Concordant but Varied Phenotypes among Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Patient-Specific Myoblasts Derived using a Human iPSC-Based Model

In Young Choi(Johns Hopkins University), Hotae Lim(Johns Hopkins University), Kenneth Estrellas(Kennedy Krieger Institute), Jyothi Mula(Kennedy Krieger Institute), Tatiana V. Cohen(Kennedy Krieger Institute), Yuanfan Zhang(Kennedy Krieger Institute), Christopher J. Donnelly(Johns Hopkins University), Jean‐Philippe Richard(Johns Hopkins University), Yong Jun Kim(Johns Hopkins University), Hyesoo Kim(Johns Hopkins University), Yasuhiro Kazuki(Tottori University), Mitsuo Oshimura(Tottori University), Hongmei Lisa Li(Kyoto University), Akitsu Hotta(Kyoto University), Jeffrey Rothstein(Johns Hopkins University), Nicholas J. Maragakis(Johns Hopkins University), Kathryn R. Wagner(Kennedy Krieger Institute), Gabsang Lee(Johns Hopkins University)
Cell Reports
May 27, 2016
Cited by 183Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) remains an intractable genetic disease. Althogh there are several animal models of DMD, there is no human cell model that carries patient-specific DYSTROPHIN mutations. Here, we present a human DMD model using human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). Our model reveals concordant disease-related phenotypes with patient-dependent variation, which are partially reversed by genetic and pharmacological approaches. Our "chemical-compound-based" strategy successfully directs hiPSCs into expandable myoblasts, which exhibit a myogenic transcriptional program, forming striated contractile myofibers and participating in muscle regeneration in vivo. DMD-hiPSC-derived myoblasts show disease-related phenotypes with patient-to-patient variability, including aberrant expression of inflammation or immune-response genes and collagens, increased BMP/TGFβ signaling, and reduced fusion competence. Furthermore, by genetic correction and pharmacological "dual-SMAD" inhibition, the DMD-hiPSC-derived myoblasts and genetically corrected isogenic myoblasts form "rescued" multi-nucleated myotubes. In conclusion, our findings demonstrate the feasibility of establishing a human "DMD-in-a-dish" model using hiPSC-based disease modeling.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis