Cell Stem Cell
Volume 17, Issue 2, 6 August 2015, Pages 204-212
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Short Article
Direct Conversion of Normal and Alzheimer’s Disease Human Fibroblasts into Neuronal Cells by Small Molecules

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.stem.2015.07.006Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Human fibroblasts can be directly converted into neurons with a chemical cocktail

  • Electrophysiological properties of hciNs are similar to iPSC-derived neurons and iNs

  • hciNs show high neuronal but low fibroblastic gene expression profiles

  • hciNs derived from FAD patient fibroblasts exhibit abnormal Aβ production

Summary

Neuronal conversion from human fibroblasts can be induced by lineage-specific transcription factors; however, the introduction of ectopic genes limits the therapeutic applications of such induced neurons (iNs). Here, we report that human fibroblasts can be directly converted into neuronal cells by a chemical cocktail of seven small molecules, bypassing a neural progenitor stage. These human chemical-induced neuronal cells (hciNs) resembled hiPSC-derived neurons and human iNs (hiNs) with respect to morphology, gene expression profiles, and electrophysiological properties. This approach was further applied to generate hciNs from familial Alzheimer’s disease patients. Taken together, our transgene-free and chemical-only approach for direct reprogramming of human fibroblasts into neurons provides an alternative strategy for modeling neurological diseases and for regenerative medicine.

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