Summary

An Efficient Method for Directed Hepatocyte-Like Cell Induction from Human Embryonic Stem Cells

Published: May 06, 2021
doi:

Summary

This manuscript describes a detailed protocol for differentiation of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) into functional hepatocyte-like cells (HLCs) by continuously supplementing Activin A and CHIR99021 during hESC differentiation into definitive endoderm (DE).

Abstract

The potential functions of hepatocyte-like cells (HLCs) derived from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) hold great promise for disease modeling and drug screening applications. Provided here is an efficient and reproducible method for differentiation of hESCs into functional HLCs. The establishment of an endoderm lineage is a key step in the differentiation to HLCs. By our method, we regulate the key signaling pathways by continuously supplementing Activin A and CHIR99021 during hESC differentiation into definitive endoderm (DE), followed by generation of hepatic progenitor cells, and finally HLCs with typical hepatocyte morphology in a stagewise method with completely defined reagents. The hESC-derived HLCs produced by this method express stage-specific markers (including albumin, HNF4α nuclear receptor, and sodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (NTCP)), and show special characteristics related to mature and functional hepatocytes (including indocyanine green staining, glycogen storage, hematoxylin-eosin staining and CYP3 activity), and can provide a platform for the development of HLC-based applications in the study of liver diseases.

Introduction

The liver is a highly metabolic organ that plays several roles, including deoxidation, storing glycogen, and secretion and synthesis of proteins1. Various pathogens, drugs and heredity can cause pathological changes in the liver and affect its functions2,3. Hepatocytes, as the main functional unit of the liver, play an important role in artificial liver support systems and drug toxicity elimination. However, the resource of primary human hepatocytes is limited in cell-based therapy, as well as in liver disease research. Therefore, developing new sources of functional human hepatocytes is an important research direction in the field of regenerative medicine. Since 1998 when hESCs have been established4, hESCs have been widely considered by researchers because of their superior differentiation potential (they can differentiate into various tissues in a suitable environment) and high degree of self-renewability, and thus provide ideal source cells for bioartificial livers, hepatocyte transplantation and even liver tissue engineering5.

Currently, the hepatic differentiation efficiency can be greatly increased by enriching the endoderm6. In the lineage differentiation of stem cells into endoderm, levels of the transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) signaling and WNT signaling pathways are the key factors in the node of the endoderm formation stage. Activation of a high-level of TGF-β and WNT signaling can promote the development of endoderm7,8. Activin A is a cytokine belonging to the TGF-β superfamily. Therefore, Activin A is widely used in endoderm induction of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and hESCs9,10. GSK3 is a serine-threonine protein kinase. Researchers have found that CHIR99021, a specific inhibitor of GSK3β, can stimulate typical WNT signals, and can promote stem cell differentiation under certain conditions, suggesting that CHIR99021 has potential for inducing stem cell differentiation into endoderm 11,12,13.

Here we report an efficient and reproducible method for effectively inducing the differentiation of hESCs into functional HLCs. The sequential addition of Activin A and CHIR99021 produced about 89.7±0.8% SOX17 (DE marker)-positive cells. After being further maturated in vitro, these cells expressed hepatic specific markers and exerted hepatocyte-like morphology (based on hematoxylin-eosin staining (H & E)) and functions, such as uptake of indocyanine green (ICG), glycogen storage and CYP3 activity. The results show that hESCs can be successfully differentiated into mature functional HLCs by this method and can provide a basis for liver disease-related research and in vitro drug screening.

Protocol

1. Stem cell maintenance

NOTE: The cell maintenance protocol described below applies to the hES03 cell line maintained in an adherent monolayer. For all the following protocols in this manuscript, cells should be handled under a biological safety cabinet.

  1. Prepare 1x mTesR stem cell culture medium by diluting 5x supplementary medium to mTesR basic medium.
  2. Prepare 30x hESC-qualified Matrigel medium by diluting 5 mL of hESC-qualified Matrigel with 5 mL of DMEM/F12 on the ice. Store at -20 °C.
  3. Prepare 1x hESC-qualified Matrigel medium by diluting 33.3 µL of 30x hESC-qualified Matrigel with 1 mL of DMEM/F12.
  4. Coat sterile 6 well, tissue culture-treated plates with 1 mL of 1x hESC-qualified Matrigel in each well in advance and store at 4 °C overnight. Leave at room temperature (RT) for at least 30 min before use.
  5. Thaw the cryopreserved hESCs in a 37 °C water bath for 3 min without shaking. Then immediately transfer the cells by pipetting into a 15 mL centrifuge tube containing 4 mL prewarmed 37 °C mTesR medium, pipet up and down gently 2 times.
  6. Centrifuge the hESCs at 200 x g for 2 min at RT.
  7. Aspirate the supernatant and gently resuspend the cells in 1 mL of mTesR medium.
  8. Aspirate the DMEM/F12 medium from the plate and seed the cells into a well of 6-well plate at a density of 1 x 105 cells in 2 mL of mTesR.
  9. Incubate in a 5% CO2 incubator and maintain the cells by replacing with preheated mTesR medium daily. Passage the cells at roughly 70-80% confluence or when the cell colonies begin to make contact.

