Transcription factor overexpression drives reliable differentiation of retinal pigment epithelium from human induced pluripotent stem cells

•High-throughput generation of patient-derived retinal pigment epithelium from iPSCs.•Transcription factor-driven differentiation imparts robustness and reproducibility.•Pigmented, functional RPE produced without the need for enrichment.•Scalable method across donor iPSC lines facilitates translatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Stem cell research 2021-05, Vol.53, p.102368-102368, Article 102368
Hauptverfasser: Dewell, Tessa E., Gjoni, Ketrin, Liu, Angela Z., Libby, Ashley R.G., Moore, Anthony T., So, Po-Lin, Conklin, Bruce R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•High-throughput generation of patient-derived retinal pigment epithelium from iPSCs.•Transcription factor-driven differentiation imparts robustness and reproducibility.•Pigmented, functional RPE produced without the need for enrichment.•Scalable method across donor iPSC lines facilitates translational applicability. Age-related macular degeneration and genetic forms of blindness such as Best Disease and Retinitis Pigmentosa can be caused by degeneration of the Retinal Pigment Epithelium (RPE). RPE generated from patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) is valuable for both the study of disease mechanisms and development of therapeutic strategies. However, protocols to produce iPSC-derived RPE in vitro are often inefficient, labor-intensive, low-throughput, and highly variable between cell lines and within batches. Here, we report a robust, scalable method to generate iPSC-RPE using doxycycline-inducible expression of eye field transcription factors OTX2, PAX6 and MITF paired with RPE-permissive culture media. Doxycycline addition induces exogenous expression of these transcription factors in Best Disease patient- and wildtype iPSCs to efficiently produce monolayers of RPE with characteristic morphology and gene expression. Further, these RPE monolayers display functionality features including light absorption via pigmentation, polarity-driven fluid transport, and phagocytosis. With this method, we achieve a highly efficient and easily scalable differentiation without the need for mechanical isolation or enrichment methods, generating RPE cultures applicable for in vitro studies.
ISSN:1873-5061
1876-7753
DOI:10.1016/j.scr.2021.102368