화학공학소재연구정보센터
Process Biochemistry, Vol.88, 138-147, 2020
Integration of metabolomic and transcriptomic profiling to compare two protocols of differentiation of human induced pluripotent stem cells into hepatocytes
Human hepatocyte-like cells derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) may provide an unlimited supply of cells for in vitro liver models. However, hiPSC differentiation remains a major challenge due to immaturity of the hepatocytes obtained and the high cost of differentiation protocols currently proposed. Here, we studied the efficacy of new protocol, with reduction of growth factors, for the generation of hepatocyte-like cells from hiPSC. We performed metabolomic and mRNA analysis by RTqPCR and nanoCAGE processing to identify and understand key metabolisms during differentiation. By reducing the change frequency of the culture medium in the new protocol, we successfully generated hepatocyte-like cells producing albumin, urea, and CYP3A4 positive. The metabolomic analysis successfully extracted both signatures, common and specific, for each differentiation step. Integrating the metabolomic data with transcriptomic contributed to explaining the kinetics of carbohydrate, lipid and nitrogen metabolism throughout differentiation. The information extracted during differentiation showed that the cells moved from an aerobic-like respiration pattern to a mitochondrial oxidative respiration pattern in both protocols. Reducing culture medium renewal led to reduced glucose consumption, followed by fructose production and significant extracellular lipogenesis throughout differentiation. We believe that the overall dataset can provide information on the sequence of process.