Use of adeno-associated virus to enrich cardiomyocytes derived from human stem cells

Cardiomyocytes derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) show great promise as autologous donor cells to treat heart disease. A major technical obstacle to this approach is that available induction methods often produce heterogeneous cell population with low percentage of cardiomyocyt...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human gene therapy. Clinical development 2015-07, p.150715074418003
Hauptverfasser: Guan, Xuan, Wang, Zejing, Czerniecki, Stefan, Mack, David, François, Virginie, Blouin, Veronique, Moullier, Philippe, Childers, Martin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cardiomyocytes derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) show great promise as autologous donor cells to treat heart disease. A major technical obstacle to this approach is that available induction methods often produce heterogeneous cell population with low percentage of cardiomyocytes. Here we describe a cardiac enrichment approach using non-integrating adeno-associated virus (AAV). We first examined several AAV serotypes for their ability to selectively transduce iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes. Result showed that AAV1 demonstrated the highest in vitro transduction efficiency among seven widely used serotypes. Next differentiated iPSC derivatives were transduced with drug-selectable AAV1 expressing neomycin resistance gene. Selection with G418 enriched the cardiac cell fraction from 27% to 57% in two weeks. Compared to other enrichment strategies such as integrative genetic selection, mitochondria labeling or surface marker cell sorting, this simple AAV method described herein bypasses antibody or dye labeling. These findings provide proof-of-concept for large-scale cardiomyocyte enrichment by exploiting AAV's intrinsic tissue tropism.
ISSN:2324-8637
2324-8645
DOI:10.1089/hum.2015.052