APL Bioengineering (Sep 2023)

Direct differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells into vascular network along with supporting mural cells

  • Taylor Bertucci,
  • Shravani Kakarla,
  • Max A. Winkelman,
  • Keith Lane,
  • Katherine Stevens,
  • Steven Lotz,
  • Alexander Grath,
  • Daylon James,
  • Sally Temple,
  • Guohao Dai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0155207
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
pp. 036107 – 036107-17

Abstract

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During embryonic development, endothelial cells (ECs) undergo vasculogenesis to form a primitive plexus and assemble into networks comprised of mural cell-stabilized vessels with molecularly distinct artery and vein signatures. This organized vasculature is established prior to the initiation of blood flow and depends on a sequence of complex signaling events elucidated primarily in animal models, but less studied and understood in humans. Here, we have developed a simple vascular differentiation protocol for human pluripotent stem cells that generates ECs, pericytes, and smooth muscle cells simultaneously. When this protocol is applied in a 3D hydrogel, we demonstrate that it recapitulates the dynamic processes of early human vessel formation, including acquisition of distinct arterial and venous fates, resulting in a vasculogenesis angiogenesis model plexus (VAMP). The VAMP captures the major stages of vasculogenesis, angiogenesis, and vascular network formation and is a simple, rapid, scalable model system for studying early human vascular development in vitro.