We present here a protocol for the differentiation of human induced pluripotent stem cells into each somite derivative (myotome, sclerotome, dermatome, and syndetome) in chemically defined conditions, which has applications in future disease modeling and cell-based therapies in orthopedic surgery.
In response to signals such as WNTs, bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), and sonic hedgehog (SHH) secreted from surrounding tissues, somites (SMs) give rise to multiple cell types, including the myotome (MYO), sclerotome (SCL), dermatome (D), and syndetome (SYN), which in turn develop into skeletal muscle, axial skeleton, dorsal dermis, and axial tendon/ligament, respectively. Therefore, the generation of SMs and their derivatives from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) is critical to obtain pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) for application in regenerative medicine and for disease research in the field of orthopedic surgery. Although the induction protocols for MYO and SCL from PSCs have been previously reported by several researchers, no study has yet demonstrated the induction of SYN and D from iPSCs. Therefore, efficient induction of fully competent SMs remains a major challenge. Here, we recapitulate human SM patterning with human iPSCs in vitro by mimicking the signaling environment during chick/mouse SM development, and report on methods of systematic induction of SM derivatives (MYO, SCL, D, and SYN) from human iPSCs under chemically defined conditions through the presomitic mesoderm (PSM) and SM states. Knowledge regarding chick/mouse SM development was successfully applied to the induction of SMs with human iPSCs. This method could be a novel tool for studying human somitogenesis and patterning without the use of embryos and for cell-based therapy and disease modeling.
Developing a directed differentiation method for a desired cell type from PSCs is a necessary step for translating the study of PSC-derived cells into clinical applications. Forced expression of key genes is a promising strategy for organ-cell differentiation from PSCs and has improved our understanding of the genetic regulation of cell fate determination, organ morphogenesis, and organization during embryogenesis1. In addition, recapitulating the endogenous signaling environments, using the development of mouse and chick embryos as a roadmap, is considered essential for the directed differentiation of PSCs. However, given the application of PSC-derived cells in clinical studies such as cell-based therapies, the latter strategy is more suitable because it does not require gene manipulation.
Several studies have reported the induction of mesoderm from human and mouse PSCs in chemically defined conditions. Typically, these methods have relied on activin/nodal/transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) signaling and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling, believed to perform meso-endoderm and mesoderm differentiation, resulting in a low induction efficiency of the paraxial mesoderm (approximately 20%)2. In other words, the PSC-derived mesoderm induced by these signaling pathways was mainly lateral plate mesoderm, and not paraxial mesoderm. Recently, a few studies have demonstrated the efficient production of PSC-derived paraxial mesoderm based on different strategies3,4,5,6,7,8. In these studies, PSCs were cultured with relatively high concentrations of glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) inhibitors (WNT signaling activators), consequently the induction efficiency of paraxial mesoderm reached 70%–95%6,7.
In somitogenesis, the paraxial mesoderm first forms the presomitic mesoderm (PSM) posteriorly, and then forms somites (SMs) in the anterior part through mesenchyme-to-epithelial transition9,10. Notch ligand Delta-like 1 (DLL1) is known to have a pivotal role during somitogenesis, as oscillatory control of DLL1 expression, both in mRNA and protein level, regulates SM segmentation. SMs eventually subdivide into two parts, giving rise to the dermomyotome (DM) dorsally and sclerotome (SCL) ventrally11. Subsequently, the DM differentiates into the dermatome (D), a precursor of the dermis, and myotome (MYO), a precursor of skeletal muscle; additionally, a ventral portion of SCL forms the syndetome (SYN), a precursor of tendons and ligaments12 (Figure 1). Some researchers have reported the induction of PSC-derived SM derivatives such as MYO4,13 and SCL14; however, there are several limitations in these studies. Notably, since our knowledge of the signaling environments of D and SYN is fragmentary, induction protocols for D and SYN have not yet been systematically established. To demonstrate the full-competence of SMs induced from PSCs, it is essential to show the multi-differentiation capacity of induced SMs into all four derivatives (D, MYO, SCL, and SYN), while previous studies have only focused on specific SM derivatives. Here, we report on how to generate all four SM derivatives, including D and SYN, through PSM and SM fates from human iPSCs15. We believe that establishing an in vitro stepwise method that models the SM development process could contribute to the study of how human SM develops during embryogenesis, without using embryos.