2. Stem cell passage and differentiation

  1. For passaging cells, aspirate the medium and incubate the cells with 1 mL per well of enzyme solution (e.g., Accutase for 5 min at 37 °C. Then transfer the cells by pipetting to a 15 mL centrifuge tube containing 4 mL of DMEM/F12 prewarmed to 37 °C.
  2. Centrifuge the cells at 200 x g at RT for 2 min.
  3. Aspirate the medium and gently resuspend the cell pellet in 1 mL of mTesR medium.
  4. Prepare 24-well plates by coating with 250 µL of 1x hESC-qualified Matrigel medium in advance. Seed hESCs as described above at a density of 1 – 1.5 x 105 cells per well in 500 µL of mTesR medium.
  5. Allow cells to incubate for 24 h at 37 °C in a CO2 incubator.

3. DE formation

  1. Prepare stock solutions of 100 µg/mL Activin A with DPBS containing 0.2% BSA and 3 mM CHIR99021 with DMSO.
  2. Prepare Stage I differentiation basic medium by supplementing RPMI medium with 1x B27.
  3. Add Activin A to a final concentration of 100 ng/mL and CHIR99021 to a final concentration of 3 µM in an appropriate volume of preheated Stage I differentiation basic medium.
  4. Aspirate mTesR medium from the cells and replace with Stage I differentiation media containing added differentiation factors (e.g., 0.5 mL per well of a 24-well plate).
  5. Allow cells to incubate for 3 days at 37 °C in a CO2 incubator, replacing Stage I media daily with freshly added differentiation factors (Days 0-2).
    ​NOTE: After 3 days of differentiation, differentiated cells should express markers of DE cells, such as FOXA2, SOX17, GATA4, CRCR4, and FOXA1 (minimum 80% of SOX17 needed for proceeding).

4. Differentiation of hepatic progenitor cells

  1. Prepare Stage II differentiation basic media by dissolving knockout serum replacement (KOSR) to a final concentration of 20% in Knock Out DMEM.
  2. Prepare Stage II differentiation medium containing 1% DMSO, 1x GlutaMAX, 1x non-essential amino acid (NEAA) solution, 100 µM 2-mercaptoethanol and 1x penicillin/streptomycin (P/S) to the appropriate volume of KOSR/knockout DMEM.
  3. On Day 3 of differentiation, aspirate the medium and replace with Stage II medium (e.g., 0.5 mL per well of a 24 well plate). Then incubate for 24 h.
  4. On Day 4 of differentiation, aspirate the medium and replace with Stage II medium (e.g., 1 mL per well of a 24 well plate).
  5. Change the medium every other day (replace medium on Day 6).
    ​NOTE: After 8 days of differentiation, differentiated cells should express appropriate markers of hepatic progenitor cells, such as HNF4α, AFP, TBX3, TTR, ALB, NTCP, CEBPA (minimum 80% of HNF4α needed for proceeding).

5. Hepatocyte differentiation

  1. Prepare 10 µg/mL hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), 20 µg/mL Oncostatin (OSM) stock solutions with DBPS (containing 0.2% BSA) and filter with a 0.22 µm filter membrane.
  2. Prepare Stage III differentiation basic medium (HepatoZYME-SFM (HZM) medium supplemented with 10 µM hydrocortisone-21-hemisuccinate and 1x P/S).
  3. Add HGF to a final concentration of 10 ng/mL and OSM to a final concentration of 20 ng/mL to the appropriate volume of preheated Stage III differentiation medium.
  4. On Day 8 of differentiation, aspirate Stage II medium from cells and replace with Stage III medium (e.g., 1 mL per well of a 24 well plate).
  5. Allow cells to incubate for 10 days at 37 °C in a CO2 incubator, changing Stage III media every other day with freshly added differentiation factors (Days 8-18).
    ​NOTE: After 18 days of differentiation, differentiated cells should express characteristic markers of hepatocytes, such as AAT, ALB, TTR, HNF4α, NTCP, ASGR1, CYP3A4. The percentage of Albumin-positive cells usually is more than 90%.

