How to differentiate induced pluripotent stem cells into sensory neurons for disease modelling: a comparison of two protocols

Author:

Kalia Anil Kumar1,Rösseler Corinna1,Granja-Vazquez Rafael2,Ahmad Ayesha2,Pancrazio Joseph J.2,Neureiter Anika1,Zhang Mei3,Sauter Daniel3,Vetter Irina4,Andersson Asa4,Dussor Gregory2,Price Theodore J.2,Kolber Benedict J.2,Truong Vincent5,Walsh Patrick5,Lampert Angelika1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Uniklinik RWTH Aachen: Universitatsklinikum Aachen

2. University of Texas at Dallas

3. Sophion Bioscience A/S: Biolin Scientific AB

4. The University of Queensland Institute for Molecular Bioscience

5. Anatomic Incorporated

Abstract

Abstract Background Human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived peripheral sensory neurons present a valuable tool to model human diseases and are a source for applications in drug discovery and regenerative medicine. Clinically, peripheral sensory neuropathies can result in maladies ranging from a complete loss of pain to severe painful neuropathic symptoms. Sensory neurons are located in the dorsal root ganglion and are comprised of functionally diverse neuronal types. Low efficiency, reproducibility concerns, variations arising due to genetic factors and time needed to generate functionally mature neuronal populations from iPSCs for disease modelling remain key challenges to study human nociception in vitro. Here, we report a detailed characterization of iPSC-derived sensory neurons with an accelerated differentiation protocol (“Anatomic” protocol) compared to the most commonly used small molecule approach (“Chambers” protocol). Methods Multiple iPSC clones derived from different reprogramming methods, genetics, age, and somatic cell sources were used to generate sensory neurons. Expression profiling of sensory neurons was performed with Immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization techniques. Manual patch clamp and high throughput cellular screening systems (Fluorescence imaging plate reader, automated patch clamp and multi-well microelectrode arrays recordings) were applied to functionally characterize the generated sensory neurons. Results The Anatomic protocol rendered a purer culture without the use of mitomycin C to suppress non-neuronal outgrowth, while Chambers differentiations yielded a mix of cell types. High throughput systems confirmed functional expression of Na+ and K+ ion channels. Multi-well microelectrode recordings display spontaneously active neurons with sensitivity to increased temperature indicating expression of heat sensitive ion channels. Patient-derived nociceptors displayed higher frequency firing compared to control subject with both, Chambers and Anatomic differentiation approaches, underlining their potential use for clinical phenotyping as a disease-in-a-dish model. Conclusions We validated the efficiency of two differentiation protocols and their potential application for understanding the disease mechanisms from patients suffering from pain disorders. We propose that both differentiation methods can be further exploited for understanding mechanisms and development of novel treatments in pain disorders.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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