  1. Bando Ricerca Indipendente ISS 20202022 [ISS20-4aeae96c8911]
  2. Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation [PGR00873]

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This study demonstrates the use of chemical reprogramming of patient skin cells into neurons for the rapid detection of pathological markers associated with neurodegenerative diseases. The combination of microfluidic technology and chemical reprogramming allows examination of disease processes on a chip and may have important diagnostic applications.
Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease are clinically diagnosed using neuropsychological and cognitive tests, expensive neuroimaging-based approaches (MRI and PET) and invasive and time-consuming lumbar puncture for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sample collection to detect biomarkers. Thus, a rapid, simple and cost-effective approach to more easily access fluids and tissues is in great need. Here, we exploit the chemical direct reprogramming of patient skin fibroblasts into neurons (chemically induced neurons, ciNs) as a novel strategy for the rapid detection of different pathological markers of neurodegenerative diseases. We found that FAD fibroblasts have a reduced efficiency of reprogramming, and converted ciNs show a less complex neuronal network. In addition, ciNs from patients show misfolded protein accumulation and mitochondria ultrastructural abnormalities, biomarkers commonly associated with neurodegeneration. Moreover, for the first time, we show that microfluidic technology, in combination with chemical reprogramming, enables on-chip examination of disease pathological processes and may have important applications in diagnosis. In conclusion, ciNs on microfluidic devices represent a small-scale, non-invasive and cost-effective high-throughput tool for protein misfolding disease diagnosis and may be useful for new biomarker discovery, disease mechanism studies and design of personalised therapies.

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