Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are generated by expression of transcription factors OCT4, SOX2, KLF4 and cMYC (OSKM) in somatic cells. In contrast to murine naïve iPSCs, conventional human iPSCs are in a more developmentally advanced state-called primed pluripotency. Here we report that human naïve iPSCs (niPSCs) can be generated directly from less than 1000 primary human somatic cells without stable genetic manipulation by delivery of modified messenger RNAs with microfluidics. Expression of OSKM in combination with NANOG for 12 days generates niPSCs free of transgenes, karyotypically normal, and display transcriptional, epigenetic and metabolic features indicative of the naïve state. Importantly, niPSCs efficiently differentiate into all three germ layers. While niPSCs could also be generated at low frequency under conventional conditions, our microfluidics approach will allow robust and cost-effective production of patient-specific niPSCs for regenerative medicine applications, including disease modelling and drug screening.
We report that the efficiency of reprogramming human somatic cells to induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) can be dramatically improved in a microfluidic environment. Microliter-volume confinement resulted in a 50-fold increase in efficiency over traditional reprogramming by delivery of synthetic mRNAs encoding transcription factors. In these small volumes, extracellular components of the TGF-β and other signaling pathways exhibited temporal regulation that appears critical to acquisition of pluripotency. The high quality and purity of the resulting hiPSCs (μ-hiPSCs) allowed direct differentiation into functional hepatocyte- and cardiomyocyte-like cells in the same platform without additional expansion.
Among the multiple metabolic signals involved in the establishment of the hepatic zonation, oxygen could play a key role. Indeed, depending on hepatocyte position in the hepatic lobule, gene expression and metabolism are differently affected by the oxygen gradient present across the lobule. The aim of this study is to understand whether an oxygen gradient, generated in vitro in our developed device, is sufficient to instruct a functional metabolic zonation during the differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) from endoderm toward terminally differentiated hepatocytes, thus mimicking the in vivo situation. For this purpose, a microfluidic device was designed for the generation of a stable oxygen gradient. The oxygen gradient was applied to differentiating hESCs at the pre-hepatoblast stage. The definitive endoderm and hepatic endoderm cells were characterized by the expression of the transcription factor SOX-17 and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP). Immature and mature hepatocytes were characterized by hepatocyte nuclear factor 4-alpha (HNF-4α) and albumin (ALB) expression and also analyzed for cytochrome P450 (CYP3A4) zonation and glycogen accumulation through PAS staining. Metabolic zonated genes expression was assessed through quantitative real time PCR. Application of the oxygen gradient during differentiation induced zonated glycogen storage, which was higher in the hepatocytes grown in high pO2 compared to those grown in low pO2. The mRNA levels of glutamine synthetase (GLUL), beta-catenin (CTNNB) and its direct target cyclin D1 (CCND1) showed significantly higher expression in the cells grown in low pO2 compared to those grown in high pO2. On the contrary, carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase 1 (CPS1), ALB, the proliferative marker ki67 (MKI67) and cyclin A (CCNA) resulted to be significantly higher expressed in cells cultured in high pO2 compared to those cultured in low pO2. These results indicate that the oxygen gradient generated in our device can instruct the establishment of a functional metabolic zonation in differentiating hESCs. The possibility to obtain differentiated hepatocytes in vitro may allow in the future to deepen our knowledge about the physiology/pathology of hepatocytes in relation to the oxygen content.
COVID-19 typically manifests as a respiratory illness, but several clinical reports have described gastrointestinal symptoms. This is particularly true in children in whom gastrointestinal symptoms are frequent and viral shedding outlasts viral clearance from the respiratory system. These observations raise the question of whether the virus can replicate within the stomach. Here we generate gastric organoids from fetal, pediatric, and adult biopsies as in vitro models of SARS-CoV-2 infection. To facilitate infection, we induce reverse polarity in the gastric organoids. We find that the pediatric and late fetal gastric organoids are susceptible to infection with SARS-CoV-2, while viral replication is significantly lower in undifferentiated organoids of early fetal and adult origin. We demonstrate that adult gastric organoids are more susceptible to infection following differentiation. We perform transcriptomic analysis to reveal a moderate innate antiviral response and a lack of differentially expressed genes belonging to the interferon family. Collectively, we show that the virus can efficiently infect the gastric epithelium, suggesting that the stomach might have an active role in fecal-oral SARS-CoV-2 transmission.
