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2 additional projects are components of the Dysregulation of miRNA-9 in a subset of schizophrenia patient-derived neural progenitor cells.
Cell-based models of many neurological and psychiatric diseases, established by reprogramming patient somatic cells into human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), have now been reported. While numerous reports have demonstrated that neuronal cells differentiated from hiPSCs are electrophysiologically active mature neurons, the “age” of these cells relative to cells in the human brain remains unresolved. Comparisons of gene expression profiles of hiPSC-derived neural progenitor cells (NPCs) and neurons to the Allen BrainSpan Atlas indicate that hiPSC neural cells most resemble first trimester neural tissue. Consequently, we posit that hiPSC-derived neural cells may most accurately be used to model the early developmental defects that contribute to disease predisposition rather than the late features of the disease. Though the characteristic symptoms of schizophrenia SZ generally appear late in adolescence, it is now thought to be a neurodevelopmental condition, often predated by a prodromal period that can appear in early childhood. Postmortem studies of SZ brain tissue typically describe defects in mature neurons, such as reduced neuronal size and spine density in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus, but abnormalities of neuronal organization, particularly in the cortex, have also been reported. We postulated that defects in cortical organization in SZ might result from abnormal migration of neural cells. To test this hypothesis, we directly reprogrammed fibroblasts from SZ patients into hiPSCs and subsequently differentiated these disorder-specific hiPSCs into NPCs. SZ hiPSC differentiated into forebrain NPCs have altered expression of a number of cellular adhesion genes and WNT signaling.
Methods: We compared global transcription of forebrain NPCs from six control and four SZ patients by RNAseq.
Results: Multi-dimensional scaling (MDS) resolved most SZ and control hiPSC NPC samples; 848 genes were significantly differentially expressed (FDR<0.01)
Conclusions: The WNT signaling pathway was enriched 2-fold (fisher exact test p-value = 0.031).
Overall design: 1-2 independent differentiations (biological replicates) for each of four control and four schizophrenia patients were analyzed; samples were generated in parallel to neuron RNAseq data.
Accession | PRJNA268951; GEO: GSE63738 |
Data Type | Transcriptome or Gene expression |
Scope | Multiisolate |
Organism | Homo sapiens[Taxonomy ID: 9606] Eukaryota; Metazoa; Chordata; Craniata; Vertebrata; Euteleostomi; Mammalia; Eutheria; Euarchontoglires; Primates; Haplorrhini; Catarrhini; Hominidae; Homo; Homo sapiens |
Publications | - Topol A et al., "Dysregulation of miRNA-9 in a Subset of Schizophrenia Patient-Derived Neural Progenitor Cells.", Cell Rep, 2016 May 3;15(5):1024-1036
- Topol A et al., "Altered WNT Signaling in Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Neural Progenitor Cells Derived from Four Schizophrenia Patients.", Biol Psychiatry, 2015 Sep 15;78(6):e29-34
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Grants | - "Contrasting causal microRNAs in forebrain and midbrain COS hiPSC neural cells" (Grant ID R01 MH101454, NIH National Institute of Mental Health)
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Submission | Registration date: 1-Dec-2014 Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai |
Relevance | Medical |
Project Data:
Resource Name | Number of Links |
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Sequence data |
SRA Experiments | 12 |
Publications |
PubMed | 2 |
PMC | 2 |
Other datasets |
BioSample | 12 |
GEO DataSets | 1 |