Recapitulating and correcting marfan syndrome in a cellular model

Jung Woo Park, Li Yan, Chris Stoddard, Xiaofang Wang, Zhichao Yue, Leann Crandall, Tiwanna Robinson, Yuxiao Chang, Kyle Denton, Enqin Li, Bin Jiang, Zhenwu Zhang, Kristen Martins-Taylor, Siu Pok Yee, Hong Nie, Feng Gu, Wei Si, Ting Xie, Lixia Yue, Ren He Xu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Articlepeer-review

21 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Marfan syndrome (MFS) is a connective tissue disorder caused by mutations in FBN1 gene, which encodes a key extracellular matrix protein FIBRILLIN-1. The haplosufficiency of FBN1 has been implicated in pathogenesis of MFS with manifestations primarily in cardiovascular, muscular, and ocular tissues. Due to limitations in animal models to study the late-onset diseases, human pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) offer a homogeneic tool for dissection of cellular and molecular pathogenic mechanism for MFS in vitro. Here, we first derived induced PSCs (iPSCs) from a MFS patient with a FBN1 mutation and corrected the mutation, thereby generating an isogenic “gain-of-function” control cells for the parental MFS iPSCs. Reversely, we knocked out FBN1 in both alleles in a wild-type (WT) human embryonic stem cell (ESC) line, which served as a loss-of-function model for MFS with the WT cells as an isogenic control. Mesenchymal stem cells derived from both FBN1-mutant iPSCs and -ESCs demonstrated reduced osteogenic differentiation and microfibril formation. We further demonstrated that vascular smooth muscle cells derived from FBN1-mutant iPSCs showed less sensitivity to carbachol as demonstrated by contractility and Ca2+ influx assay, compared to the isogenic controls cells. These findings were further supported by transcriptomic anaylsis of the cells. Therefore, this study based on both gainand loss-of-function approaches confirmed the pathogenetic role of FBN1 mutations in these MFS-related phenotypic changes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)588-603
Number of pages16
JournalInternational Journal of Biological Sciences
Volume13
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Ivyspring International Publisher.

Keywords

  • Disease modeling
  • Genome editing
  • Human pluripotent stem cells
  • Marfan syndrome
  • Osteogenesis
  • Smooth muscle

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