Abstract

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and induced neuronal (iN) cells are very much touted in terms of their potential promises in therapeutics. However, from a more fundamental perspective, iPSCs and iNs are invaluable tools for the postnatal generation of specific diseased cell types from patients, which may offer insights into disease etiology that are otherwise unobtainable with available animal or human proxies. There are two good recent examples of such important insights with diseased neurons derived via either the iPSC or iN approaches. In one, induced motor neurons (iMNs) derived from iPSCs of Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/Frontotemporal dementia (ALS/FTD) patients with a C9orf72 repeat expansion revealed a haploinsufficiency of protein function resulting from the intronic expansion and deficiencies in motor neuron vesicular trafficking and lysosomal biogenesis that were not previously obvious in knockout mouse models. In another, striatal medium spinal neurons (MSNs) derived directly from fibroblasts of Huntington’s disease (HD) patients recapitulated age-associated disease signatures of mutant Huntingtin (mHTT) aggregation and neurodegeneration that were not prominent in neurons differentiated indirectly via iPSCs from HD patients. These results attest to the tremendous potential for pathologically accurate and mechanistically revealing disease modelling with advances in the derivation of iPSCs and iNs.

Highlights

  • Induced pluripotent stem cells and induced neuronal cells are very much touted in terms of their potential promises in therapeutics

  • The loss of irreplaceable adult central nervous system (CNS) neuron types underlies the state of devastating morbidity in neurodegenerative disorders like Alzheimer’s disease (AD), Parkinson’s disease (PD), Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/Frontotemporal dementia (ALS/FTD) and Huntington’s disease (HD)

  • A breakthrough in somatic cell reprogramming occurred in 2007, when Yamanaka and colleagues reported the generation of induced pluripotent stem cells from adult human fibroblasts

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Summary

Introduction

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and induced neuronal (iN) cells are very much touted in terms of their potential promises in therapeutics. IPSC-derived motor neurons (iMNs)repeat expansion revealed a previously haploinsufficiency defect due to loss ofrepeat Shi and colleagues generated iMNs from ALS/FTD patient iPSCs via the co-expression of a number of proneural transcription factors (Ngn2, Isl1, Lhx3, NeuroD1, Brn2, Ascl1 and Myt1l).

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