All experimental protocols involving human iPSCs were approved by the Ethics Committee of the Department of Medicine and Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University.
1. Human iPSCs Preparation Before Induction
NOTE: Culture human iPSCs (201B7-PAX3-GFP) on SNL feeder cells16 with primate ES cell medium supplemented with 4 ng/mL recombinant human basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF2) and 0.5% penicillin and streptomycin (hereinafter referred to as hESC medium, see Table 1). When the confluence ratio reaches 70%–80%, passage the cells as previously described17.
2. PSM Differentiation and Isolation by Fluorescence-activated Cell Sorting (FACS)
3. SM Differentiation from PSM
4. SM Derivatives (DM, MYO, D, SCL, SYN) Differentiation from SM
NOTE: To demonstrate the full-competence of SM cells, first perform DM (dermomyotome) and SCL (sclerotome) induction accordingly using iPSC-derived SM cells. Subsequently, perform MYO (myotome) and D (dermatome) induction using the DM cells, and conduct SYN (syndetome) induction using the SCL cells. Below are the protocols for the induction of each derivative (DM, MYO, D, SCL, and SYN) from induced SM cells in vitro.
5. Characterization of iPSC-derived Products
NOTE: Upon differentiation, characterize human iPSCs derivatives using quantitative real-time PCR (RT-qPCR), immunocytochemistry (ICC), enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA), and mechanical stretch stimulation assays, accordingly.
All figures in this report were obtained with 201B7-PAX3-GFP iPSCs, in which EGFP replaces one allele of the PAX3 coding sequence in exon 1. Establishment of 201B7-PAX3-GFP iPSCs will be described elsewhere (H. Sakurai, personal communication). The statistical significance was evaluated using statistical software. P-values lower than 0.05 were considered significant.
Characterization of human iPSC-derived PSM and SM cells
To assess the differentiation of human iPSCs toward SM through the PSM state (Figure 2A), FACS analysis, ICC analysis, and RT-qPCR analysis were performed. As shown in Figure 2B, over 85% of the cells were positive for DLL1, a marker of PSM, but negative for PAX3, a marker of SM, after 4 days of PSM induction with human iPSCs. Subsequently, this population became PAX3 positive SM cells after 4 days of SM induction. The PSM-SM transition was also confirmed by ICC (Figure 2C) and RT-qPCR (Figure 2D). TBX6, MSGN1, and WNT3A, PSM markers were expressed at the PSM state (day 4), but not expressed at the SM state (day 8). PARAXIS, MEOX1, and PAX3, SM markers, were expressed at SM, but not expressed at PSM. Furthermore, staining of CDH11, a marker of epithelialized SM, only accumulated at the cell-cell junction, following the addition of SB431542 with CHIR99021 (Figure 2E).
Characterization of SM derivatives induced from human iPSC-derived SM cells
To evaluate the differentiation potency of human iPSC-derived SM, differentiation toward DM, MYO, D, SCL, and SYN (Figure 3A) was assessed by ICC analysis and PAX3 (GFP)-fluorescence. As shown in Figure 3B, DM differentiation was confirmed by ALX4 and EN1 staining, and PAX3 (GFP)-fluorescence; MYO differentiation was confirmed by MYOD, MYOG, and Myosin heavy chain (MHC) staining; D differentiation was confirmed by EN1 and PDGFRa staining; SCL differentiation was confirmed by PAX1, PAX9, and NKX3.2 staining; and SYN differentiation was confirmed by SCX, MKX, COL1A1, and COL1A2 staining.
Characterization of induced D and SYN
1. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for functional analysis of iPSC-derived D
In the human body, one of the primary functions of dermal fibroblasts is to secrete extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins, such as collagen and hyaluronic acid that hydrate the skin and help sustain the skin structure. To demonstrate that a comparable amount of collagen-type 1 and hyaluronic acid proteins were secreted in the culture medium of iPSC-derived D and HDF, ELISA was performed, as shown in Figure 4A.
