Stem Cell Research (Aug 2019)

Generation of 5 induced pluripotent stem cell lines, LUMCi007-A and B and LUMCi008-A, B and C, from 2 patients with Huntington disease

  • Linda M. van der Graaf,
  • Sarah L. Gardiner,
  • Merve Tok,
  • Tom Brands,
  • Merel W. Boogaard,
  • Barry A. Pepers,
  • Bert Eussen,
  • Annelies de Klein,
  • N. Ahmad Aziz,
  • Christian Freund,
  • Ronald A.M. Buijsen,
  • Willeke M.C. van Roon-Mom

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39

Abstract

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Huntington disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant, neurodegenerative disease caused by a CAG repeat expansion within the coding sequence of the HTT gene, resulting in a highly toxic protein with an expanded polyglutamine stretch that forms typical protein aggregates throughout the brain. We generated human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) from two HD patients using non-integrating Sendai virus (SeV). The hiPSCs display a normal karyotype, express all pluripotency markers, have the same CAG repeat expansion as the original fibroblasts and are able to differentiate into the three germ layers in vitro.