Authors
Kathrin Meyer, Laura Ferraiuolo, Carlos J Miranda, Shibi Likhite, Sohyun McElroy, Samantha Renusch, Dara Ditsworth, Clotilde Lagier-Tourenne, Richard A Smith, John Ravits, Arthur H Burghes, Pamela J Shaw, Don W Cleveland, Stephen J Kolb, Brian K Kaspar
Publication date
2014/1/14
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
111
Issue
2
Pages
829-832
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) causes motor neuron degeneration, paralysis, and death. Accurate disease modeling, identifying disease mechanisms, and developing therapeutics is urgently needed. We previously reported motor neuron toxicity through postmortem ALS spinal cord-derived astrocytes. However, these cells can only be harvested after death, and their expansion is limited. We now report a rapid, highly reproducible method to convert adult human fibroblasts from living ALS patients to induced neuronal progenitor cells and subsequent differentiation into astrocytes (i-astrocytes). Non-cell autonomous toxicity to motor neurons is found following coculture of i-astrocytes from familial ALS patients with mutation in superoxide dismutase or hexanucleotide expansion in C9orf72 (ORF 72 on chromosome 9) the two most frequent causes of ALS. Remarkably, i-astrocytes from sporadic ALS patients are as …
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