6. RNA isolation, cDNA synthesis and RT-qPCR analysis

  1. Aspirate medium from cells and add the proper amount of RNAiso Plus reagent, (e.g., 0.3 mL per well of a 24-well plate). Collect the supernatant in a 1.5 mL tube and let stand at RT for 5 min.
  2. Add 60 µL of chloroform reagent and leave it at RT for 5 min. Then centrifuge at 12,000 x g for 15 min.
  3. Collect the 125 µL supernatant and transfer it to another centrifuge tube. Add 160 µL of isopropanol, mix well, and stand at RT for 10 min.
  4. Centrifuge at 12,000 x g for 10 min.
  5. Remove the supernatant, add 75% ethanol to the precipitated, and centrifuge at 7,500 x g for 5 min.
  6. After drying at RT, add 40 µL of DEPC-treated water to dissolve. For qPCR, reverse transcribe 2 µg of total RNA with a reverse transcription kit according to the manufacturer's protocol.
  7. Perform RT-qPCR using a commercial kit according to the manufacturer's protocol.
  8. Normalize gene expression relative to non-induced stem cells and determine fold variation following normalization to GAPDH.

7. Immunofluorescence Validation of Differentiation

  1. Prepare 1x PBST washing buffer by adding 0.1% Tween-20 to PBS.
  2. Aspirate medium from adherent cells and wash briefly with PBS at RT on a shaker.
  3. Aspirate PBS and incubate cells with 500 µL of ice-cold methanol per well of a 24-well plate to fix the cells at -20 °C overnight.
  4. Remove the methanol and wash the cells 3 times with PBS on a shaker for 10 min each time at RT.
  5. Block cells with 500 µL of 5% BSA prepared in PBS for 1-2 h at RT on a shaker.
  6. Dilute primary antibody at 1: 200 in the same solution used for blocking.
  7. Incubate the fixed cells in 300 µL primary antibody solution overnight at 4 °C on a shaker.
  8. After overnight incubation, wash cells 3 times with PBST for 10 min each time at RT on a shaker.
  9. Prepare secondary antibody solution in blocking solution at 1:1000.
  10. Incubate in 300 µL of secondary antibody solution protected from light for 1 h at RT on a shaker.
  11. Aspirate secondary antibody solution and wash cells 3 times with PBST for 10 min each time at RT on a shaker.
  12. Incubate cells with 300 µL of 1 µg/mL DAPI for 3-5 min, and then wash twice with PBST.
  13. After aspirating PBST, add an appropriate amount of PBS for taking pictures under a fluorescence microscope.

8. Western blot analysis

  1. Prepare 1x TBST washing buffer by adding 0.1% Tween-20 to Tris-buffered saline (TBS).
  2. Prepare SDS-PAGE electrophoresis buffer and western transfer buffer by using a commercial kit according to the manufacturer's protocol.
  3. Resolve total cell protein (40 µg) on a 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel and run in SDS-PAGE electrophoresis buffer at 15 mA constant current for about 2 h.
  4. Transfer the gel to a polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membrane at 300 mA constant current for 2 h at low temperature.
    NOTE: The running time and transfer time may vary depending on the equipment used and the type and percentage of the gel.
  5. Block the membrane with 3% BSA prepared in TBST for 1 h at RT on a shaker.
  6. Incubate in primary antibody solution (1:1000 dilution) overnight at 4 °C on a shaker.
  7. After overnight incubation, wash blotting membrane 3 times with TBST for 15 min per time at RT on a shaker.
  8. Incubate in secondary antibody solution (1:2000 dilution) for 2 h at RT on a shaker.
  9. Discard secondary antibody solution and wash the membrane 3 times with TBST, for 15 min each time, at RT on a shaker.
  10. Visualize immunoreactive bands using a chemiluminescence reagent followed by autoradiography. Use β-actin as the loading control.

9. Indocyanine green uptake

  1. Prepare 200 mg/mL indocyanine green stock solution in DMSO.
  2. Prepare a working solution by supplementing Stage III differentiation medium with indocyanine green solution to a final concentration of 1 mg/mL.
  3. Incubate in a 37 °C, 5% CO2 incubator for 1-2 h.
  4. Aspirate medium and wash the cells 3 times with PBS.
  5. Photograph under a microscope.

