Stem Cell Reports (Jan 2015)

Restoration of Progranulin Expression Rescues Cortical Neuron Generation in an Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Model of Frontotemporal Dementia

  • Susanna Raitano,
  • Laura Ordovàs,
  • Louis De Muynck,
  • Wenting Guo,
  • Ira Espuny-Camacho,
  • Martine Geraerts,
  • Satish Khurana,
  • Kim Vanuytsel,
  • Balazs I. Tóth,
  • Thomas Voets,
  • Rik Vandenberghe,
  • Toni Cathomen,
  • Ludo Van Den Bosch,
  • Pierre Vanderhaeghen,
  • Philip Van Damme,
  • Catherine M. Verfaillie

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 16 – 24

Abstract

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Summary: To understand how haploinsufficiency of progranulin (PGRN) causes frontotemporal dementia (FTD), we created induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from patients carrying the GRNIVS1+5G > C mutation (FTD-iPSCs). FTD-iPSCs were fated to cortical neurons, the cells most affected in FTD. Although generation of neuroprogenitors was unaffected, their further differentiation into CTIP2-, FOXP2-, or TBR1-TUJ1 double-positive cortical neurons, but not motorneurons, was significantly decreased in FTD-neural progeny. Zinc finger nuclease-mediated introduction of GRN cDNA into the AAVS1 locus corrected defects in cortical neurogenesis, demonstrating that PGRN haploinsufficiency causes inefficient cortical neuron generation. RNA sequencing analysis confirmed reversal of the altered gene expression profile following genetic correction. We identified the Wnt signaling pathway as one of the top defective pathways in FTD-iPSC-derived neurons, which was reversed following genetic correction. Differentiation of FTD-iPSCs in the presence of a WNT inhibitor mitigated defective corticogenesis. Therefore, we demonstrate that PGRN haploinsufficiency hampers corticogenesis in vitro. : Verfaillie and colleagues describe the inefficient cortical neuron, but not motorneuron, generation, from FTD-patient-derived iPSCs carrying a mutation in the GRN gene. They show restoration of the defective phenotype following introduction of the GRN cDNA in FTD-iPSC using zinc finger nucleases and by inhibiting the WNT pathway.