Here, we present a method for reproducible generation of ventral midbrain patterned astrocytes from hiPSCs and protocols for their characterization to assess phenotype and function.
In Parkinson’s disease, progressive dysfunction and degeneration of dopamine neurons in the ventral midbrain cause life-changing symptoms. Neuronal degeneration has diverse causes in Parkinson’s, including non-cell autonomous mechanisms mediated by astrocytes. Throughout the CNS, astrocytes are essential for neuronal survival and function, as they maintain metabolic homeostasis in the neural environment. Astrocytes interact with the immune cells of the CNS, microglia, to modulate neuroinflammation, which is observed from the earliest stages of Parkinson’s, and has a direct impact on the progression of its pathology. In diseases with a chronic neuroinflammatory element, including Parkinson’s, astrocytes acquire a neurotoxic phenotype, and thus enhance neurodegeneration. Consequently, astrocytes are a potential therapeutic target to slow or halt disease, but this will require a deeper understanding of their properties and roles in Parkinson’s. Accurate models of human ventral midbrain astrocytes for in vitro study are therefore urgently required.
We have developed a protocol to generate high purity cultures of ventral midbrain-specific astrocytes (vmAstros) from hiPSCs that can be used for Parkinson’s research. vmAstros can be routinely produced from multiple hiPSC lines, and express specific astrocytic and ventral midbrain markers. This protocol is scalable, and thus suitable for high-throughput applications, including for drug screening. Crucially, the hiPSC derived-vmAstros demonstrate immunomodulatory characteristics typical of their in vivo counterparts, enabling mechanistic studies of neuroinflammatory signaling in Parkinson’s.
Parkinson's disease affects 2%-3% of people over 65 years of age, making it the most prevalent neurodegenerative movement disorder1. It is caused by degeneration of ventral midbrain dopamine neurons within the substantia nigra, resulting in debilitating motor symptoms, as well as frequent cognitive and psychiatric issues2. Parkinson's pathology is typified by aggregates of the protein, α-synuclein, which are toxic to neurons and result in their dysfunction and death1,2,3. As the dopaminergic neurons are the degenerating population in Parkinson's, they were historically the focus of research. However, it is apparent that another cell type in the brain, the astrocytes, also demonstrate abnormalities in Parkinson's, and are believed to contribute to degeneration in models of Parkinson's4,5,6,7.
Astrocytes are a heterogenous cell population that can transform both physically and functionally as required. They support neuronal function and health via a plethora of mechanisms, including the modulation of neuronal signaling, shaping of synaptic architecture, and trophic support of neuronal populations via secretion of specific factors6,8,9,10. However, astrocytes also have a substantial immunomodulatory role, integral to the development and propagation of neuroinflammation10,11. Neuroinflammation is observed in the brains of Parkinson’s patients, and significantly has recently been shown to pre-empt the onset of Parkinson's symptoms12,13,14,15, thereby taking the center stage in Parkinson's research.
At a cellular level, astrocytes are said to become reactive in response to injury, infection, or disease, as an attempt to facilitate neuroprotection9,6,10,16. Reactivity describes a shift in astrocyte phenotype characterized by changes in gene expression, secretome, morphology, and mechanisms of clearance of cell debris and toxic byproducts9,10,11,17. This reactive shift occurs in response to inductive signals from microglia, which are the immune cells of the CNS and the first responders to injury and disease9. Both astrocytes and microglia respond to inflammatory signals by moderating their own function and can transduce inflammatory signals and thus directly influence neuroinflammation9,10. However, the chronic nature of Parkinson's results in a transition where reactive astrocytes become toxic to neurons, and themselves promote degeneration and disease pathology6,9,10,18,19. Significantly it was recently demonstrated that blocking the transformation of astrocytes into the reactive neurotoxic phenotype prevents the progression of Parkinson's in animal models11. Astrocyte reactivity in the paradigm of neuroinflammation has therefore become a major focus of Parkinson's research, and similarly relates to a wide spectrum of diseases of the CNS. Together these findings build a picture of significant astrocytic involvement in the etiology of Parkinson's, emphasizing the need for accurate research models that recapitulate the phenotype of the human astrocyte populations that are involved in Parkinson's.
