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High-throughput fingerprinting of human pluripotent stem cell fate responses and lineage bias.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Nazareth, EJP; Ostblom, JEE; Lücker, PB; Shukla, S; Alvarez, MM; Oh, SKW; Yin, T; Zandstra, PW
Published in: Nature methods
December 2013

Populations of cells create local environments that lead to emergent heterogeneity. This is particularly evident with human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs): microenvironmental heterogeneity limits hPSC cell fate control. We developed a high-throughput platform to screen hPSCs in configurable microenvironments in which we optimized colony size, cell density and other parameters to achieve rapid and robust cell fate responses to exogenous cues. We used this platform to perform single-cell protein expression profiling, revealing that Oct4 and Sox2 costaining discriminates pluripotent, neuroectoderm, primitive streak and extraembryonic cell fates. We applied this Oct4-Sox2 code to analyze dose responses of 27 developmental factors to obtain lineage-specific concentration optima and to quantify cell line-specific endogenous signaling pathway activation and differentiation bias. We demonstrated that short-term responses predict definitive endoderm induction efficiency and can be used to rescue differentiation of cell lines reticent to cardiac induction. This platform will facilitate high-throughput hPSC-based screening and quantification of lineage-induction bias.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Nature methods

DOI

EISSN

1548-7105

ISSN

1548-7091

Publication Date

December 2013

Volume

10

Issue

12

Start / End Page

1225 / 1231

Related Subject Headings

  • Time Factors
  • Signal Transduction
  • SOXB1 Transcription Factors
  • Pluripotent Stem Cells
  • Phenotype
  • Octamer Transcription Factor-3
  • Mice
  • Humans
  • Gene Expression Profiling
  • Endoderm
 

Citation

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Nazareth, E. J. P., Ostblom, J. E. E., Lücker, P. B., Shukla, S., Alvarez, M. M., Oh, S. K. W., … Zandstra, P. W. (2013). High-throughput fingerprinting of human pluripotent stem cell fate responses and lineage bias. Nature Methods, 10(12), 1225–1231. https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.2684
Nazareth, Emanuel J. P., Joel E. E. Ostblom, Petra B. Lücker, Shreya Shukla, Manuel M. Alvarez, Steve K. W. Oh, Ting Yin, and Peter W. Zandstra. “High-throughput fingerprinting of human pluripotent stem cell fate responses and lineage bias.Nature Methods 10, no. 12 (December 2013): 1225–31. https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.2684.
Nazareth EJP, Ostblom JEE, Lücker PB, Shukla S, Alvarez MM, Oh SKW, et al. High-throughput fingerprinting of human pluripotent stem cell fate responses and lineage bias. Nature methods. 2013 Dec;10(12):1225–31.
Nazareth, Emanuel J. P., et al. “High-throughput fingerprinting of human pluripotent stem cell fate responses and lineage bias.Nature Methods, vol. 10, no. 12, Dec. 2013, pp. 1225–31. Epmc, doi:10.1038/nmeth.2684.
Nazareth EJP, Ostblom JEE, Lücker PB, Shukla S, Alvarez MM, Oh SKW, Yin T, Zandstra PW. High-throughput fingerprinting of human pluripotent stem cell fate responses and lineage bias. Nature methods. 2013 Dec;10(12):1225–1231.

Published In

Nature methods

DOI

EISSN

1548-7105

ISSN

1548-7091

Publication Date

December 2013

Volume

10

Issue

12

Start / End Page

1225 / 1231

Related Subject Headings

  • Time Factors
  • Signal Transduction
  • SOXB1 Transcription Factors
  • Pluripotent Stem Cells
  • Phenotype
  • Octamer Transcription Factor-3
  • Mice
  • Humans
  • Gene Expression Profiling
  • Endoderm