Abstract
Background: The study of live human neurons has been hindered due to the complexity and potential irreversible damage to the patient during biopsy. However, reprogramming of adult human somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) has proved to be a novel method in the study of the pathophysiology of disease and therapeutic targets of the human nervous system. There are several approaches, and the optimum time (i.e., passage number) to generate highly pure cultures is being studied. Therefore, our laboratory has investigated the effect of passage number on culture contaminants with non-neuronal cell types. 
 
 Methods: Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were isolated from whole blood from three cell lines and reprogrammed into iPSCs. Each cell line consisted of three samples that were analyzed after low (5-10), middle (20-26), and high (30-38) number of passages. Cells were maintained in an induction medium for eight days. On day nine, cells were dissociated and replated in a maintenance medium. On day 33, total RNA was extracted from cells. Normalized values for non-neuronal cell marker genes were compared using paired Student’s t-tests and two-way ANOVA, with the cell line and passage number as independent variables. P-values less than 0.05 were considered significant. 
 
 Results: Our results showed that lower passage number was associated with decreased astrocyte and chondrocyte marker expression. High passage number was associated with decreased oligodendrocyte and glial precursor marker expression. Of the fibroblast markers evaluated, there were similar trends of expression between all three groups. There was no significant difference in microglial cell marker gene expression between all three groups. 
 
 Conclusion and Potential Impact: Low gene expression suggests a purer culture. According to these results, as passage number increases, there is more contaminants with oligodendrocytes and glial precursor cells. Conversely, with low passage numbers, there are more contaminants with astrocytes and chondrocytes. Future studies will identify the impact of these non-neuronal contaminants and implications on research.
Highlights
The study of primary human neurons is hindered due to the potential for irreversible damage to a patient during biopsy
We set out to determine the effect of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) passage number on maturity and presence of contaminating cell types in iPSC-derived sensory neuron cultures
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were isolated from whole blood of three individual donors and reprogrammed into iPSCs
Summary
The study of primary human neurons is hindered due to the potential for irreversible damage to a patient during biopsy. Reprogramming of adult human somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) with subsequent sensory neuronal differentiation has proved to be a reliable, patient-specific method for the study of the pathophysiology of diseases of the human peripheral nervous system. The impact of iPSC culture conditions, such as passage number, on the generation of pure, mature neuronal cultures has not been definitively established. We set out to determine the effect of iPSC passage number on maturity and presence of contaminating cell types in iPSC-derived sensory neuron (iPSC-dSN) cultures
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