2. Mechanical stretch stimulation assay for functional analysis of iPSC-derived SYN
As several studies have already reported, mechanical stimulation affects tendon development before and after birth, and promotes the differentiation of tenocytes from precursor cells18,19. Therefore, it is well known that reactivity to mechanical stress is one of the characteristics of tenocytes. To demonstrate the comparable reactivity of human iPSC-derived SYN and human adult tenocytes, a mechanical stretch stimulation assay was performed as shown in Figure 4B.
Figure 1: Schematic view of hierarchical differentiation of paraxial mesoderm. Presomitic mesoderm is a cell population that transiently emerges during early embryogenesis and undergoes segmentation to form somites. Somites are a transient stem cell population that gives rise to multiple cell types, such as sclerotome, dermomyotome, syndetome, dermatome, and myotome cells, which eventually differentiate into tendon/Ligament, bone/cartilage, skeletal muscle, and dermis cells. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: FACS, RT-qPCR, and ICC analysis of human iPSC-derived PSM and SM. (A) Schematic view of a protocol for SM differentiation through PSM. (B) Representative dot plot of DLL1 staining and PAX3 (GFP)-fluorescence on day 4 of PSM induction and day 4 (day 8 from iPSC) of SM induction. (C) Representative immunocytochemical images and PAX3 (GFP)-fluorescence on day 4 of PSM induction and day 4 (day 8 from iPSC) of SM induction. Cells were stained with anti-TBX6, PARAXIS, and MEOX1 antibodies (red) and co-stained with DAPI (blue) or detected with PAX3 (GFP)-fluorescence (green). (D) RT-qPCR analysis of markers for PSM and SM at iPSC, PSM and SM. The means ± standard error (S.E.) from three sets of experiments are shown. (E) Representative immunocytochemical images on day 4 (day 8 from iPSC) of SM, cultured in S10I10 (combination of SB431542 and IWR1, an inhibitor of WNT signaling), S10 (SB431542), and S10C5 (combination of SB431542 and CHIR99021) conditions. Cells were stained with anti-CDH11 antibody (red) and co-stained with DAPI (blue). iPS, induced pluripotent stem cell; PSM, presomitic mesoderm; SM, somite; S10, SB431542 10 μM; C5, CHIR99021 5 μM; I10, IWR1 10 μM; Scale bars = 50 μm. This figure has been modified from Nakajima et al. (2018)15. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: ICC analysis of DM, MYO, D, SCL, and SYN differentiated from human iPSC-derived SM. (A) Schematic view of protocols for SM derivatives differentiation. (B) Representative immunocytochemical images and PAX3 (GFP)-fluorescence on day 3 (day 11 from iPSC) of DM induction, day 30 (day 41 from iPSC) of MYO induction, day 9 (day 20 from iPSC) of D induction, day 3 (day 11 from iPSC) of SCL induction, and day 21 (day 32 from iPSC) of SYN induction. DM, cells were stained with anti-ALX4 and EN1 antibodies (red) and co-stained with DAPI (blue) or detected with PAX3 (GFP)-fluorescence (green); MYO, cells were stained with anti-MYOD, MYOG (red), and MHC (cyan) antibodies, also co-stained with DAPI (blue); D, cells were stained with anti-EN1 (red) and PDGFRa (cyan) antibodies and co-stained with DAPI (blue); SCL, cells were stained with anti-PAX1, PAX9, and NKX3.2 (red) antibodies, and co-stained with DAPI (blue); SYN, cells were stained with anti-SCX, MKX, COL1A1, and COL1A2 (red) antibodies, and co-stained with DAPI (blue). DM, dermomyotome; MYO, myotome; D, dermatome; SCL, sclerotome; SYN, syndetome; Scale bars = 50 μm. This figure has been modified from Nakajima et al. (2018)15. