Stem Cell Research (May 2018)

Efficient production of erythroid, megakaryocytic and myeloid cells, using single cell-derived iPSC colony differentiation

  • Marten Hansen,
  • Eszter Varga,
  • Cathelijn Aarts,
  • Tatjana Wust,
  • Taco Kuijpers,
  • Marieke von Lindern,
  • Emile van den Akker

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29
pp. 232 – 244

Abstract

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Hematopoietic differentiation of human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) provide opportunities not only for fundamental research and disease modelling/drug testing but also for large-scale production of blood effector cells for future clinical application. Although there are multiple ways to differentiate human iPSCs towards hematopoietic lineages, there is a need to develop reproducible and robust protocols. Here we introduce an efficient way to produce three major blood cell types using a standardized differentiation protocol that starts with a single hematopoietic initiation step. This system is feeder-free, avoids EB-formation, starts with a hematopoietic initiation step based on a novel single cell-derived iPSC colony differentiation and produces multi-potential progenitors within 8–10 days. Followed by lineage-specific growth factor supplementation these cells can be matured into well characterized erythroid, megakaryocytic and myeloid cells with high-purity, without transcription factor overexpression or any kind of pre-purification step. This standardized differentiation system provides a simple platform to produce specific blood cells in a reproducible manner for hematopoietic development studies, disease modelling, drug testing and the potential for future therapeutic applications. Keywords: iPSC, Differentiation, Erythroid, Hematopoietic, Megakaryocytic, Myeloid