A non-invasive method to generate induced pluripotent stem cells from primate urine

2021 | journal article

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​A non-invasive method to generate induced pluripotent stem cells from primate urine​
Geuder, J.; Wange, L. E.; Janjic, A.; Radmer, J.; Janssen, P.; Bagnoli, J. W. & Müller, S. et al.​ (2021) 
Scientific Reports11(1).​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-82883-0 

Documents & Media

document.pdf3.66 MBAdobe PDF

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Geuder, Johanna; Wange, Lucas E.; Janjic, Aleksandar; Radmer, Jessica; Janssen, Philipp; Bagnoli, Johannes W.; Müller, Stefan; Kaul, Artur; Ohnuki, Mari; Enard, Wolfgang
Abstract
Abstract Comparing the molecular and cellular properties among primates is crucial to better understand human evolution and biology. However, it is difficult or ethically impossible to collect matched tissues from many primates, especially during development. An alternative is to model different cell types and their development using induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). These can be generated from many tissue sources, but non-invasive sampling would decisively broaden the spectrum of non-human primates that can be investigated. Here, we report the generation of primate iPSCs from urine samples. We first validate and optimize the procedure using human urine samples and show that suspension- Sendai Virus transduction of reprogramming factors into urinary cells efficiently generates integration-free iPSCs, which maintain their pluripotency under feeder-free culture conditions. We demonstrate that this method is also applicable to gorilla and orangutan urinary cells isolated from a non-sterile zoo floor. We characterize the urinary cells, iPSCs and derived neural progenitor cells using karyotyping, immunohistochemistry, differentiation assays and RNA-sequencing. We show that the urine-derived human iPSCs are indistinguishable from well characterized PBMC-derived human iPSCs and that the gorilla and orangutan iPSCs are well comparable to the human iPSCs. In summary, this study introduces a novel and efficient approach to non-invasively generate iPSCs from primate urine. This will extend the zoo of species available for a comparative approach to molecular and cellular phenotypes.
Issue Date
2021
Journal
Scientific Reports 
Organization
Deutsches Primatenzentrum 
eISSN
2045-2322
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media