This proposal seeks to estabalish a formalized national resource for lung researchers consisting of a lung disease-specific induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) bank that can be shared without restriction or exclusivity. More than 200 human lung disease-relevant iPSC clones, and their gene-edited progeny, are now banked in the Center for Regenerative Medicine (CReM) of Boston University/Boston Medical Center, providing an unprecedented opportunity for any basic scientist to derive an inexhaustible supply of patient-derived lung epithelial, vascular, immune, or interstitial cells. These cells containing each patient's own genetic background are now available for in vitro human lung disease modeling, drug screening of personalized therapeutics, and the development of future lung regeneration cell-based therapies. The most valuable human clones in this bank not only carry the most common lung disease-inducing mutations (e.g. mutations in loci encoding CFTR, Alpha-1 antitrypsin, BMPR2, SPC, SPB, ABCA3, and NKX2.1), but also carry knock-in fluorochrome reporters targeted to specific loci through state-of-the-art gene editing technologies. In parallel, the bank also includes 50 mouse iPSC clones generated from transgenic or knock-in mice that carry well characterized fluorochrome reporters of lung lineages (SPC-GFP, T1a-GFP, Tie2-GFP, SMA-GFP, and Nkx2.1-GFP). We propose to establish this cell bank through four specific aims to accomplish the goals of: a) national sharing of iPSCs that comprise a critical resource in high demand by both basic and clinical lung researchers, b) establishment of quality assurance approaches and methods for banking an exhaustive panel of human and mouse lines carrying the most common gene mutations and lung lineage reporter genes required by the majority of U.S. lung researchers in the years ahead, c) development of a formalized education and training program able to nationally disseminate the expertise required to fully harness these new tools and differentiate them into lung lineages, and d) self-sustained maintenance of the bank financially, logistically, and educationally.

Public Health Relevance

Diseases affecting the lung cause considerable morbidity and mortality in the US today, yet there are few therapeutic options available due to limited access to an accessible supply of primary human lung cells for biomedical research. Induced pluripotent stem cell technologies (iPSCs) now provide easy access to cells from each individual patient, and since the cells indefinitely self-renew in the undifferentiated state they represent a inexhaustible source of patient-specific or disease-specific cells that can be expanded, frozen, shipped, and thawed in any investigators lab. This proposal makes available an expansive bank of lung disease-specific iPSC cells as a national resource available to any investigator without restriction or exclusivity. (End of Abstract)

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Resource-Related Research Projects (R24)
Project #
5R24HL123828-02
Application #
8913259
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHL1-CSR-Q (M3))
Program Officer
Blaisdell, Carol J
Project Start
2014-08-15
Project End
2019-04-30
Budget Start
2015-05-01
Budget End
2016-04-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
$533,174
Indirect Cost
$207,472
Name
Boston University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
604483045
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02118
McCauley, Katherine B; Hawkins, Finn; Kotton, Darrell N (2018) Derivation of Epithelial-Only Airway Organoids from Human Pluripotent Stem Cells. Curr Protoc Stem Cell Biol 45:e51
McCauley, Katherine B; Alysandratos, Konstantinos-Dionysios; Jacob, Anjali et al. (2018) Single-Cell Transcriptomic Profiling of Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived SCGB3A2+ Airway Epithelium. Stem Cell Reports 10:1579-1595
Reeves, Emer P; O'Dwyer, Ciara A; Dunlea, Danielle M et al. (2018) Ataluren, a New Therapeutic for Alpha-1 Antitrypsin-Deficient Individuals with Nonsense Mutations. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 198:1099-1102
Park, Seonmi; Mostoslavsky, Gustavo (2018) Generation of Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Using a Defined, Feeder-Free Reprogramming System. Curr Protoc Stem Cell Biol 45:e48
Jamal, Mohamed; Lewandowski, Sara L; Lawton, Matthew L et al. (2018) Derivation and characterization of putative craniofacial mesenchymal progenitor cells from human induced pluripotent stem cells. Stem Cell Res 33:100-109
Sommer, Cesar A; Capilla, Amalia; Molina-Estevez, Francisco J et al. (2018) Modeling APC mutagenesis and familial adenomatous polyposis using human iPS cells. PLoS One 13:e0200657
Hawkins, Finn; Kramer, Philipp; Jacob, Anjali et al. (2017) Prospective isolation of NKX2-1-expressing human lung progenitors derived from pluripotent stem cells. J Clin Invest 127:2277-2294
McCauley, Katherine B; Hawkins, Finn; Serra, Maria et al. (2017) Efficient Derivation of Functional Human Airway Epithelium from Pluripotent Stem Cells via Temporal Regulation of Wnt Signaling. Cell Stem Cell 20:844-857.e6
Jacob, Anjali; Morley, Michael; Hawkins, Finn et al. (2017) Differentiation of Human Pluripotent Stem Cells into Functional Lung Alveolar Epithelial Cells. Cell Stem Cell 21:472-488.e10