Department of Oncology, The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Hepatology. 2013 Jun;57(6):2458-68. doi: 10.1002/hep.26237.
Patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) represent a potential source for developing novel drug and cell therapies. Although increasing numbers of disease-specific iPSCs have been generated, there has been limited progress in iPSC-based drug screening/discovery for liver diseases, and the low gene-targeting efficiency in human iPSCs warrants further improvement. Using iPSC lines from patients with alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency, for which there is currently no drug or gene therapy available, we established a platform to discover new drug candidates and correct disease-causing mutation with a high efficiency. A high-throughput format screening assay, based on our hepatic differentiation protocol, was implemented to facilitate automated quantification of cellular AAT accumulation using a 96-well immunofluorescence reader. To expedite the eventual application of lead compounds to patients, we conducted drug screening utilizing our established library of clinical compounds (the Johns Hopkins Drug Library) with extensive safety profiles. Through a blind large-scale drug screening, five clinical drugs were identified to reduce AAT accumulation in diverse patient iPSC-derived hepatocyte-like cells. In addition, using the recently developed transcription activator-like effector nuclease technology, we achieved high gene-targeting efficiency in AAT-deficiency patient iPSCs with 25%-33% of the clones demonstrating simultaneous targeting at both diseased alleles. The hepatocyte-like cells derived from the gene-corrected iPSCs were functional without the mutant AAT accumulation. This highly efficient and cost-effective targeting technology will broadly benefit both basic and translational applications.
Our results demonstrated the feasibility of effective large-scale drug screening using an iPSC-based disease model and highly robust gene targeting in human iPSCs, both of which are critical for translating the iPSC technology into novel therapies for untreatable diseases.
患者特异性诱导多能干细胞(iPSC)代表了开发新型药物和细胞疗法的潜在来源。尽管已经产生了越来越多的疾病特异性 iPSC,但基于 iPSC 的肝脏疾病药物筛选/发现方面进展有限,并且人类 iPSC 中的低基因靶向效率需要进一步提高。我们使用来自目前尚无药物或基因治疗方法的α-1 抗胰蛋白酶(AAT)缺乏症患者的 iPSC 系,建立了一个高效发现新药物候选物和纠正致病突变的平台。我们实施了一种基于我们的肝分化方案的高通量筛选测定法,该测定法使用 96 孔免疫荧光阅读器来自动定量细胞 AAT 积累。为了加速将先导化合物最终应用于患者,我们利用我们广泛的安全概况的已建立的临床化合物库(约翰霍普金斯药物库)进行了药物筛选。通过盲目进行大规模药物筛选,确定了五种临床药物可减少不同患者 iPSC 衍生的肝样细胞中 AAT 的积累。此外,我们使用最近开发的转录激活因子样效应物核酸酶技术,在 AAT 缺乏症患者 iPSC 中实现了 25%-33%的克隆同时靶向两个病变等位基因的高基因靶向效率。来自基因校正 iPSC 的肝样细胞没有突变 AAT 积累,因此具有功能。这种高效且具有成本效益的靶向技术将广泛有益于基础和转化应用。
我们的结果证明了使用基于 iPSC 的疾病模型进行有效大规模药物筛选以及在人类 iPSC 中进行高度稳健的基因靶向的可行性,这对于将 iPSC 技术转化为无法治愈的疾病的新型疗法至关重要。