In the embryonic brain, neurons appear first, with the astroglial lineage, namely, the astrocytes and oligodendrocytes, appearing later in development6. In vivo and in vitro studies have highlighted a number of signaling pathways that appear to control the potency of neural progenitor cells from neuronal to astroglial derivatives. In particular, JAK/STAT, EGF, and BMP signaling play roles in the proliferation, differentiation, and maturation of astroglia20,21. These pathways have been the focus of in vitro protocols for the generation of astrocytes from pluripotent cells, including hiPSC6,22,23. There have been many successful examples of generating astrocytes from hiPSCs6,24,25. However, it is apparent that in vivo astrocytes in the CNS possess specific regional identities, which relate directly to their function, in accordance with the specific requirements of those astrocytes in relation to their specialized neuronal neighbors17,24,25,26. For example, relating specifically to the ventral midbrain, it has been demonstrated that astrocytes in this region express specific sets of proteins, including receptors for dopamine enabling communication with the local population of midbrain dopamine neurons26. Furthermore, ventral midbrain astrocytes demonstrate unique signaling properties26. Therefore, to study the role of ventral midbrain astrocytes in Parkinson's, we require an in vitro model that reflects their unique set of characteristics.
To address this, we have developed a protocol to generate ventral midbrain astrocytes (vmAstros) from hiPSCs. The resulting vmAstros exhibit characteristics of their in vivo ventral midbrain counterparts such as expression of specific proteins, as well as immunomodulatory functions. The results presented are from the differentiation of the NAS2 and AST23 hiPSC lines, which were derived and gifted to us by Dr. Tilo Kunath27. NAS2 was generated from a healthy control subject whereas AST23 is derived from a Parkinson's patient carrying a triplication in the locus encoding α-Synuclein (SNCA). These hiPSC lines have been previously characterized and used in a number of published research papers, including for the generation of various neural cell types27,28,29,30,31.
1. Human hiPSC line thawing, maintenance, and cryopreservation
2. vmAstro Differentiation protocol
NOTE: A schematic summary of the vmAstros differentiation protocol is shown in Figure 1A. A detailed list of reagents required for the protocol and their preparation is given in Table 1.
3. Cryopreservation of vmNPCs, vmAPCs, and vmAstros
NOTE: Cryopreserve vmNPCs/vmAPCs/vmAstros at full confluency.
4. Characterization of vmAstro phenotype
Differentiation methodology and progression
Here we present the details of both the methods employed for the generation of vmAstros and the protocols used for their subsequent phenotypic characterization. The method for generation of vmAstros is made up of several distinct differentiation stages, which can be monitored by microscopy and identifying distinct morphological characteristics (Figure 1A–F). A feeder-free hiPSC culture (Figure 1B) is exposed to specific factors to induce their differentiation toward a neural lineage (LDN193189, SB431542), specifically of the ventral midbrain (CHIR99021, SHH-C24ii). This results in the generation of a culture of vmNPCs, which are morphologically distinct from hiPSCs-the vmNPCs are less rounded than hiPSCs and vmNPCs have an elongated polygonal or triangular shape, typical of neural progenitors (Figure 1B,C). The morphological distinction is apparent from day 7-10 onward. When vmNPCs are passaged, similar to hiPSCs, we aim to maintain them as small cell clusters rather than single cells to increase cell survival (Figure 1D). However, whereas hiPSCs when passaged quickly form and remain as distinct colonies, vmNPCs readily form a monolayer (Figure 1C). From day 20 onward, vmNPCs can be used to generate midbrain dopaminergic neurons (Figure 1A), which we have previously published30,31.
