Showing 1 - 12 of 24 results for "05110"
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- ReferenceL.-M. Grunwald et al. ( 2019) Translational psychiatry 9 1 179
Comparative characterization of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) derived from patients with schizophrenia and autism.
Human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) provide an attractive tool to study disease mechanisms of neurodevelopmental disorders such as schizophrenia. A pertinent problem is the development of hiPSC-based assays to discriminate schizophrenia (SZ) from autism spectrum disorder (ASD) models. Healthy control individuals as well as patients with SZ and ASD were examined by a panel of diagnostic tests. Subsequently, skin biopsies were taken for the generation, differentiation, and testing of hiPSC-derived neurons from all individuals. SZ and ASD neurons share a reduced capacity for cortical differentiation as shown by quantitative analysis of the synaptic marker PSD95 and neurite outgrowth. By contrast, pattern analysis of calcium signals turned out to discriminate among healthy control, schizophrenia, and autism samples. Schizophrenia neurons displayed decreased peak frequency accompanied by increased peak areas, while autism neurons showed a slight decrease in peak amplitudes. For further analysis of the schizophrenia phenotype, transcriptome analyses revealed a clear discrimination among schizophrenia, autism, and healthy controls based on differentially expressed genes. However, considerable differences were still evident among schizophrenia patients under inspection. For one individual with schizophrenia, expression analysis revealed deregulation of genes associated with the major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC class II) presentation pathway. Interestingly, antipsychotic treatment of healthy control neurons also increased MHC class II expression. In conclusion, transcriptome analysis combined with pattern analysis of calcium signals appeared as a tool to discriminate between SZ and ASD phenotypes in vitro. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 85850 mTeSR™1 34811 AggreWell™800 05835 STEMdiff™ Neural Induction Medium 05832 STEMdiff™ Neural Rosette Selection Reagent 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit 05790 BrainPhys™ Neuronal Medium 05792 BrainPhys™ Neuronal Medium and SM1 Kit 05794 BrainPhys™ Primary Neuron Kit 05795 BrainPhys™ hPSC Neuron Kit 05793 BrainPhys™ Neuronal Medium N2-A & SM1 Kit Catalog #: 85850 Product Name: mTeSR™1 Catalog #: 34811 Product Name: AggreWell™800 Catalog #: 05835 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Neural Induction Medium Catalog #: 05832 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Neural Rosette Selection Reagent Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 05790 Product Name: BrainPhys™ Neuronal Medium Catalog #: 05792 Product Name: BrainPhys™ Neuronal Medium and SM1 Kit Catalog #: 05794 Product Name: BrainPhys™ Primary Neuron Kit Catalog #: 05795 Product Name: BrainPhys™ hPSC Neuron Kit Catalog #: 05793 Product Name: BrainPhys™ Neuronal Medium N2-A & SM1 Kit - ReferenceWu X et al. (JAN 2018) Cell 172 3 423--438.e25
Intrinsic Immunity Shapes Viral Resistance of Stem Cells.
Stem cells are highly resistant to viral infection compared to their differentiated progeny; however, the mechanism is mysterious. Here, we analyzed gene expression in mammalian stem cells and cells at various stages of differentiation. We find that, conserved across species, stem cells express a subset of genes previously classified as interferon (IFN) stimulated genes (ISGs) but that expression is intrinsic, as stem cells are refractory to interferon. This intrinsic ISG expression varies in a cell-type-specific manner, and many ISGs decrease upon differentiation, at which time cells become IFN responsive, allowing induction of a broad spectrum of ISGs by IFN signaling. Importantly, we show that intrinsically expressed ISGs protect stem cells against viral infection. We demonstrate the in vivo importance of intrinsic ISG expression for protecting stem cells and their differentiation potential during viral infection. These findings have intriguing implications for understanding stem cell biology and the evolution of pathogen resistance. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 04434 MethoCult™ H4434 Classic 05872 ReLeSR™ 72052 CHIR99021 72302 Y-27632 (Dihydrochloride) 70039 Human Peripheral Blood Plasma, Frozen 60062 Anti-Human SSEA-4 Antibody, Clone MC-813-70 60045 Anti-Human CD90 Antibody, Clone 5E10 02691 StemSpan™ CD34+ Expansion Supplement (10X) 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit 05711 NeuroCult™ SM1 Neuronal Supplement Catalog #: 04434 Product Name: MethoCult™ H4434 Classic Catalog #: 05872 Product Name: ReLeSR™ Catalog #: 72052 Product Name: CHIR99021 Catalog #: 72302 Product Name: Y-27632 (Dihydrochloride) Catalog #: 70039 Product Name: Human Peripheral Blood Plasma, Frozen Catalog #: 60062 Product Name: Anti-Human SSEA-4 Antibody, Clone MC-813-70 Catalog #: 60045 Product Name: Anti-Human CD90 Antibody, Clone 5E10 Catalog #: 02691 Product Name: StemSpan™ CD34+ Expansion Supplement (10X) Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 05711 Product Name: NeuroCult™ SM1 Neuronal Supplement - ReferencePijuan-Galitó et al. ( 2016) Nature communications 7 12170
Human serum-derived protein removes the need for coating in defined human pluripotent stem cell culture.
