Publication

Forskolin-driven conversion of human somatic cells into induced neurons through regulation of the cAMP-CREB1-JNK signaling

February 11, 2024
ActivityScan Assay
Functional Phenotyping
MaxLab Live
MaxOne
MaxOne Chip
Network Assay
Neuronal Cell Cultures
Guodong Wang, Dandan Zhang, Liangshan Qin, Quanhui Liu, Wenkui Tang, Mingxing Liu, Fan Xu, Fen Tang, Leping Cheng, Huiming Mo, Xiang Yuan, Zhiqiang Wang, Ben Huang
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Abstract

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Human somatic cells can be reprogrammed into neuron cell fate through regulation of a single transcription factor or application of small molecule cocktails. Methods: Here, we report that forskolin efficiently induces the conversion of human somatic cells into induced neurons (FiNs). Results: A large population of neuron-like phenotype cells was observed as early as 24-36 h post-induction. There were >90% TUJ1-, >80% MAP2-, and >80% NEUN-positive neurons at 5 days post-induction. Multiple subtypes of neurons were present among TUJ1-positive cells, including >60% cholinergic, >20% glutamatergic, >10% GABAergic, and >5% dopaminergic neurons. FiNs exhibited typical neural electrophysiological activity in vitro and the ability to survive in vitro and in vivo more than 2 months. Mechanistically, forskolin functions in FiN reprogramming by regulating the cAMP-CREB1-JNK signals, which upregulates cAMP-CREB1 expression and downregulates JNK expression. Conclusion: Overall, our studies identify a safer and efficient single-small-molecule-driven reprogramming approach for induced neuron generation and reveal a novel regulatory mechanism of neuronal cell fate acquisition. Keywords: Chemically induced neurons (ciNs), Somatic cell transdifferentiation, Forskolin, CREB1-JNK, Regulatory network