Characterization of a human pluripotent stem cell‐derived model of neuronal development using multiplexed targeted proteomics
2015
Purpose
Human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC)-derived cellular models have great potential to enable drug discovery and improve translation of preclinical insights to the clinic. We have developed a hPSC-derived neural precursor cell model for studying early events in human brain development. We present protein-level characterization of this model, using a multiplexed SRM approach, to establish reproducibility and physiological relevance; essential prerequisites for utilization of the neuronal development model in phenotypic screening-based drug discovery.
Experimental design
Profiles of 246 proteins across three key stages of in vitro neuron differentiation were analyzed by SRM. Three independently hPSC-derived isogenic neural stem cell (NSC) lines were analyzed across five to nine independent neuronal differentiations.
Results
One hundred seventy-five proteins were reliably quantified revealing a time-dependent pattern of protein regulation that reflected protein dynamics during in vivo brain development and that was conserved across replicate differentiations and multiple cell lines.
Conclusions and clinical relevance
SRM-based protein profiling enabled establishment of the reproducibility and physiological relevance of the hPSC-derived neuronal model. Combined with the successful quantification of proteins relevant to neurodevelopmental diseases, this validates the platform for use as a model to enable neuroscience drug discovery.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
38
References
15
Citations
NaN
KQI