Is the time right for in vitro neurotoxicity testing using human iPSC-derived neurons?

Publication date

2016

Authors

Tukker, Anke MISNI 0000000493229145
de Groot, M.W.G.D.M.ISNI 0000000505986507
Wijnolts, Fiona M JISNI 000000049296034X
Kasteel, Emma E.J.ORCID 0000-0002-4518-1648ISNI 0000000492896499
Hondebrink, LauraISNI 0000000396548435
Westerink, RemcoISNI 0000000080720470

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Article
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Abstract

Current neurotoxicity testing heavily relies on expensive, time consuming and ethically debated in vivo animal experiments that are unsuitable for screening large number of chemicals. Consequently, there is a clear need for (high-throughput) in vitro test strategies, preferably using human cells as this increases relevance and eliminates the need for interspecies translation. However, human stem cell-derived neurons used to date are not well characterised, require prolonged differentiation and are potentially subject to batch-to-batch variation, ethical concerns and country-specific legislations. Recently, a number of human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neurons became commercially available that may circumvent these concerns. We therefore used immunofluorescent stainings to demonstrate that human iPSC-derived neurons from various suppliers form mixed neuronal cultures, consisting of different types of (excitatory and inhibitory) neurons. Using multi-well microelectrode array (mwMEA) recordings, we demonstrate that these human iPSC-derived cultures develop spontaneous neuronal activity over time, which can be modulated by different physiological, toxicological and pharmacological compounds. Additional single cell calcium imaging illustrates the presence of functional GABA, glutamate, and acetylcholine receptors as well as voltage-gated calcium channels. While human iPSC-derived neuronal cultures appear not yet suitable to fully replace the rat primary cortical model, our data indicate that these rapidly differentiating, commercially available human iPSC-derived neuronal cultures are already suitable for in vitro prioritisation and effect screening studies. Further characterisation and toxicological validation is now required to facilitate acceptance and large-scale implementation of these animal-free, physiologically-relevant human iPSC-based modelsfor future neurotoxicity testing.

Keywords

In vitro neurotoxicity screening, multi-electrode array (MEA), human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons, mixed neuronal cultures, alternatives to animal testing

Citation

Tukker, A M, de Groot, M W G D M, Wijnolts, F M J, Kasteel, E E J, Hondebrink, L & Westerink, R H S 2016, 'Is the time right for in vitro neurotoxicity testing using human iPSC-derived neurons?', Altex, vol. 33, no. 3, pp. 261-71. https://doi.org/10.14573/altex.1510091