Dystrophin-deficient cardiomyocytes derived from human urine: new biologic reagents for drug discovery

来自人尿的缺乏肌营养不良蛋白的心肌细胞:用于药物研发的新型生物试剂

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作者:Xuan Guan, David L Mack, Claudia M Moreno, Jennifer L Strande, Julie Mathieu, Yingai Shi, Chad D Markert, Zejing Wang, Guihua Liu, Michael W Lawlor, Emily C Moorefield, Tara N Jones, James A Fugate, Mark E Furth, Charles E Murry, Hannele Ruohola-Baker, Yuanyuan Zhang, Luis F Santana, Martin K Childe

Abstract

The ability to extract somatic cells from a patient and reprogram them to pluripotency opens up new possibilities for personalized medicine. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have been employed to generate beating cardiomyocytes from a patient's skin or blood cells. Here, iPSC methods were used to generate cardiomyocytes starting from the urine of a patient with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Urine was chosen as a starting material because it contains adult stem cells called urine-derived stem cells (USCs). USCs express the canonical reprogramming factors c-myc and klf4, and possess high telomerase activity. Pluripotency of urine-derived iPSC clones was confirmed by immunocytochemistry, RT-PCR and teratoma formation. Urine-derived iPSC clones generated from healthy volunteers and a DMD patient were differentiated into beating cardiomyocytes using a series of small molecules in monolayer culture. Results indicate that cardiomyocytes retain the DMD patient's dystrophin mutation. Physiological assays suggest that dystrophin-deficient cardiomyocytes possess phenotypic differences from normal cardiomyocytes. These results demonstrate the feasibility of generating cardiomyocytes from a urine sample and that urine-derived cardiomyocytes retain characteristic features that might be further exploited for mechanistic studies and drug discovery.

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