10. Periodic Acid-Schiff (PAS) staining and Hematoxylin-Eosin (H&E) staining

  1. Aspirate medium from adherent cells and briefly wash twice with PBS.
  2. For cell fixation, aspirate PBS and incubate cells with ice-cold methanol at -20 °C overnight.
  3. Visualize glycogen storage by PAS staining and observe binucleated cells by H & E staining using a kit following the manufacturer's instructions.
  4. Take images with a fluorescence microscope.

11. Assay for CYP Activity

  1. Measure CYP450 activity using commercially available cell-based assays (P450-Glo Assays) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
  2. Use three independent repeats for testing. Data are represented as the mean ± SD.

Representative Results

The schematic diagram of HLC induction from hESCs and representative bright-field images of each differentiation stage are shown in Figure 1. In Stage I, Activin A and CHIR99021 were added for 3 days to induce stem cells to form endoderm cells. In Stage II, the endoderm cells differentiated into hepatic progenitor cells after being treated with differentiation medium for 5 days. In Stage III, early hepatocytes had matured and differentiated into HLCs after 10 days in HGF and OSM (Figure 1A). In the final stage of differentiation, cells showed a typical hepatocyte phenotype (The cells are polygon and distributed evenly and regularly) (Figure 1B).

To further confirm hepatic differentiation, RT-qPCR, immunofluorescence staining and western blotting were used to detect markers of endoderm cells, hepatic progenitor cells, and mature hepatocytes (Figure 2). The differentiated cells showed high expression levels of differentiation-related genes and proteins in each stage, such as endoderm markers SOX17 (89.7± 0.8%) at Day 3, hepatic progenitor marker HNF4α (81.3±2.9%) at Day 8, AFP (86.6±0.3%) at Day 14, and mature hepatocyte marker ALB (94.5±1.1%) at Day 18. These results indicate that hepatocyte-like cells are generated by this protocol.

In order to detect whether HLCs have hepatocyte functions, we detected ICG uptake, glycogen storage, and CYP activity of HLCs, as well as performed H&E staining. As can be seen the HLCs exhibited green staining (Figure 3A) and extensive cytoplasmic periodic acid-Schiff staining (pink to purple) was observed (Figure 3B), which is consistent with glycogen storage. In addition, we can see the representative morphology of a typical binucleated hepatocyte (Figure 3C). Finally, the enzymatic activity of CYP3A4, the most important metabolic CYP in the liver, was confirmed by enzymatic activity assay (Figure 3D).

Name of Reagent Company Catalog Number Stock Concentration Final Concentration
2-Mercaptoethanol Sigma M7522 50 mM 100 µM
488 labeled goat against mouse IgG ZSGB-BIO ZF-0512 IF: 1:1000
488 labeled goat against Rabbit IgG ZSGB-BIO ZF-0516 IF: 1:1000
Accutase Stem Cell Technologies 7920 1 x 1 x
Activin A peproTech 120-14E 100 µg/ml 100 ng/ml
Anti – Albumin (ALB) Sigma-Aldrich A6684 IF: 1:200; WB:1:1000
Anti – Human Oct4 Abcam Ab19587 IF: 1:200
Anti – α-Fetoprotein (AFP) Sigma-Aldrich A8452 IF: 1:200; WB:1:1000
Anti -SOX17 Abcam ab224637 IF: 1:200
Anti-Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 4 alpha (HNF4α) Sigma-Aldrich SAB1412164 IF: 1:200
B-27 Supplement Gibco 17504-044 50 x 1 x
BSA Beyotime ST023-200g 5.00%
CHIR99021 Sigma-Aldrich SML1046 3 mM 3 µM
DAPI Beyotime C1006
DEPC-water Beyotime R0021
DM3189 MCE HY-12071 500 µM 250 nM
DMEM/F12 Gibco 11320-033 1 x 1 x
DMSO Sigma-Aldrich D5879 1 x 1 x
DPBS Gibco 14190-144 1 x 1 x
GlutaMAX Gibco 35050-061 100 x 1 x
H&E staining kit Beyotime C0105S
Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) peproTech 100-39 10 µg/ml 10 ng/ml
HepatoZYME-SFM (HZM) Gibco 17705-021
Hydrocortisone-21-hemisuccinate Sigma-Aldrich H4881 1 mM 10 µM
Indocyanine Sangon Biotech A606326 200 mg/mL 1 mg/mL
Knock Out DMEM Gibco 10829-018 1 x 1 x
Knock Out SR Multi-Species Gibco A31815-02 20%
Matrigel hESC-qualified Corning 354277 60 x 1 x
MEM NeAA Gibco 11140-050 100 x 1 x
mTesR 5X Supplement Stem Cell Technologies 85852 5 x 1 x
mTesR Basal Medium Stem Cell Technologies 85851 1 x 1 x
Oncostatin (OSM) peproTech 300-10 20 µg/ml 20 ng/ml
P450 – CYP3A4 (Luciferin – PFBE) Promega V8901
PAS staining kit Solarbio G1281
Pen/Strep Gibco 15140-122 100 x 1 x
Peroxidase-Conjugated Goat anti-Mouse IgG ZSGB-BIO ZB-2305 WB: 1:2000
Primary Antibody Dilution Buffer for Western Blot Beyotime P0256
ReverTraAce qPCR RT Kit TOYOBO FSQ-101
RNAiso Plus TaKaRa 9109
RPMI 1640 Gibco 11875093 1 x 1 x
Skim milk Sangon Biotech A600669 5.00%
SYBR Green Master Mix Thermo Fisher Scientific A25742
Torin2 MCE HY-13002 15 µM 15 nM
Tween Sigma-Aldrich WXBB7485V 0.10%