Reliable, scalable and time-efficient culture methods are required to fully realize the clinical and industrial applications of human pluripotent stem (hPS) cells. Here we present a completely defined, xeno-free medium that supports long-term propagation of hPS cells on uncoated tissue culture plastic. The medium consists of the Essential 8 (E8) formulation supplemented with inter-α-inhibitor (IαI), a human serum-derived protein, recently demonstrated to activate key pluripotency pathways in mouse PS cells. IαI efficiently induces attachment and long-term growth of both embryonic and induced hPS cell lines when added as a soluble protein to the medium at seeding. IαI supplementation efficiently supports adaptation of feeder-dependent hPS cells to xeno-free conditions, clonal growth as well as single-cell survival in the absence of Rho-associated kinase inhibitor (ROCKi). This time-efficient and simplified culture method paves the way for large-scale, high-throughput hPS cell culture, and will be valuable for both basic research and commercial applications. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 85850 mTeSR™1 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 85850 Product Name: mTeSR™1 Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit - ReferenceSmith BW et al. ( 2016) Stem Cells International 2016 2574152
Genome Editing of the CYP1A1 Locus in iPSCs as a Platform to Map AHR Expression throughout Human Development
The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) is a ligand activated transcription factor that increases the expression of detoxifying enzymes upon ligand stimulation. Recent studies now suggest that novel endogenous roles of the AHR exist throughout development. In an effort to create an optimized model system for the study of AHR signaling in several cellular lineages, we have employed a CRISPR/CAS9 genome editing strategy in induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to incorporate a reporter cassette at the transcription start site of one of its canonical targets, cytochrome P450 1A1 (CYP1A1). This cell line faithfully reports on CYP1A1 expression, with luciferase levels as its functional readout, when treated with an endogenous AHR ligand (FICZ) at escalating doses. iPSC-derived fibroblast-like cells respond to acute exposure to environmental and endogenous AHR ligands, and iPSC-derived hepatocytes increase CYP1A1 in a similar manner to primary hepatocytes. This cell line is an important innovation that can be used to map AHR activity in discrete cellular subsets throughout developmental ontogeny. As further endogenous ligands are proposed, this line can be used to screen for safety and efficacy and can report on the ability of small molecules to regulate critical cellular processes by modulating the activity of the AHR. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 85850 mTeSR™1 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 85850 Product Name: mTeSR™1 Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit - ReferenceKwok CTD et al. (MAR 2016) Stem Cell Research 16 3 651--661
The Forkhead box transcription factor FOXM1 is required for the maintenance of cell proliferation and protection against oxidative stress in human embryonic stem cells
Human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) exhibit unique cell cycle structure, self-renewal and pluripotency. The Forkhead box transcription factor M1 (FOXM1) is critically required for the maintenance of pluripotency in mouse embryonic stem cells and mouse embryonal carcinoma cells, but its role in hESCs remains unclear. Here, we show that FOXM1 expression was enriched in undifferentiated hESCs and was regulated in a cell cycle-dependent manner with peak levels detected at the G2/M phase. Expression of FOXM1 did not correlate with OCT4 and NANOG during in vitro differentiation of hESCs. Importantly, knockdown of FOXM1 expression led to aberrant cell cycle distribution with impairment in mitotic progression but showed no profound effect on the undifferentiated state. Interestingly, FOXM1 depletion sensitized hESCs to oxidative stress. Moreover, genome-wide analysis of FOXM1 targets by ChIP-seq identified genes important for M phase including CCNB1 and CDK1, which were subsequently confirmed by ChIP and RNA interference analyses. Further peak set comparison against a differentiating hESC line and a cancer cell line revealed a substantial difference in the genomic binding profile of FOXM1 in hESCs. Taken together, our findings provide the first evidence to support FOXM1 as an important regulator of cell cycle progression and defense against oxidative stress in hESCs. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 85850 mTeSR™1 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 85850 Product Name: mTeSR™1 Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit - ReferenceCarpentier A et al. (MAR 2016) Stem Cell Research 16 3 640--650
Hepatic differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells in miniaturized format suitable for high-throughput screen
The establishment of protocols to differentiate human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) including embryonic (ESC) and induced pluripotent (iPSC) stem cells into functional hepatocyte-like cells (HLCs) creates new opportunities to study liver metabolism, genetic diseases and infection of hepatotropic viruses (hepatitis B and C viruses) in the context of specific genetic background. While supporting efficient differentiation to HLCs, the published protocols are limited in terms of differentiation into fully mature hepatocytes and in a smaller-well format. This limitation handicaps the application of these cells to high-throughput assays. Here we describe a protocol allowing efficient and consistent hepatic differentiation of hPSCs in 384-well plates into functional hepatocyte-like cells, which remain differentiated for more than 3 weeks. This protocol affords the unique opportunity to miniaturize the hPSC-based differentiation technology and facilitates screening for molecules in modulating liver differentiation, metabolism, genetic network, and response to infection or other external stimuli. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 85850 mTeSR™1 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 85850 Product Name: mTeSR™1 Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit - ReferenceSagi I et al. (APR 2016) Nature 532 7597 107--11
Derivation and differentiation of haploid human embryonic stem cells.