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Functional assay of induced D and SYN. (A) The amount of collagen-type 1 and hyaluronic acid proteins in the culture medium were analyzed by ELISA. (B) The effect of mechanical stretch stimulation on induced SYN and human adult tenocytes was assessed by RT-qPCR. The means ± standard error (S.E.) from three sets of experiments are shown. *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001 by Dunnett’s multiple comparisons t-test compared to Stretch (-); n.s, not significant, HDF, human adult dermal fibroblast. This figure has been modified from Nakajima et al. (2018)15. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Medium/solution | Reagant | Concentration |
CDM basal medium | Iscove’s modified Dulbecco’s medium/Ham’s F12 | 1:1 |
Penicillin/Streptomycin | 0.5 % | |
Chemically defined lipid concentrate | 1 % | |
Apo-transferrin | 15 mg/mL | |
Monothioglycerol | 450 mM | |
Bovine serum albumin | 5 mg/mL | |
Insulin | 7 mg/mL | |
CTK solution | Water | – |
Trypsin | 0.25 % | |
Collagenase IV | 0.1 mg/mL | |
Calcium chloride | 1 mM | |
Knockout SR | 20 % | |
D induction medium | CDM basal medium | – |
CHIR99021 | 5 µM | |
BMP4 | 10 ng/mL | |
DM induction medium | CDM basal medium | – |
CHIR99021 | 5 µM | |
BMP4 | 10 ng/mL | |
ECM solution | Artificial extracellular matrix | 0.3 mg/mL |
DMEM/F12 | – | |
FACS buffer | PBS | – |
Bovine serum albumin | 0.1 % | |
Feeder-free cell culture medium | mTeSR1 | – |
Penicillin/Streptomycin | 0.5 % | |
HDF culture medium | DMEM | – |
Fetal bovine serum | 10 % | |
hESC medium | Primate ES cell medium | – |
Penicillin/Streptomycin | 0.5 % | |
FGF2 | 4 ng/mL | |
MYO induction medium | CDM basal medium | – |
CHIR99021 | 5 µM | |
PSM induction medium | CDM basal medium | – |
SB431542 | 10 µM | |
CHIR99021 | 10 µM | |
DMH1 | 2 µM | |
FGF2 | 20 ng/mL | |
SCL induction medium | CDM basal medium | – |
SAG | 100 nM | |
LDN193189 | 0.6 µM | |
SM induction medium | CDM basal medium | – |
SB431542 | 10 µM | |
CHIR99021 | 5 µM | |
SYN induction medium-1 | CDM basal medium | – |
FGF8 | 20 ng/mL | |
SYN induction medium-2 | CDM basal medium | – |
BMP7 | 10 ng/mL | |
TGFβ3 | 10 ng/mL |
Table 1: Media and solution recipes.
NAME | Forward | Reverse |
ACTB | CACCATTGGCAATGAGCGGTTC | AGGTCTTTGCGGATGTCCACGT |
COL1A1 | GGACACAGAGGTTTCAGTGGT | GCACCATCATTTCCACGAGC |
MEOX1 | GAGATTGCGGTAAACCTGGA | GAACTTGGAGAGGCTGTGGA |
MSGN1 | GGAGAAGCTCAGGATGAGGA | GTCTGTGAGTTCCCCGATGT |
PARAXIS | TCCTGGAGAGCTGTGAGGAT | CACACCCTGTCACCAACAGT |
PAX3 | AGGAAGGAGGCAGAGGAAAG | CAGCTGTTCTGCTGTGAAGG |
SCX | CCCAAACAGATCTGCACCTTC | GCGAATCGCTGTCTTTCTGTC |
TBX6 | AGCCTGTGTCTTTCCATCGT | AGGCTGTCACGGAGATGAAT |
TNMD | CCCTTCATGCTGAAGCCACTT | CTCACTTTCAGCAGAATTGGGG |
WNT3A | CAAGATTGGCATCCAGGAGT | ATGAGCGTGTCACTGCAAAG |
Table 2: Primer sequences for RT-qPCR analysis.