Table 1: Components of cell culture and differentiation base media.

Name of Gene abbreviations primers sequences(F) primers sequences (R)
POU Class 5 Homeobox 1 OCT4 AGCGAACCAG
TATCGAGAAC
TTACAGAACC
ACACTCGGAC
Forkhead Box A2 FOXA2 GCATTCCCAATC
TTGACACGGTGA
GCCCTTGCAGC
CAGAATACACATT
SRY-Box Transcription Factor 17 SOX17 TATTTTGTCTGC
CACTTGAACAGT
TTGGGACACAT
TCAAAGCTAGTTA
Frizzled Class Receptor 8 FZD8 ATCGGCTACAA
CTACACCTACA
GTACATGCTGC
ACAGGAAGAA
C-X-C Motif Chemokine Receptor 4 CXCR4 CACCGCATCT
GGAGAACCA
GCCCATTTCCT
CGGTGTAGTT
Forkhead Box A1 FOXA1 AAGGCATACGA
ACAGGCACTG
TACACACCTTG
GTAGTACGCC
Msh Homeobox 1 MSX1 CGCCAAGGCA
AAGAGACTAC
GCCATCTTCAG
CTTCTCCAG
Mesogenin 1 MSGN1 GCTGGAATCCTA
TTCTTCTTCTCC
TGGAAAGCTAACA
TATTGTAGTCCAC
Caudal Type Homeobox 1 CDX1 AAGGAGTTTCAT
TACAGCCGTTAC
TGCTGTTTCTTCT
TGTTCACTTTG
Even-Skipped Homeobox 1 EVX1 GCTGTCTCTCTG
AACAAAATGCT
CATCTCTCACTCT
CTCCTCCAAA
Mesoderm Posterior BHLH Transcription Factor 2 MESP2 AGCTTGGGTG
CCTCCTTATT
TGCTTCCCTGAA
AGACATCA
NK2 Homeobox 5 NKX2.5 CAAGTGTGCG
TCTGCCTTT
CAGCTCTTTCTT
TTCGGCTCTA
ISL LIM Homeobox 1 ISL1 AGATTATATCAGGT
TGTACGGGATCA
ACACAGCGGA
AACACTCGAT
Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 4 Alpha HNF4α ACATGGACATG
GCCGACTAC
CGTTGAGGTTG
GTGCCTTCT
Alpha Fetoprotein AFP ACTGAATCCAG
AACACTGCA
TGCAGTCAATG
CATCTTTCA
T-Box Transcription Factor 3 TBX3 TTATGTCCCAG
CGAGGGTGA
ACGTGGTGGTG
GAGATCTTG
Transthyretin TTR AGAAAGGCTG
CTGATGAC
GTGCCTTCCA
GTAAGATTTG
Albumin ALB CCCCAAGTGT
CAACTCCA
GTTCAGGACCA
CGGATAG
Sodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide NTCP CATAGGGATCGT
CCTCAAATCCA
GCCACACTGCAC
AAGAGAATG
CCAAT Enhancer Binding Protein Alpha CEBPA  AGGAGGATGAA
GCCAAGCAGCT
AGTGCGCGATC
TGGAACTGCAG
Serpin Family A Member 1 AAT AAATGAACTCA
CCCACGAT
ACCTTAGTGATG
CCCAGT
Asialoglycoprotein Receptor 1 ASGR1 CAGACCCTGAGA
CCCTGAGCAA
TCCTGCAGCTGG
GAGTCTTTTCT
Cytochrome P450 Family 3 Subfamily A Member 4 CYP3A4 TTGTAATCACTG
TTGGCGTGGG
AATGGGCAAAGT
CACAGTGGA

Table 2: Primer sequences for q-PCR analysis.

