Stem Cell Reports (May 2017)

Physico-electrochemical Characterization of Pluripotent Stem Cells during Self-Renewal or Differentiation by a Multi-modal Monitoring System

  • Karen Low,
  • Lauren Y. Wong,
  • Maricela Maldonado,
  • Chetas Manjunath,
  • Christopher B. Horner,
  • Mark Perez,
  • Nosang V. Myung,
  • Jin Nam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.stemcr.2017.03.021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
pp. 1329 – 1339

Abstract

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Monitoring pluripotent stem cell behaviors (self-renewal and differentiation to specific lineages/phenotypes) is critical for a fundamental understanding of stem cell biology and their translational applications. In this study, a multi-modal stem cell monitoring system was developed to quantitatively characterize physico-electrochemical changes of the cells in real time, in relation to cellular activities during self-renewal or lineage-specific differentiation, in a non-destructive, label-free manner. The system was validated by measuring physical (mass) and electrochemical (impedance) changes in human induced pluripotent stem cells undergoing self-renewal, or subjected to mesendodermal or ectodermal differentiation, and correlating them to morphological (size, shape) and biochemical changes (gene/protein expression). An equivalent circuit model was used to further dissect the electrochemical (resistive and capacitive) contributions of distinctive cellular features. Overall, the combination of the physico-electrochemical measurements and electrical circuit modeling collectively offers a means to longitudinally quantify the states of stem cell self-renewal and differentiation.

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