Concentration | ||
1st Antibody |
ALX4_Goat | 1/50 |
CDH11_Mouse | 1/1000 | |
COL1A1_Rabbit | 1/100 | |
COL2A1_Mouse | 1-2 μg/mL | |
EN1_Rabbit | 1/50 | |
MEOX1_Rabbit | 1/50 | |
MHC_Rabbit | 1/200 | |
MKX_Rabbit | 1/50 | |
MYOD_Rabbit | 1/500 | |
MYOG_Mouse | 1/400 | |
NKX3.2_Rabbit | 1/50 | |
PARAXIS_Rabbit | 1/50 | |
PAX1_Rabbit | 1/50 | |
PAX9_Rabbit | 1/50 | |
PDGFRa_Goat | 1/100 | |
SCX_Rabbit | 1/50 | |
TBX6_Goat | 1/50 | |
2nd Antibody |
Donkey anti Goat IgG(H+L) secondary antibody555 | 1/500 |
Donkey anti Goat IgG(H+L) secondary antibody647 | 1/500 | |
Goat anti Mouse IgG(H+L) secondary antibody555 | 1/500 | |
Goat anti Rabbit IgG(H+L) secondary antibody555 | 1/500 | |
Goat anti Rabbit IgG(H+L) secondary antibody647 | 1/500 |
Table 3: First and second antibodies for ICC.
A well-known method for the induction of PSC-derived SM through PSM is the combination of CHIR99021 + A83-01 (TGFβ inhibitor) during PSM induction from PSC, but not during the PSM maturation process6. In the present study, WNT/beta-catenin signaling was inhibited using C59 to induce SM from PSM. However, we introduced the use of CHIR99021 to activate the WNT pathway during SM differentiation. This decision was made based on the finding that several WNTs are expressed in the surrounding tissues of SM and given the fact that WNT reporters are active in SM20. As a result, we observed epithelialization, a characteristic of SM in vivo, only under the condition with CHIR99021, based on the accumulation of CDH11 in cell-cell junctions (Figure 2E). This observation indicates the critical involvement of WNT signaling during PSM differentiation and SM epithelialization, therefore our protocol may better recapitulate the endogenous signaling environment. However, it also implies a further possibility of fine-tuning the WNT/beta-catenin signaling pathway during differentiation, because robustness and efficiency of differentiation might vary significantly depending on the cell types, cell lines, and various chemical compounds of WNT-inducers used by each researcher.
This method also allows us to generate all four SM derivatives, MYO, D, SCL, and SYN, from human iPSCs. Our stepwise protocols using CDM can be used to identify the signaling requirements during human somitogenesis/somite patterning, and provide important insights into human SM development. For example, our methods could be useful for studying segmentation clock mechanisms, a molecular oscillation system that regulates the formation of SM. It has been thoroughly investigated in mice, chicks, and zebrafish, but not in humans due to the lack of appropriate experimental tools.
Moreover, our method can be applicable to future clinical cell-based therapies. For example, human iPSC-derived D or SYN can be transplanted into severely injured skin or ruptured tendons for regeneration and treatment. However, several limitations need to be resolved before this method can be practically applied. Although in the present study, we used SNL feeder cells for iPSC maintenance and ECM solution, which is extracted from the Engelbreth-Holm-Swarm mouse sarcoma, as a surface coat on the dish during induction, these non-human animal-derived reagents should be removed to improve clinical quality. In addition, cell quantity and quality, which includes the purity and maturation of the desired cells, must also be improved. Furthermore, not only the cell number but also the cell strength is an important characteristic for tendon/ligament regeneration. Additionally, the development of surface markers for purification and a novel method for 3D reconstitution are indispensable in order to advance our protocols to clinical cell-based therapies.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We would like to thank Dr. Junya Toguchida (CiRA) for his help with project administration and funding acquisition, Mr. Mitsuaki Shibata (CiRA) and Ms. Mei Terashima (CiRA) for their technical assistance, Dr. Yayoi Toyooka (CiRA) and Dr. Daisuke Kamiya (CiRA) for their proofreading of the manuscript, and Mr. Masaya Todani (CiRA) for providing an illustration (Figure 1). We also thank all the members of the Ikeya and Toguchida laboratories (CiRA) for their support during this study. This work was supported by Grants-in-aid for Scientific Research from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) (26670661), the Program for Intractable Diseases Research Utilizing Disease-Specific iPS Cells from the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) and the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED), the Core Center for iPS Cell Research of the Research Center Network for the Realization of Regenerative Medicine (JST/AMED), and the iPS Cell Research Fund (in part to Makoto Ikeya and Junya Toguchida). Makoto Ikeya was also supported by Grants-in-aid for Scientific Research (JSPS) (16H05447) and the Acceleration Program for Intractable Diseases Research utilizing Disease-specific iPS cells (AMED).
