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REST suppression mediates neural conversion of adult human fibroblasts via microRNA‐dependent and ‐independent pathways

Authors :
Per Ludvik Brattås
Daniella Rylander Ottosson
Romina Vuono
Lucy M Collins
Lennart Minthon
Janelle Drouin-Ouellet
Johan Jakobsson
Annika Andersson Sjöland
Daniela A. Grassi
Caroline Graff
Shong Lau
Malin Parmar
Håkan Toresson
Roger A. Barker
Karolina Pircs
Gunilla Westergren-Thorsson
Jakobsson, Johan [0000-0003-0669-7673]
Parmar, Malin [0000-0001-5002-4199]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
BASE-Bielefeld Academic Search Engine, EMBO Molecular Medicine
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Embo, 2017.

Abstract

Direct conversion of human fibroblasts into mature and functional neurons, termed induced neurons (iNs), was achieved for the first time 6 years ago. This technology offers a promising shortcut for obtaining patient‐ and disease‐specific neurons for disease modeling, drug screening, and other biomedical applications. However, fibroblasts from adult donors do not reprogram as easily as fetal donors, and no current reprogramming approach is sufficiently efficient to allow the use of this technology using patient‐derived material for large‐scale applications. Here, we investigate the difference in reprogramming requirements between fetal and adult human fibroblasts and identify REST as a major reprogramming barrier in adult fibroblasts. Via functional experiments where we overexpress and knockdown the REST‐controlled neuron‐specific microRNAs miR‐9 and miR‐124, we show that the effect of REST inhibition is only partially mediated via microRNA up‐regulation. Transcriptional analysis confirmed that REST knockdown activates an overlapping subset of neuronal genes as microRNA overexpression and also a distinct set of neuronal genes that are not activated via microRNA overexpression. Based on this, we developed an optimized one‐step method to efficiently reprogram dermal fibroblasts from elderly individuals using a single‐vector system and demonstrate that it is possible to obtain iNs of high yield and purity from aged individuals with a range of familial and sporadic neurodegenerative disorders including Parkinson9s, Huntington9s, as well as Alzheimer9s disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17574676
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BASE-Bielefeld Academic Search Engine, EMBO Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17c821b0e0bcf5dd008b2082f6af5029