Diploidy is a fundamental genetic feature in mammals, in which haploid cells normally arise only as post-meiotic germ cells that serve to ensure a diploid genome upon fertilization. Gamete manipulation has yielded haploid embryonic stem (ES) cells from several mammalian species, but haploid human ES cells have yet to be reported. Here we generated and analysed a collection of human parthenogenetic ES cell lines originating from haploid oocytes, leading to the successful isolation and maintenance of human ES cell lines with a normal haploid karyotype. Haploid human ES cells exhibited typical pluripotent stem cell characteristics, such as self-renewal capacity and a pluripotency-specific molecular signature. Moreover, we demonstrated the utility of these cells as a platform for loss-of-function genetic screening. Although haploid human ES cells resembled their diploid counterparts, they also displayed distinct properties including differential regulation of X chromosome inactivation and of genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation, alongside reduction in absolute gene expression levels and cell size. Surprisingly, we found that a haploid human genome is compatible not only with the undifferentiated pluripotent state, but also with differentiated somatic fates representing all three embryonic germ layers both in vitro and in vivo, despite a persistent dosage imbalance between the autosomes and X chromosome. We expect that haploid human ES cells will provide novel means for studying human functional genomics and development. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 85850 mTeSR™1 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 85850 Product Name: mTeSR™1 Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit - ReferenceKaini RR et al. (JAN 2016) Tissue engineering. Part C, Methods
Recombinant Xeno-Free Vitronectin Supports Self-Renewal and Pluripotency in Protein-Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells.
Patient safety is a major concern in the application of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) in cell-based therapy. Efforts are being made to reprogram, maintain, and differentiate iPSCs in defined conditions to provide a safe source of stem cells for regenerative medicine. Recently, human fibroblasts were successfully reprogrammed into pluripotent stem cells using four recombinant proteins (OCT4, c-Myc, KLF4, and SOX2) fused with a cell-penetrating peptide (9R). These protein-induced pluripotent stem cells (piPSCs) are maintained and propagated on a feeder layer of mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Use of animal-derived products in maintenance and differentiation of iPSCs poses risks of zoonotic disease transmission and immune rejection when transplanted into humans. To avoid potential incorporation of xenogenic products, we cultured piPSCs on recombinant human matrix proteins. We then tested whether recombinant human matrix proteins can support self-renewal and pluripotency of piPSCs. After long-term culture on recombinant human vitronectin in xeno-free conditions, piPSCs retained the expression of pluripotent markers. The pluripotency of these cells was further evaluated by differentiating toward ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm lineages in vitro. In conclusion, recombinant human vitronectin can support the long-term culture and maintain the stemness of piPSCs in defined nonxenogenic conditions. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit - ReferenceRamakrishnan VM et al. (AUG 2015) Scientific reports 5 13231
Restoration of Physiologically Responsive Low-Density Lipoprotein Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis in Genetically Deficient Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells.