Our strategy to generate vmAstros from the vmNPCs relied on an understanding of the developing embryonic brain, the acquisition of astroglial fate in the embryo, and also how this has been applied to ex vivo neural progenitors and hiPSCs to generate astrocytes22,23,25,32,33,34,35,36,37. Elongated time in culture together with the activation of specific signaling pathways has been demonstrated to be required by mammalian NPCs to recapitulate the timing enabling the shift in neuronal potency toward the astroglial lineage in vitro6,21,22,23,32. Therefore, we used LIF and EGF to support the elongated expansion of the cultures from day 30-90 (Figure 1A). Both JAK/STAT signaling downstream of LIF, and EGF signaling are inducers of astroglial identity and also selectively act as mitogens on astroglial progenitors22,23,25,33,34. Media components for the culture of vmAPCs are modified from those demonstrated by22 to support the generation of astrocytes from hiPSCs.
During the EGF/LIF mediated expansion period, cells are referred to as vmAPCs (Figure 1A,E). We expect that between days 50 and 90 to culture the vmAPCs in 175 cm2 tissue culture flasks, passaging at ratios between 1:4 and 1:6 every 4 days, thus enabling rapid expansion of vmAPCs, which can be cryopreserved for future use.
From day 90 onward, vmAstros are generated from vmAPCs via the application of BMP4 in combination with LIF (Figure 1F). BMP signaling is required in vivo for mature astrocyte differentiation and recapitulates this effect in vitro21,23,37,38. In the culture flask, mature vmAstros appear larger than vmAPCs (Figure 1F).
The protocol detailed here has been carried out over six independent repeats, reproducibly generating vmAstros from the hiPSC line NAS2 and AST23. In addition, the generation of vmNPCs (for producing ventral midbrain dopamine neurons) has been carried out on multiple hiPSC and hESC lines as detailed in30.
Characterization of vmAstros differentiation and phenotype
The ventral midbrain identity of the vmNPCs was confirmed by co-expression of the neural progenitor marker Musashi1 (MSI1) and the ventral midbrain transcription factor FOXA2 (Figure 2A). vmNPCs readily generate midbrain dopamine neurons, which co-express FOXA2 and dopaminergic marker tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) (Figure 2B). Expansion of vmNPCs in the presence of EGF and LIF leads to the appearance of vmAPCs (Figure 2C). From day 90 onward of the protocol, vmAPCs are exposed to BMP4 in combination with LIF to induce maturation into vmAstros (Figure 2D). Immunocytochemistry confirmed co-expression of the ventral midbrain transcription factors LMX1A, LMX1B, and FOXA2 with the astrocyte marker S100β (Figure 2E–G). vmAstros also express the mature astrocyte marker GFAP (Figure 2H) and the novel marker CD49f, which has been shown to be specific to mature, functional astrocytes39,40 (Figure 2I). Together these results confirm that treatment with BMP4 and LIF induces a mature astrocyte identity, as demonstrated both in vivo and in vitro, and that mature vmAstros maintain the regional ventral midbrain identity acquired in the primary stages of the differentiation protocol21,37,38 (Figure 2E–I).
To confirm that the vmAstros are capable of neuroinflammatory modulation in line with their in vivo counterparts, we characterized their response to cytokine exposure. Exposure of vmAstros to the cytokine IL-1α for 24 h resulted in morphological changes similar to those demonstrated by ex vivo reactive mouse astrocytes9 (Figure 2J,K). Specifically, upon addition of IL-1α, a large proportion of the vmAstros demonstrated a smaller, rounded cell body with multiple projections (Figure 2K). To confirm that these changes were representative of a reactive astrocyte phenotype in response to the neuroinflammatory stimuli, we measured the level of IL-6 secreted by the vmAstros. Increased IL-6 secretion is an indicator of reactivity in astrocytes. We measured IL-6 levels by ELISA after a 24 h treatment with IL-1α, which confirmed a large and significant increase in secreted IL-6, thus confirming the vmAstros were demonstrating a reactive phenotype (Figure 2L).
