4.3 Article

SOX9-induced Generation of Functional Astrocytes Supporting Neuronal Maturation in an All-human System

期刊

STEM CELL REVIEWS AND REPORTS
卷 17, 期 5, 页码 1855-1873

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12015-021-10179-x

关键词

Astrocytes; Pluripotent stem cells; Differentiation protocol; Genome engineering; All-human co-culture system

资金

  1. FWO grant [1166518, 1166520 N, SC/1S10717N, 12ZG121N]
  2. Hercules [AKUL/19/34]
  3. EU/EFPIA/Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 Joint Undertaking (EBISC2) [821362]
  4. [IWT. 150031 iPSCAF]
  5. [FWO.G0B5819N]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

By overexpressing SOX9 in pluripotent stem cells, functionally mature human astrocytes can be generated, displaying comparable functional properties to primary human astrocytes. The electrophysiological properties of neurons co-cultured with these astrocytes are similar to murine primary cultures. This method allows for scaled-up production for high-throughput analysis, aiding in drug development and reducing animal use in biomedical research.
Astrocytes, the main supportive cell type of the brain, show functional impairments upon ageing and in a broad spectrum of neurological disorders. Limited access to human astroglia for pre-clinical studies has been a major bottleneck delaying our understanding of their role in brain health and disease. We demonstrate here that functionally mature human astrocytes can be generated by SOX9 overexpression for 6 days in pluripotent stem cell (PSC)-derived neural progenitor cells. Inducible (i)SOX9-astrocytes display functional properties comparable to primary human astrocytes comprising glutamate uptake, induced calcium responses and cytokine/growth factor secretion. Importantly, electrophysiological properties of iNGN2-neurons co-cultured with iSOX9-astrocytes are indistinguishable from gold-standard murine primary cultures. The high yield, fast timing and the possibility to cryopreserve iSOX9-astrocytes without losing functional properties makes them suitable for scaled-up production for high-throughput analyses. Our findings represent a step forward to an all-human iPSC-derived neural model for drug development in neuroscience and towards the reduction of animal use in biomedical research.

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