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Modulation of WNT and FGF18 enhances yield and subtype identity of hPSC-derived midbrain dopamine neurons
- Kim, Tae Wan ;
- Piao, Jinghua ;
- Bocchi, Vittoria D. ;
- Koo, So Yeon ;
- Choi, Se Joon ;
- Chaudhry, Fayzan ;
- Yang, Donghe ;
- Cho, Hyein S. ;
- Hergenreder, Emiliano ;
- Ruiz Perera, Lucia ;
- Joshi, Subhashini ;
- Abou Mrad, Zaki ;
- Claros, Nidia ;
- Donohue, Shkurte Ademi ;
- Eun Im, Yeong ;
- Jeong, Hyo Jae ;
- Frank, Anika K. ;
- Walsh, Ryan M. ;
- Mosharov, Eugene V. ;
- Betel, Doron ;
- Tabar, Viviane ;
- Studer, Lorenz
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- Title
- Modulation of WNT and FGF18 enhances yield and subtype identity of hPSC-derived midbrain dopamine neurons
- Issued Date
- 2026-05
- Citation
- The Journal of clinical investigation, v.136, no.10
- Type
- Article
- Author Keywords
- Development ; Neurodevelopment ; Neuroscience ; Parkinson disease ; Stem cell transplantation
- Keywords
- REGENERATIVE MEDICINE ; PROGENITOR CELLS ; STEM-CELLS ; MOUSE ; DIFFERENTIATION ; PROTECTS ; SURVIVAL ; THERAPY ; GRAFTS
- ISSN
- 0021-9738
- Abstract
-
While clinical trials of human pluripotent stem cell-derived midbrain dopamine (mDA) neuron precursor grafts for Parkinson's disease (PD) are ongoing, current protocols remain suboptimal. In particular, the yield of TH+ mDA neurons after in vivo grafting and the expression of certain mDA neuron and subtype-specific markers require improvement. Single-cell transcriptomic analyses of grafts have revealed low proportions of mDA neurons and substantial off-target contamination. Here, we present an optimized mDA neuron differentiation strategy that builds on our clinical-grade ("Boost") protocol by adding FGF18 and IWP2 treatment ("Boost+") at the neurogenesis stage. Boost+ mDA neurons show higher expression of EN1, PITX3, and ALDH1A1. Improvements in mDA neuron yield and transcriptional similarity to primary mDA neurons are observed in vitro and following transplantation. Single-nucleus RNA sequencing demonstrates enrichment of A9 mDA neurons within Boost+ grafts. Functional studies in vitro demonstrate increased dopamine production and release and improved electrophysiological properties. In vivo analyses show higher percentages of TH+ mDA neurons, resulting in efficient rescue of amphetamine-induced rotation behavior in the 6-OHDA rat model and rescue of deficits in some nondrug-induced assays, including the ladder rung assay, which are not improved by Boost mDA neurons. The Boost+ conditions present an optimized differentiation protocol with advantages for disease modeling and mDA neuron grafting paradigms.
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- Publisher
- American Society for Clinical Investigation
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