Figure 1: HiPSC differentiation into vmAstros. (A) A schematic representation of the optimized protocol to generate vmAstros from hiPSC. The protocol is made up of distinct stages; first a neural, ventral midbrain fate is through dual-SMAD inhibition (with SB431542 and LDN193189) in combination with ventral midbrain patterning molecules (SHH (C24ii) and CHIR99021). vmNPCs proliferate rapidly in the absence of any exogenous mitogens during the vmNPC expansion stage. The addition of BDNF, GDNF, and ascorbic acid promotes survival of vmNPCs, supporting an increase in cell number. Addition of EGF and LIF sustains proliferation and promotes acquisition of astroglial fate over an extended culture period. After a minimum of 90 days from the initial hiPSC, vmAPCs form mature vmAstros upon exposure to BMP4. (B–F) Images of cells as they should appear at different stages in the protocol. hiPSCs and vmNPCs cells are passaged as small clusters, rather than single cells (C). Scale bars: B = 500 μm; C = 250 μm; D & E = 200 μm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Characterization of the phenotype of intermediate cells and vmAstros generated using the described protocol, confirming a ventral midbrain identity. (A) Immunocytochemistry demonstrated vmNPCs express the neural progenitor marker MSI1 (red) and the ventral midbrain transcription factor FOXA2 (green). (B) vmNPCs are capable of generating midbrain dopamine neurons co-expressing dopaminergic marker tyrosine hydroxylase (TH; red) and ventral midbrain transcription factor FOXA2 (green) (previously published in30). (C) High magnification phase contrast images show the morphology of vmAPCs compared to (D) the mature vmAstros, which have a larger area from nucleus to cell membrane. Immunocytochemistry demonstrated mature vmAstros co-express astrocyte marker S100β and ventral midbrain markers LMX1A (E), LMX1B (F), and FOXA2 (G). (H,I) vmAstros express GFAP and CD49f, which are associated with a mature astrocyte phenotype. (J,L) Representative images demonstrating the morphology of untreated cultures of vmAstros (J), compared to those exposed to IL-1α for 24 h (K). Exposure to IL-1α resulted in clear morphological changes (K). (L) In response to IL-1α, vmAstros significantly increased secretion of IL-6, indicating vmAstros are generating a reactive phenotype in response to neuroinflammatory stimuli (n = 3 independent experiments, SEM, unpaired t-test p = 0.0227). All immunofluorescence images were taken on a confocal microscope. Scale bars: A, B, I = 50 μm; C, D = 100 μm; E, F = 25 μm; G,H = 100 μm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Table 1. Reagent preparation for hiPSC differentiation into ventral midbrain astrocytes (vmAstros) Please click here to download this Table.
This method for the generation of vmAstros from hiPSCs is highly efficient, generating pure cultures of vmAstros, and being reproducible for the generation of vmAstros from different hiPSC lines. This protocol was developed around the recapitulation of the developmental events required in the embryo to correctly pattern the developing midbrain and generate astrocytes and comprises three defined stages: 1) neural ventral midbrain induction to generate vmNPCs, 2) generation and expansion of vmAPCs, and finally 3) maturation of vmAstros.
In our previous published work, we highlighted the importance of optimizing the concentrations of CHIR99021 and SHH(C24ii) for each hiPSC line used to generate vmNPCs, to ensure optimal expression of ventral midbrain markers30,31; 200 ng/mL SHH (C24ii) and 0.8 μM CHIR99021 yields consistently reproducible results over multiple hiPSC lines. However, 300 ng/mL SHH (C24ii) and 0.6 μM CHIR99021 can be more efficacious for particular hiPSC lines but can also affect cell survival30,31. Therefore, optimization by the user is recommended.
In developing this protocol for the generation of vmAPCs, it was apparent that cell density is critical at all stages. In the vmNPC induction stage, cell density must remain high to support cell survival, as vmNPC density below 75% leads to the death of vmNPCs in large numbers. The rate of proliferation of the vmNPCs is dependent on the rate of proliferation of the parent hiPSC culture and does vary between lines; however, to maintain a proliferative population, vmNPC density must remain high. Therefore, we recommend that vmNPCs are passaged at conservative ratios until the user has optimized the passaging regime. In contrast vmAPCs should be passaged at high ratios, achieving a cell density of around 30-40% after passaging, and passaging as soon as the cells are confluent. We found in our preliminary experiments that maintaining vmAPCs at very high confluency leads to greater heterogeneity in the resulting vmAstros as indicated by varied morphology and expression of astrocyte marker GFAP (data not shown). Micrographs of appropriate cell densities are included in this protocol for reference.
