Propensity of Patient-Derived iPSCs for Retinal Differentiation: Implications for Autologous Cell Replacement

Author:

Cooke Jessica A12,Voigt Andrew P12,Collingwood Michael A3,Stone Nicholas E12,Whitmore S Scott12ORCID,DeLuca Adam P12,Burnight Erin R12,Anfinson Kristin R12,Vakulskas Christopher A3,Reutzel Austin J12,Daggett Heather T12,Andorf Jeaneen L12,Stone Edwin M12,Mullins Robert F12,Tucker Budd A12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Vision Research, Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa , Iowa City, IA , USA

2. Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa , Iowa City, IA , USA

3. Integrated DNA Technologies , Coralville, IA , USA

Abstract

Abstract Prior to use, newly generated induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) should be thoroughly validated. While excellent validation and release testing assays designed to evaluate potency, genetic integrity, and sterility exist, they do not have the ability to predict cell type-specific differentiation capacity. Selection of iPSC lines that have limited capacity to produce high-quality transplantable cells, places significant strain on valuable clinical manufacturing resources. The purpose of this study was to determine the degree and root cause of variability in retinal differentiation capacity between cGMP-derived patient iPSC lines. In turn, our goal was to develop a release testing assay that could be used to augment the widely used ScoreCard panel. IPSCs were generated from 15 patients (14-76 years old), differentiated into retinal organoids, and scored based on their retinal differentiation capacity. Despite significant differences in retinal differentiation propensity, RNA-sequencing revealed remarkable similarity between patient-derived iPSC lines prior to differentiation. At 7 days of differentiation, significant differences in gene expression could be detected. Ingenuity pathway analysis revealed perturbations in pathways associated with pluripotency and early cell fate commitment. For example, good and poor producers had noticeably different expressions of OCT4 and SOX2 effector genes. QPCR assays targeting genes identified via RNA sequencing were developed and validated in a masked fashion using iPSCs from 8 independent patients. A subset of 14 genes, which include the retinal cell fate markers RAX, LHX2, VSX2, and SIX6 (all elevated in the good producers), were found to be predictive of retinal differentiation propensity.

Funder

Ruby Chair of Regenerative Ophthalmology

National Eye Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,General Medicine

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