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Physiological Normoxia and Absence of EGF Is Required for the Long-Term Propagation of Anterior Neural Precursors from Human Pluripotent Cells
Authors:Bilada Bilican  Matthew R. Livesey  Ghazal Haghi  Jing Qiu  Karen Burr  Rick Siller  Giles E. Hardingham  David J. A. Wyllie  Siddharthan Chandran
Affiliation:1. Euan MacDonald Centre for Motor Neurone Disease Research, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.; 2. MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.; 3. Centre for Neuroregeneration, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.; 4. Centre for Integrative Physiology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.; University of Freiburg, Germany,
Abstract:Widespread use of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) to study neuronal physiology and function is hindered by the ongoing need for specialist expertise in converting hPSCs to neural precursor cells (NPCs). Here, we describe a new methodology to generate cryo-preservable hPSC-derived NPCs that retain an anterior identity and are propagatable long-term prior to terminal differentiation, thus abrogating regular de novo neuralization. Key to achieving passagable NPCs without loss of identity is the combination of both absence of EGF and propagation in physiological levels (3%) of O2. NPCs generated in this way display a stable long-term anterior forebrain identity and importantly retain developmental competence to patterning signals. Moreover, compared to NPCs maintained at ambient O2 (21%), they exhibit enhanced uniformity and speed of functional maturation, yielding both deep and upper layer cortical excitatory neurons. These neurons display multiple attributes including the capability to form functional synapses and undergo activity-dependent gene regulation. The platform described achieves long-term maintenance of anterior neural precursors that can give rise to forebrain neurones in abundance, enabling standardised functional studies of neural stem cell maintenance, lineage choice and neuronal functional maturation for neurodevelopmental research and disease-modelling.
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