Both the vmNPCs and vmAPCs are highly proliferative, generating large number of cells from a relatively small starting population of iPSCs. For example, we usually begin this protocol with a single 10 cm2 dish of iPSCs and when we reach day 60, we would expect to culture the APCs in 175 cm2 flasks, with each passage generating 4-6 new flasks and this rate of expansion would continue until day 90. Extrapolating from this, at minimum we would have the ability to generate up to 4,000 flasks of vmAPCs. We cryopreserve the vmAPCs throughout this expansion period and thus can generate a large cryobank of cells for future generation of mature vmAstros. This is extremely advantageous as it enables high-throughput analysis required for applications such as drug screening.
The unique aspect of this protocol is the midbrain identity of the resulting vmAstros. In the brain, specific regional astroglial populations, similar to their neuronal counterparts, possess specific characteristics25,26. A major focus of Parkinson's research is the involvement of astroglial cells in neuroinflammation and how this influences disease progression. Neuroinflammation is present in early Parkinson's and many other injury or disease scenarios12. As part of the neuroinflammatory response, astrocytes transform in an attempt to protect neurons from damage-this is referred to as the "reactive astrocyte". However, reactive astrocytes are themselves neurotoxic in chronic diseases such as Parkinson's9,11. In animal and in vitro models of Parkinson's, reactive astroglial mediated neuroinflammation is a catalyst for neurotoxic α-synuclein pathology and neurodegeneration9,14,41,42,43. Therefore, we created an in vitro neuroinflammatory environment by treating vmAstros with pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1α or IL-1β. In response, the vmAstros demonstrated significant morphological changes and we saw a significant increase in secretion of IL-6, which is also elevated in Parkinson's and is widely used as a measure of astrocyte reactivity.
In conclusion, this protocol provides a reproducible and efficient method to generate large numbers of hiPSC-derived vmAstros, which demonstrate a phenotype that parallels their in vivo counterparts in the ventral midbrain. This protocol is therefore highly applicable to high-throughput applications such as drug screening, which require large numbers of human cells. Recent work has highlighted the role of neuroinflammation in Parkinson's diseases, and how pharmacological targeting of astroglia influences neuroinflammation, which in turn modulates disease pathology11. As demonstrated, the vmAstros generated with this protocol are appropriately responsive to neuroinflammatory stimulation, providing a comprehensive cellular model with which to study astroglial involvement in Parkinson's disease.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was funded by a Parkinson's UK project grant (G-1402) and studentship. The authors gratefully acknowledge the Wolfson Bioimaging Facility for their support and assistance in this work.
Reagents | |||
0.2M Tris-Cl (pH 8.5) | n/a | n/a | Made up from Tris base and plus HCl |
0.5M EDTA, PH 8 | ThermoFisher | 15575-020 | 1:1000 in D-PBS to 0.5 mM final |
1,4-diazabicylo[2.2.2]octane (DABCO) | Sigma | D27802- | 25 mg/mL in Mowiol mounting solution |
