Cell Reports (Jun 2016)

Concordant but Varied Phenotypes among Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Patient-Specific Myoblasts Derived using a Human iPSC-Based Model

  • In Young Choi,
  • HoTae Lim,
  • Kenneth Estrellas,
  • Jyothi Mula,
  • Tatiana V. Cohen,
  • Yuanfan Zhang,
  • Christopher J. Donnelly,
  • Jean-Philippe Richard,
  • Yong Jun Kim,
  • Hyesoo Kim,
  • Yasuhiro Kazuki,
  • Mitsuo Oshimura,
  • Hongmei Lisa Li,
  • Akitsu Hotta,
  • Jeffrey Rothstein,
  • Nicholas Maragakis,
  • Kathryn R. Wagner,
  • Gabsang Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2016.05.016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 10
pp. 2301 – 2312

Abstract

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Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) remains an intractable genetic disease. Althogh there are several animal models of DMD, there is no human cell model that carries patient-specific DYSTROPHIN mutations. Here, we present a human DMD model using human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). Our model reveals concordant disease-related phenotypes with patient-dependent variation, which are partially reversed by genetic and pharmacological approaches. Our “chemical-compound-based” strategy successfully directs hiPSCs into expandable myoblasts, which exhibit a myogenic transcriptional program, forming striated contractile myofibers and participating in muscle regeneration in vivo. DMD-hiPSC-derived myoblasts show disease-related phenotypes with patient-to-patient variability, including aberrant expression of inflammation or immune-response genes and collagens, increased BMP/TGFβ signaling, and reduced fusion competence. Furthermore, by genetic correction and pharmacological “dual-SMAD” inhibition, the DMD-hiPSC-derived myoblasts and genetically corrected isogenic myoblasts form “rescued” multi-nucleated myotubes. In conclusion, our findings demonstrate the feasibility of establishing a human “DMD-in-a-dish” model using hiPSC-based disease modeling.