Acquiring sufficient amounts of high-quality cells remains an impediment to cell-based therapies. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) may be an unparalleled source, but autologous iPSC likely retain deficiencies requiring correction. We present a strategy for restoring physiological function in genetically deficient iPSC utilizing the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) deficiency Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FH) as our model. FH fibroblasts were reprogrammed into iPSC using synthetic modified mRNA. FH-iPSC exhibited pluripotency and differentiated toward a hepatic lineage. To restore LDLR endocytosis, FH-iPSC were transfected with a 31 kb plasmid (pEHZ-LDLR-LDLR) containing a wild-type LDLR (FH-iPSC-LDLR) controlled by 10 kb of upstream genomic DNA as well as Epstein-Barr sequences (EBNA1 and oriP) for episomal retention and replication. After six months of selective culture, pEHZ-LDLR-LDLR was recovered from FH-iPSC-LDLR and transfected into Ldlr-deficient CHO-a7 cells, which then exhibited feedback-controlled LDLR-mediated endocytosis. To quantify endocytosis, FH-iPSC ± LDLR were differentiated into mesenchymal cells (MC), pretreated with excess free sterols, Lovastatin, or ethanol (control), and exposed to DiI-LDL. FH-MC-LDLR demonstrated a physiological response, with virtually no DiI-LDL internalization with excess sterols and an ˜2-fold increase in DiI-LDL internalization by Lovastatin compared to FH-MC. These findings demonstrate the feasibility of functionalizing genetically deficient iPSC using episomal plasmids to deliver physiologically responsive transgenes. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit - ReferenceLiu J et al. (NOV 2015) Experimental cell research 338 2 203--213
Efficient episomal reprogramming of blood mononuclear cells and differentiation to hepatocytes with functional drug metabolism.
The possibility of converting cells from blood mononuclear cells (MNC) to liver cells provides promising opportunities for the study of diseases and the assessment of new drugs. However, clinical applications have to meet GMP requirements and the methods for generating induced pluripotent cells (iPCs) have to avoid insertional mutagenesis, a possibility when using viral vehicles for the delivery of reprogramming factors. We have developed an efficient non-integration method for reprogramming fresh or frozen blood MNC, maintained in an optimised cytokine cocktail, to generate induced pluripotent cells. Using electroporation for the effective delivery of episomal transcription factors (Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, L-Myc, and Lin28) in a feeder-free system, without any requirement for small molecules, we achieved a reprogramming efficiency of up to 0.033% (65 colonies from 2×10(5) seeded MNC). Applying the same cytokine cocktail and reprogramming methods to cord blood or fetal liver-derived CD34(+) cells, we obtained 148 iPS colonies from 10(5) seeding cells (0.148%). The iPS cell lines we generated maintained typical characteristics of pluripotent cells and could be successfully differentiated into hepatocytes with drug metabolic function. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit - ReferencePaull D et al. (SEP 2015) Nature methods 12 9 885--892
Automated, high-throughput derivation, characterization and differentiation of induced pluripotent stem cells.
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are an essential tool for modeling how causal genetic variants impact cellular function in disease, as well as an emerging source of tissue for regenerative medicine. The preparation of somatic cells, their reprogramming and the subsequent verification of iPSC pluripotency are laborious, manual processes limiting the scale and reproducibility of this technology. Here we describe a modular, robotic platform for iPSC reprogramming enabling automated, high-throughput conversion of skin biopsies into iPSCs and differentiated cells with minimal manual intervention. We demonstrate that automated reprogramming and the pooled selection of polyclonal pluripotent cells results in high-quality, stable iPSCs. These lines display less line-to-line variation than either manually produced lines or lines produced through automation followed by single-colony subcloning. The robotic platform we describe will enable the application of iPSCs to population-scale biomedical problems including the study of complex genetic diseases and the development of personalized medicines. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit - ReferenceWade SL et al. (OCT 2015) Stem cells (Dayton, Ohio) 33 10 2925--2935
MiRNA-Mediated Regulation of the SWI/SNF Chromatin Remodeling Complex Controls Pluripotency and Endodermal Differentiation in Human ESCs.
MicroRNAs and chromatin remodeling complexes represent powerful epigenetic mechanisms that regulate the pluripotent state. miR-302 is a strong inducer of pluripotency, which is characterized by a distinct chromatin architecture. This suggests that miR-302 regulates global chromatin structure; however, a direct relationship between miR-302 and chromatin remodelers has not been established. Here, we provide data to show that miR-302 regulates Brg1 chromatin remodeling complex composition in human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) through direct repression of the BAF53a and BAF170 subunits. With the subsequent overexpression of BAF170 in hESCs, we show that miR-302's inhibition of BAF170 protein levels can affect the expression of genes involved in cell proliferation. Furthermore, miR-302-mediated repression of BAF170 regulates pluripotency by positively influencing mesendodermal differentiation. Overexpression of BAF170 in hESCs led to biased differentiation toward the ectoderm lineage during EB formation and severely hindered directed definitive endoderm differentiation. Taken together, these data uncover a direct regulatory relationship between miR-302 and the Brg1 chromatin remodeling complex that controls gene expression and cell fate decisions in hESCs and suggests that similar mechanisms are at play during early human development. View PublicationCatalog #: Product Name: 05110 STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit Catalog #: 05110 Product Name: STEMdiff™ Definitive Endoderm Kit
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