TOPIC

How to differentiate induced pluripotent stem cells into sensory neurons for disease modelling: a comparison of two protocols

Journal

Stem Cell Research and Therapy

Author(s)

Kalia, A. K., Rösseler, C., Granja-vazquez, R., Ahmad, A., Pancrazio, J. J., Neureiter, A., Zhang, M., Sauter, D., Vetter, I., Andersson, A., Dussor, G., Price, T. J., Kolber, B. J., Truong, V., Walsh, P., & Lampert, A.

Year

2024

Human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived peripheral sensory neurons present a valuable tool to model human diseases and are a source for applications in drug discovery and regenerative medicine. Clinically, peripheral sensory neuropathies can result in maladies ranging from a complete loss of pain to severe painful neuropathic symptoms. Sensory neurons are located in the dorsal root ganglion and are comprised of functionally diverse neuronal types. Low efficiency, reproducibility concerns, variations arising due to genetic factors and time needed to generate functionally mature neuronal populations from iPSCs for disease modelling remain key challenges to study human nociception in vitro. Here, we report a detailed characterization of iPSC-derived sensory neurons with an accelerated differentiation protocol (“Anatomic” protocol) compared to the most commonly used small molecule approach (“Chambers” protocol).

Keywords: Q2 2024

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