Figure 1
Figure 1: Schematic diagram of protocol for the specification of DE and HLCs. (A) Schematic presentation of the 3-stage differentiation strategy used in this study. (B) Morphology of the differentiated cells at Days 0, 3, 8, 14 and 18. Scale bar = 100 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 2
Figure 2: Stage-specific marker expression during hESC differentiation into HLCs. (A) mRNA expression of stage-specific genes. (B-C) Protein expression of stage-specific genes. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Figure 3
Figure 3: Functions of hESC-derived HLCs. (A) HLCs treated for 1 h with 1 mg/mL indocyanine green demonstrate uptake as assessed by phase microscopy. (B) Representative PAS staining images indicating glycogen storage. (C) Representative HE staining images showing binucleates cells. (D) Basal level activity of major cytochrome P450 enzymes. All values are presented as mean ± SD. Scale bar = 100 µm. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

Discussion

Here, we present a stepwise method that induces HLCs from hESCs in three stages. In the first stage, Activin A and CHIR99021 were used to differentiate hESCs into DE. In the second stage, KO-DMEM and DMSO were used to differentiate DE into hepatic progenitor cells. In the third stage, HZM plus HGF, OSM and hydrocortisone 21-hemisuccinate sodium salt were used to continue to differentiate hepatic progenitor cells into HLCs.

The following critical steps need to be taken into consideration while using the protocol. The initial differentiation density of cells and the accurate timing of medium changes are important factors for successful differentiation. When we begin to differentiate, we must ensure that the initial seeding density is appropriate, at a confluence of about 30-40%, when cells are just beginning to come into contact with each other, and that the intercellular spaces are evenly arranged in a network under the field of vision. During differentiation, the corresponding differentiation medium must be changed precisely at the indicated time, especially in the first stage and the key moment of each replacement stage, to ensure that cells differentiate in the mode and stage imitating the process of embryonic development.

The first stage of differentiation of hESCs into DE is particularly important. There are usually a large number of cells that detach and float up during Stage I of differentiation, which is a critical stage for the cell fate, but at this time the cells still retain the ability to proliferate. Therefore, the confluence of cells can reach about 90-100% at the end of Stage I. In addition, it should be noted that at the beginning of Stage III of differentiation (i.e., Day 8), the cytoplasm of the cells begins to condense, resulting in the cells gradually acquiring a slender morphology. However at Day 10, the cytoplasm gradually recovers, and at Day 14, the cells begin to show the obvious polyhedral morphology of hepatocytes.

In this study, the HLCs obtained are actually closer to fetal hepatocytes as AFP is higher expressed than ALB at day 18. Although the generated HLCs exert hepatocyte characteristics and functions, there is still a gap between HLCs and primary human hepatocytes, indicating our differentiated cells are still not functionally mature. Therefore, future work will need to focus on further optimizing the differentiation method.

At present, growth factors and small molecular compounds such as Activin A9,10,14, Wnt3a15, CHIR16, Torin217 and IDE118,19 are commonly used to induce DE differentiation in various differentiation systems. The Song group used Activin A to differentiate stem cells into DE, and used FGF4 (Fibroblast Growth Factor 4), BMP2(Bone morphogenetic protein 2), HGF, KGF (Keratinocyte growth factor), OSM and Dex for hepatic specification and HLCs maturation20. The Sullivan group induced DE by Activin A and Wnt 3a, and induced HLCs by β-ME (2-mercaptoethanol), DMSO, Insulin, HGF, OSM21. The Siller team used CHIR99021 for DE differentiation, DMSO, Dihexa (Hepatocyte growth factor receptor agonist N-hexanoic-Tyr), and Dex for HLC differentiation to obtain HLC with liver function characteristics16. However, some of these methods use many recombinant growth factors to generate DE with high cost and some of them use only small molecules to generate DE with lower efficiency. Activin A is critical factor for DE generation. We have tried to replace Activin A with other small molecules but usually get a lower efficiency. Therefore, we adopt the method of adding Activin A and CHIR99021 as inducing factors of DE, and detect differentiation-related genes in each stage by q-PCR, immunofluorescence and western blotting.

In recent years, the establishment of an experimental system for directed HLC induction from hESCs is an important basis for the modeling of hepatocyte development and screening drugs for liver-related diseases. At the same time, it can also provide an effective source of cells for hepatocyte transplantation, liver tissue engineering, bioartificial livers and other research. It has been reported that HLCs derived from stem cells have been used to conduct various studies on viral infection as a drug screening model to predict hepatotoxic drug-induced responses and to study the innate immune pathway and signaling pathways of cells10,22,23,24,25. Generally, this method introduces in detail an efficient hepatocyte-like cell differentiation technique from hESCs that can successfully differentiate hESCs into mature functional hepatocytes. The results provide a platform for the development of HLC-based applications.