ALX4_Goat antibody | Santacruz | sc-22066 | |
Apo-transferrin | Sigma | T1147 | |
BMP4 | R&D | 314-BP-010 | |
BMP7 | R&D | 354-BP-010 | |
Bovine serum albumin | Sigma | A8806 | |
Calcium chloride | Nacalai tesque | 067730-15 | |
CDH11_Mouse antibody | Cell signaling | 13577 | |
Cell streching device | Strex | STB-140 | |
Chemically defined lipid concentrate | Gibco | 11905-031 | |
CHIR99021 | Axon | 1386 | |
COL1A1_Rabbit antibody | Abcam | ab34710 | |
COL2A1_Mouse antibody | Thermo scientific | MS-235 | |
Collagenase IV | Thermofisher | 17104019 | |
DLL1 APC-conjugated_Mouse antibody | R&D | FAB1818A | For FACS |
DMEM | Sigma | D6046 | |
DMEM/F12 | Gibco | 11320-082 | |
DMH1 | Tocris | 4126 | |
EN1_Rabbit antibody | Abcam | ab70993 | |
Fetal bovine serum | Nichirei | 171012 | |
FGF2 | Wako | 060-04543 | |
FGF8 | Peprotech | 100-25 | |
Human dermal fibroblast | Cell applications | 160-05a | |
Human tenocyte | Angio proteomie | cAP-0041 | |
Insulin | Wako | 090-06474 | |
Iscove’s modified Dulbecco’s medium/Ham’s F12 | Gibco | 21056023 | |
Knockout SR | Gibco | 10828028 | |
LDN193189 | Axon | 1509 | |
Matrigel | BD bioscience | 354230 | Artificial extracellular matrix |
MEOX1_Rabbit antibody | Abcam | ab75895 | |
MHC_Rabbit antibody | Santacruz | sc-20641 | |
MKX_Rabbit antibody | Atlas antibodies | A83377 | |
Monothioglycerol | Sigma | M6145 | |
mTeSR1 | Stemcell tech | 85850 | |
Multi well-type silicon rubber chamber | Strex | STB-CH-4W | |
MYOD_Rabbit antibody | Abcam | ab133627 | |
MYOG_Mouse antibody | Santacruz | sc-12732 | |
NKX3.2_Rabbit antibody | Sigma | HPA027564 | |
Novex Donkey anti Goat IgG(H+L) secondary antibody555 | Invitrogen | A21432 | |
Novex Donkey anti Goat IgG(H+L) secondary antibody647 | Invitrogen | A21447 | |
Novex Goat anti Mouse IgG(H+L) secondary antibody555 | Invitrogen | A21422 | |
Novex Goat anti Rabbit IgG(H+L) secondary antibody555 | Invitrogen | A21428 | |
Novex Goat anti Rabbit IgG(H+L) secondary antibody647 | Invitrogen | A21245 | |
PARAXIS_Rabbit antibody | Santacruz | sc-98796 | |
PAX1_Rabbit antibody | Abcam | ab95227 | |
PAX9_Rabbit antibody | Gene tex | GTX104454 | |
PBS | – | – | |
PDGFRa_Goat | R&D | AF307 | |
Penicillin/Streptomycin | Invitrogen | 15140-122 | |
Primate ES cell medium | Reprocell | RCHEMD001 | |
SAG | Calbiochem | 566661 | |
SB431542 | Selleckchem | SEL-S1067-10 | |
SCX_Rabbit antibody | Abcam | ab58655 | |
TBX6_Goat antibody | R&D | AF4744 | |
Tendon cell growth medium | Angio-proteomie | cAP-40 | Tenocytes growth medium |
TGFβ3 | R&D | 243-B3-200 | |
Trypsin | Gibco | 15090046 |