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have a number of potential applications in stem cell biology and regenerative medicine, including precision medicine. However, their potential clinical application is hampered by the low efficiency, high costs, and intensive workload of the reprogramming process. Here, we describe a protocol to reprogram human somatic cells to hiPSCs with high efficiency in 15 days using microfluidics. We successfully downscaled an 8day protocol based on daily transfections of mRNA encoding for reprogramming factors and immune evasion proteins. Using this protocol, we obtain hiPSC colonies (up to 160±20 in a single 27-mm 2 microfluidic chamber) 15 days after seeding ~1500 cells per independent chamber and under xeno-free defined conditions. Only ~20-µL medium is required per day. The hiPSC colonies extracted from the microfluidic chamber do not require further stabilization due to the short lifetime of mRNA. The high success rate of reprogramming in microfluidics, under completely defined conditions, enables hundreds of cells to be simultaneously reprogrammed, with an ~100-fold cost reduction of raw material compared to a standard multiwell culture condition. This system also enables the generation of hiPSCs suitable for clinical translation or further research into the reprogramming process.
Human tissue in vitro models on-chip are highly desirable to dissect the complexity of a physio-pathological in vivo response because of their advantages compared to traditional static culture systems in terms of high control of microenvironmental conditions, including accurate perturbations and high temporal resolution analyses of medium outflow. Human adipose tissue (hAT) is a key player in metabolic disorders, such as Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM). It is involved in the overall energy homeostasis not only as passive energy storage but also as an important metabolic regulator. Here, we aim at developing a large scale microfluidic platform for generating high temporal resolution of glucose uptake profiles, and consequently insulin sensitivity, under physio-pathological stimulations in ex vivo adipose tissues from nondiabetic and T2DM individuals. A multiscale mathematical model that integrates fluid dynamics and an intracellular insulin signaling pathway description was used for assisting microfluidic design in order to maximize measurement accuracy of tissue metabolic activity in response to perturbations. An automated microfluidic injection system was included on-chip for performing precise dynamic biochemical stimulations. The temporal evolution of culture conditions could be monitored for days, before and after perturbation, measuring glucose concentration in the outflow with high temporal resolution. As a proof of concept for detection of insulin resistance, we measured insulin-dependent glucose uptake by hAT from nondiabetic and T2DM subjects, mimicking the postprandial response. The system presented thus represents an important tool in dissecting the role of single tissues, such as hAT, in the complex interwoven picture of metabolic diseases.
Recent advancements in cell engineering have succeeded in manipulating cell identity with the targeted overexpression of specific cell fate determining transcription factors in a process named transcriptional programming. Neurogenin2 (NGN2) is sufficient to instruct pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) to acquire a neuronal identity when delivered with an integrating system, which arises some safety concerns for clinical applications. A non-integrating system based on modified messenger RNA (mmRNA) delivery method, represents a valuable alternative to lentiviral-based approaches. The ability of NGN2 mmRNA to instruct PSC fate change has not been thoroughly investigated yet. Here we aimed at understanding whether the use of an NGN2 mmRNA-based approach combined with a miniaturized system, which allows a higher transfection efficiency in a cost-effective system, is able to drive human induced PSCs (hiPSCs) toward the neuronal lineage. We show that NGN2 mRNA alone is able to induce cell fate conversion. Surprisingly, the outcome cell population accounts for multiple phenotypes along the neural development trajectory. We found that this mixed population is mainly constituted by neural stem cells (45% ± 18 PAX6 positive cells) and neurons (38% ± 8 βIIITUBULIN positive cells) only when NGN2 is delivered as mmRNA. On the other hand, when the delivery system is lentiviral-based, both providing a constant expression of NGN2 or only a transient pulse, the outcome differentiated population is formed by a clear majority of neurons (88% ± 1 βIIITUBULIN positive cells). Altogether, our data confirm the ability of NGN2 to induce neuralization in hiPSCs and opens a new point of view in respect to the delivery system method when it comes to transcriptional programming applications.
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