Divulgations

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 81870432 and 81570567 to X.L.Z.), (No. 81571994 to P.N.S.); the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province, China (No. 2020A1515010054 to P.N.S.), The Li Ka Shing Shantou University Foundation (No. L1111 2008 to P.N.S.). We would like to thank Prof. Stanley Lin from Shantou University Medical College for useful advice.

Materials

2-Mercaptoethanol Sigma M7522 For hepatic progenitor differentiation
488 labeled goat against mouse IgG ZSGB-BIO ZF-0512 For IF,second antibody
488 labeled goat against Rabbit IgG ZSGB-BIO ZF-0516 For IF,second antibody
Accutase Stem Cell Technologies 7920 For cell passage
Activin A peproTech 120-14E For definitive endoderm formation
Anti – Albumin (ALB) Sigma-Aldrich A6684 For IF and WB, primary antibody
Anti – Human Oct4 Abcam Ab19587 For IF, primary antibody
Anti – α-Fetoprotein (AFP) Sigma-Aldrich A8452 For IF and WB, primary antibody
Anti -SOX17 Abcam ab224637 For IF, primary antibody
Anti-Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 4 alpha (HNF4α) Sigma-Aldrich SAB1412164 For IF, primary antibody
B-27 Supplement Gibco 17504-044 For definitive endoderm formation
BSA Beyotime ST023-200g For cell blocking
CHIR99021 Sigma-Aldrich SML1046 For definitive endoderm formation
DAPI Beyotime C1006 For nuclear staining
DEPC-water Beyotime R0021 For RNA dissolution
DM3189 MCE HY-12071 For definitive endoderm formation
DMEM/F12 Gibco 11320-033 For cell culture
DMSO Sigma-Aldrich D5879 For hepatic progenitor differentiation
DPBS Gibco 14190-144 For cell culture
GlutaMAX Gibco 35050-061 For hepatic progenitor differentiation
H&E staining kit Beyotime C0105S For H&E staining
Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) peproTech 100-39 For hepatocyte differentiation
HepatoZYME-SFM (HZM) Gibco 17705-021 For hepatocyte differentiation
Hydrocortisone-21-hemisuccinate Sigma-Aldrich H4881 For hepatocyte differentiation
Indocyanine Sangon Biotech A606326 For Indocyanine staining
Knock Out DMEM Gibco 10829-018 For hepatic progenitor differentiation
Knock Out SR Multi-Species Gibco A31815-02 For hepatic progenitor differentiation
Matrigel hESC-qualified Corning 354277 For cell culture
MEM NeAA Gibco 11140-050 For hepatic progenitor differentiation
mTesR 5X Supplement Stem Cell Technologies 85852 For cell culture
mTesR Basal Medium Stem Cell Technologies 85851 For cell culture
Oncostatin (OSM) peproTech 300-10 For hepatocyte differentiation
P450 – CYP3A4 (Luciferin – PFBE) Promega V8901 For CYP450 activity
PAS staining kit Solarbio G1281 For PAS staining
Pen/Strep Gibco 15140-122 For cell differentiation
Peroxidase-Conjugated Goat anti-Mouse IgG ZSGB-BIO ZB-2305 For WB,second antibody
Primary Antibody Dilution Buffer for Western Blot Beyotime P0256 For primary antibody dilution
ReverTraAce qPCR RT Kit TOYOBO FSQ-101 For cDNA Synthesis
RNAiso Plus TaKaRa 9109 For RNA Isolation
RPMI 1640 Gibco 11875093 For definitive endoderm formation
Skim milk Sangon Biotech A600669 For second antibody preparation
SYBR Green Master Mix Thermo Fisher Scientific A25742 For RT-PCR Analysis
Torin2 MCE HY-13002 For definitive endoderm formation
Tween Sigma-Aldrich WXBB7485V For washing buffer preparation

