A human Dravet syndrome model from patient induced pluripotent stem cells

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Abstract

Background: Dravet syndrome is a devastating infantile-onset epilepsy syndrome with cognitive deficits and autistic traits caused by genetic alterations in SCN1A gene encoding the α-subunit of the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.1. Disease modeling using patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) can be a powerful tool to reproduce this syndrome's human pathology. However, no such effort has been reported to date. We here report a cellular model for DS that utilizes patient-derived iPSCs. Results: We generated iPSCs from a Dravet syndrome patient with a c.4933C>T substitution in SCN1A, which is predicted to result in truncation in the fourth homologous domain of the protein (p.R1645*). Neurons derived from these iPSCs were primarily GABAergic (>50%), although glutamatergic neurons were observed as a minor population (<1%). Current-clamp analyses revealed significant impairment in action potential generation when strong depolarizing currents were injected. Conclusions: Our results indicate a functional decline in Dravet neurons, especially in the GABAergic subtype, which supports previous findings in murine disease models, where loss-of-function in GABAergic inhibition appears to be a main driver in epileptogenesis. Our data indicate that patient-derived iPSCs may serve as a new and powerful research platform for genetic disorders, including the epilepsies. © 2013 Higurashi et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

Figures

  • Figure 1 Characterization of generated iPSCs and neuronal differentiati arrowheads point to the c.4933C>T substitution. (B) iPSC morphology and im and SSEA4 without SSEA1). Scale bar, 500 μm. (C) iPSC-derived teratomas gen layers. Scale bar, 200 μm (neural rosettes and respiratory epithelium) and 400 the four reprogramming factors in both patient and control iPSCs compared (E) G-band karyotyping showed normal chromosome numbers (46,XX) in all t bodies (EB) and neurospheres (NS). Scale bar, 500 μm. (G) Expression of βIII-tu iPSC-derived neural cells. Scale bar, 200 μm. Day numbers indicate the days o
  • Figure 2 Nav channel expression in iPSC-derived neurons. (A) Real-time PCR addressing neuronal Nav expression at 30 days of differentiation (N = 3 in each cell line) Crossing point differences to β-actin (ΔCp = Cpβ-actin − CpNav) closer to zero indicate higher expression. PCR efficiencies were nearly identical (Additional file 2). Asterisks indicate a significant difference to SCN1A (P < 0.5, one-way ANOVA). Expression strength of the indicated Nav genes was constant across the cell lines (P = 0.92, two-way ANOVA) (B) Normalized expression levels for each Nav gene (SCN1A + SCN2A + SCN3A + SCN8A)/4 = 1. Compared to the control, SCN1A expression tended to be higher in D1-1 (P = 0.0929, one-way ANOVA), and it was significantly higher in D1-6 (*P = 0.0078). The distribution of Nav genes expression ratios in each cell line was significantly different between the control and the patient lines (P =0.0086 and <0.0001 for D1-1 and D1-6, respectively, two-way ANOVA), but identical between D1-1 and D1-6 (P = 0.11). (C) Sequencing of SCN1A reverse transcribed mRNA isolated from iPSCs-derived neurons. Patient-neurons show a double peak at mutation site (solid arrowheads), confirming the heterozygous state of the cells (D) Immunocytochemical characterization of Nav1.1 expression in control neurons: strong (solid arrows), moderate (open arrows), weak (solid arrowheads), and faint (open arrowhead). Despite weak staining in the cell body, neurite staining was often apparent (solid arrowheads). (E) Neurite co-localization of Nav1.1 and the AIS marker ankyrin G (AnkG, solid arrowheads). (F) PAN-Nav staining of SCN1A Venus-positive neurons (via anti-GFP, see Figure 3) in the AIS (arrowheads). (G) Co-localization of Nav1.1 and GAD67 staining. (H) VGlut1-positive neuron with SCN1A Venus expression. Scale bars: 100 μm (D), 30 μm (F), 200 μm (G) and 50 μm (others).
  • Figure 3 Structure and characterization of the lentiviral SCN1A-reporter used in the electrophysiological analyses. (A) The reporter comprised (50 to 30) a 1.2-kb upstream sequence, a 50-untranslated exon, the 50-end of the first coding exon, and, following the ATG start codon, Venus cDNA. (B) & (C) 201B7 neurons labeled for Venus (using a GFP antibody) and Nav1.1 (B) or GABA (C). (B) Open arrowheads indicate GFP-pseudopositive neurons lacking Nav1.1 staining. (C) GFP-positive neurons with (arrowhead) and without GABA staining (open arrowhead). Scale bars: 200 μm.
  • Figure 4 Electrophysiological characteristics of mature iPSC-derived n potential (AP) firing threshold, and voltage peak were identical across all ne (B) Representative traces of AP trains triggered by a 500-ms depolarizing cu membrane potential. Scale bars: 20 mV vs. 100 ms. (C) Action potential (AP percentage: 10th/1st AP amplitude. Control vs. D1-1 (P = 0.078) and D1-6 (*P during the 500-ms stimulation period vs. current injection intensity. When produced significantly fewer APs compared to the control (the slope of AP respectively, ANCOVA, *P <0.05 for D1-6 only, **P <0.05 for both D1-1 and D
  • Table 1 Primer details for real-time PCR

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Higurashi, N., Uchida, T., Lossin, C., Misumi, Y., Okada, Y., Akamatsu, W., … Hirose, S. (2013). A human Dravet syndrome model from patient induced pluripotent stem cells. Molecular Brain, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-6606-6-19

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