Neuron
Volume 94, Issue 2, 19 April 2017, Pages 278-293.e9
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iPSC-Derived Human Microglia-like Cells to Study Neurological Diseases

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2017.03.042Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Fully defined and efficient generation of human microglial-like cells from iPSCs

  • Whole-transcriptome and functional validation of iPSC-derived microglia (iMGLs)

  • Novel in vitro and in vivo applications for studying neurological diseases

  • iMGLs can be used to interrogate AD gene function

Summary

Microglia play critical roles in brain development, homeostasis, and neurological disorders. Here, we report that human microglial-like cells (iMGLs) can be differentiated from iPSCs to study their function in neurological diseases, like Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We find that iMGLs develop in vitro similarly to microglia in vivo, and whole-transcriptome analysis demonstrates that they are highly similar to cultured adult and fetal human microglia. Functional assessment of iMGLs reveals that they secrete cytokines in response to inflammatory stimuli, migrate and undergo calcium transients, and robustly phagocytose CNS substrates. iMGLs were used to examine the effects of Aβ fibrils and brain-derived tau oligomers on AD-related gene expression and to interrogate mechanisms involved in synaptic pruning. Furthermore, iMGLs transplanted into transgenic mice and human brain organoids resemble microglia in vivo. Together, these findings demonstrate that iMGLs can be used to study microglial function, providing important new insight into human neurological disease.

Keywords

microglia
induced pluripotent stem cells
neurodegenerative diseases
Alzheimer’s disease
Beta-amyloid
Tau
mouse transplantation
cell models of disease
AD-GWAS
3D organoids

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