Scalable Production of iPSC-Derived Human Neurons to Identify Tau-Lowering Compounds by High-Content Screening

Chao Wang(Gladstone Institutes), Michael E. Ward(National Institutes of Health), Robert Y. Chen(University of California, San Francisco), Kai Liu(Gladstone Institutes), Tara E. Tracy(Gladstone Institutes), Xu Chen(Gladstone Institutes), Min Xie(Gladstone Institutes), Peter Sohn(Gladstone Institutes), Connor Ludwig(University of California, San Francisco), Anke Meyer‐Franke(Gladstone Institutes), Celeste M. Karch(Washington University in St. Louis), Sheng Ding(Gladstone Institutes), Li Gan(Gladstone Institutes)
Stem Cell Reports
September 29, 2017
Cited by 462Open Access
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Abstract

Lowering total tau levels is an attractive therapeutic strategy for Alzheimer's disease and other tauopathies. High-throughput screening in neurons derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) is a powerful tool to identify tau-targeted therapeutics. However, such screens have been hampered by heterogeneous neuronal production, high cost and low yield, and multi-step differentiation procedures. We engineered an isogenic iPSC line that harbors an inducible neurogenin 2 transgene, a transcription factor that rapidly converts iPSCs to neurons, integrated at the AAVS1 locus. Using a simplified two-step protocol, we differentiated these iPSCs into cortical glutamatergic neurons with minimal well-to-well variability. We developed a robust high-content screening assay to identify tau-lowering compounds in LOPAC and identified adrenergic receptors agonists as a class of compounds that reduce endogenous human tau. These techniques enable the use of human neurons for high-throughput screening of drugs to treat neurodegenerative disease.


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