References

  1. Hou, Y., Hu, S., Li, X., He, W., Wu, G. Amino Acid Metabolism in the Liver: Nutritional and Physiological Significance. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology. 1265, 21-37 (2020).
  2. Huang, C., Li, Q., Xu, W., Chen, L. Molecular and cellular mechanisms of liver dysfunction in COVID-19. Discovery Medicine. 30, 107-112 (2020).
  3. Todorovic Vukotic, N., Dordevic, J., Pejic, S., Dordevic, N., Pajovic, S. B. Antidepressants- and antipsychotics-induced hepatotoxicity. Archives of Toxicology. , (2021).
  4. Thomson, J. A., et al. Embryonic stem cell lines derived from human blastocysts. Science. 282, 1145-1147 (1998).
  5. Li, Z., et al. Generation of qualified clinical-grade functional hepatocytes from human embryonic stem cells in chemically defined conditions. Cell Death & Disease. 10, 763 (2019).
  6. Rassouli, H., et al. Gene Expression Patterns of Royan Human Embryonic Stem Cells Correlate with Their Propensity and Culture Systems. Cell Journal. 21, 290-299 (2019).
  7. Loh, K. M., et al. Efficient endoderm induction from human pluripotent stem cells by logically directing signals controlling lineage bifurcations. Cell Stem Cell. 14, 237-252 (2014).
  8. Mukherjee, S., et al. Sox17 and beta-catenin co-occupy Wnt-responsive enhancers to govern the endoderm gene regulatory network. Elife. 9, (2020).
  9. Ang, L. T., et al. A Roadmap for Human Liver Differentiation from Pluripotent Stem Cells. Cell Reports. 22, 2190-2205 (2018).
  10. Carpentier, A., et al. Engrafted human stem cell-derived hepatocytes establish an infectious HCV murine model. Journal of Clinical Investigation. 124, 4953-4964 (2014).
  11. Gomez, G. A., et al. Human neural crest induction by temporal modulation of WNT activation. Biologie du développement. 449, 99-106 (2019).
  12. Lee, J., Choi, S. H., Lee, D. R., Kim, D. S., Kim, D. W. Generation of Isthmic Organizer-Like Cells from Human Embryonic Stem Cells. Molecules and Cells. 41, 110-118 (2018).
  13. Matsuno, K., et al. Redefining definitive endoderm subtypes by robust induction of human induced pluripotent stem cells. Differentiation. 92, 281-290 (2016).
  14. Mathapati, S., et al. Small-Molecule-Directed Hepatocyte-Like Cell Differentiation of Human Pluripotent Stem Cells. Current Protocols in Stem Cell Biology. 38, 1-18 (2016).
  15. Hay, D. C., et al. Highly efficient differentiation of hESCs to functional hepatic endoderm requires ActivinA and Wnt3a signaling. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 105, 12301-12306 (2008).
  16. Siller, R., Greenhough, S., Naumovska, E., Sullivan, G. J. Small-molecule-driven hepatocyte differentiation of human pluripotent stem cells. Stem Cell Reports. 4, 939-952 (2015).
  17. Yu, J. S., et al. PI3K/mTORC2 regulates TGF-beta/Activin signalling by modulating Smad2/3 activity via linker phosphorylation. Nature Communications. 6, 7212 (2015).
  18. Borowiak, M., et al. Small molecules efficiently direct endodermal differentiation of mouse and human embryonic stem cells. Cell Stem Cell. 4, 348-358 (2009).
  19. Tahamtani, Y., et al. Treatment of human embryonic stem cells with different combinations of priming and inducing factors toward definitive endoderm. Stem Cells and Development. 22, 1419-1432 (2013).
  20. Song, Z., et al. Efficient generation of hepatocyte-like cells from human induced pluripotent stem cells. Cell Research. 19, 1233-1242 (2009).
  21. Sullivan, G. J., et al. Generation of functional human hepatic endoderm from human induced pluripotent stem cells. Hepatology. 51, 329-335 (2010).
  22. Xia, Y., et al. Human stem cell-derived hepatocytes as a model for hepatitis B virus infection, spreading and virus-host interactions. Journal of Hepatology. 66, 494-503 (2017).
  23. Li, S., et al. Derivation and applications of human hepatocyte-like cells. World Journal of Stem Cells. 11, 535-547 (2019).
  24. Ogawa, S., et al. Three-dimensional culture and cAMP signaling promote the maturation of human pluripotent stem cell-derived hepatocytes. Development. 140, 3285-3296 (2013).
  25. Kim, D. E., et al. Prediction of drug-induced immune-mediated hepatotoxicity using hepatocyte-like cells derived from human embryonic stem cells. Toxicology. 387, 1-9 (2017).

Play Video

Citer Cet Article
Zhou, Q., Xie, X., Zhong, Z., Sun, P., Zhou, X. An Efficient Method for Directed Hepatocyte-Like Cell Induction from Human Embryonic Stem Cells. J. Vis. Exp. (171), e62654, doi:10.3791/62654 (2021).

View Video