13 mm coverslips | VWR | 631-0149 | |
2-Mercaptoethanol (50 mM) | ThermoFisher | 31350010 | |
Accutase | ThermoFisher | 13151014 | |
Advanced DMEM/F12 | ThermoFisher | 12634010 | Has 1x NEAA but we add to final concentration of 2x (0.2 mM) |
Ascorbic acid | Sigma | A5960 | 200 mM stock, 1:1000 to 200 µM final |
B27 Supplement | ThermoFisher | 17504-044 | 50x stock |
BSA | Sigma | 5470 | |
Cell freezing media | Sigma | C2874 | Cryostor CS10 |
Cell freezing vessel | Nalgene | 5100-0001 | |
CHIR99021 | Axon Medchem | 1386 | 0.8 mM stock, 1:1000 dilution to 0.8 µM final |
Cryovials | Sigma | CLS430487 | |
DAPI | Sigma | D9542 | 1 mg/mL, 1:10,000 to 100ng/mL final (in PBS) |
DMEM/F12 + Glutamax | ThermoFisher | 10565018 | |
Dulbeccos-PBS (D-PBS without Mg or Ca) | ThermoFisher | 14190144 | pH 7.2 |
E8 Flex medium kit | ThermoFisher | A2858501 | |
Formaldehyde (36% solution) | Sigma | 47608 | |
Geltrex | ThermoFisher | A1413302 | 1:100 or 1:400 in ice-cold DMEM/F12 |
Glutamax | ThermoFisher | 35050038 | 2 mM stock (1:200 in N2B27, 1:100 in ASTRO media to 20 µM final) |
Glycerol | Sigma | G5516 | |
Human BDNF | Peprotech | 450-02 | 20 µg/mL stock, 1:1000 to 20 ng/mL final |
Human BMP4 | Peprotech | 120-05 | 20 µg/mL stock, 1:1000 to 20 ng/mL final |
Human EGF | Peprotech | AF-100-15 | 20 µg/mL stock, 1:1000 to 20 ng/mL final |
Human GDNF | Peprotech | 450-10 | 20 µg/mL stock, 1:1000 to 20 ng/mL final |
Human insulin solution | Sigma | I9278 | 10 mg/mL stock, 1:2000 to 5 µg/mL final |
Human LIF | Peprotech | 300-05 | 20 µg/mL stock, 1:1000 to 20 ng/mL final |
IL-6 ELISA kit | Biotechne | DY206 | |
Isopropanol | Sigma | I9516-4L | For filling Mr Frosty cryostorage vessel |
LDN193189 | Sigma | SML0559 | 100 µM stock, 1:10,000 dilution to 10 nM final |
Mowiol 40-88 | Sigma | 324590 | |
N2 Supplement | ThermoFisher | 17502048 | 100x stock |
NEAA | ThermoFisher | 11140035 | 10 mM stock, 1:100 to 0.1 mM final |
Neurobasal media | ThermoFisher | 21103049 | |
Normal Goat serum | Vector Labs | S-1000-20 | |
Revitacell | ThermoFisher | A2644501 | 100x stock, 1:100 to 1x final |
SB431542 | Tocris | 1614 | 10 mM stock, 1:1000 dilution to 10 µM final |
SHH-C24ii | Biotechne | 1845-SH-025 | 200 µg/mL stock, 1:1000 to 200 ng/mL final |
Tris-HCl | Sigma | PHG0002 | |
Triton-X | Sigma | X100 | |
Tween-20 | Sigma | P7949 | |
Vitronectin | ThermoFisher | A14700 | 1:50 in D-PBS |
Antibodies for immunocytochemistry | Company | Catalogue Number | Host species |
Antibody against S100b | Sigma | SAB4200671 | Mouse; 1:200 |
Antibody against FOXA2 | SCBT | NB600501 | Mouse; 1:50 |
Antibody against LMX1A | ProSci | 7087 | Rabbit; 1:300 |
Antibody against LMX1A | Millipore | AB10533 | Rabbit; 1:2000 |
Antibody against LMX1B | Proteintech | 18278-1-AP | Rabbit; 1:300 |
Antibody against GLAST | Proteintech | 20785-1-AP | Rabbit; 1:300 |
Antibody against GFAP | Dako | Z0334 | Rabbit; 1:400 |
Antibody against CD49f | Proteintech | 27189-1-AP | Rabbit; 1:100 |
Antibody against MSI1 | Abcam | ab52865 | Rabbit; 1:400 |
Alexa Fluor 488 Goat Anti-Rabbit | ThermoFisher | A32731 | Goat; 1:500 |
Alexa Fluor 488 Goat Anti-Mouse | ThermoFisher | A32723 | Goat; 1:500 |
Alexa Fluor 568 Goat Anti-Rabbit | ThermoFisher | A11036 | Goat; 1:500 |
Alexa Fluor 488 Goat Anti-Mouse | ThermoFisher | A11031 | Goat; 1:500 |
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