Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Samuele Marro is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Samuele Marro.


Nature | 2011

Induction of human neuronal cells by defined transcription factors

Zhiping P. Pang; Nan Yang; Thomas Vierbuchen; Austin Ostermeier; Daniel R. Fuentes; Troy Q. Yang; Vittorio Sebastiano; Samuele Marro; Thomas C. Südhof; Marius Wernig

Somatic cell nuclear transfer, cell fusion, or expression of lineage-specific factors have been shown to induce cell-fate changes in diverse somatic cell types. We recently observed that forced expression of a combination of three transcription factors, Brn2 (also known as Pou3f2), Ascl1 and Myt1l, can efficiently convert mouse fibroblasts into functional induced neuronal (iN) cells. Here we show that the same three factors can generate functional neurons from human pluripotent stem cells as early as 6 days after transgene activation. When combined with the basic helix–loop–helix transcription factor NeuroD1, these factors could also convert fetal and postnatal human fibroblasts into iN cells showing typical neuronal morphologies and expressing multiple neuronal markers, even after downregulation of the exogenous transcription factors. Importantly, the vast majority of human iN cells were able to generate action potentials and many matured to receive synaptic contacts when co-cultured with primary mouse cortical neurons. Our data demonstrate that non-neural human somatic cells, as well as pluripotent stem cells, can be converted directly into neurons by lineage-determining transcription factors. These methods may facilitate robust generation of patient-specific human neurons for in vitro disease modelling or future applications in regenerative medicine.


Neuron | 2013

Rapid Single-Step Induction of Functional Neurons from Human Pluripotent Stem Cells

Yingsha Zhang; ChangHui Pak; Yan Han; Henrik Ahlenius; Zhenjie Zhang; Soham Chanda; Samuele Marro; Christopher Patzke; Claudio Acuna; Jason P. Covy; Wei Xu; Nan Yang; Tamas Danko; Lu Chen; Marius Wernig; Thomas C. Südhof

Available methods for differentiating human embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and induced pluripotent cells (iPSCs) into neurons are often cumbersome, slow, and variable. Alternatively, human fibroblasts can be directly converted into induced neuronal (iN) cells. However, with present techniques conversion is inefficient, synapse formation is limited, and only small amounts of neurons can be generated. Here, we show that human ESCs and iPSCs can be converted into functional iN cells with nearly 100% yield and purity in less than 2 weeks by forced expression of a single transcription factor. The resulting ES-iN or iPS-iN cells exhibit quantitatively reproducible properties independent of the cell line of origin, form mature pre- and postsynaptic specializations, and integrate into existing synaptic networks when transplanted into mouse brain. As illustrated by selected examples, our approach enables large-scale studies of human neurons for questions such as analyses of human diseases, examination of human-specific genes, and drug screening.


Nature Biotechnology | 2013

Generation of oligodendroglial cells by direct lineage conversion

Nan Yang; J. Bradley Zuchero; Henrik Ahlenius; Samuele Marro; Yi Han Ng; Thomas Vierbuchen; John S. Hawkins; Richard Geissler; Ben A. Barres; Marius Wernig

Transplantation of oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) is a promising potential therapeutic strategy for diseases affecting myelin. However, the derivation of engraftable OPCs from human pluripotent stem cells has proven difficult and primary OPCs are not readily available. Here we report the generation of induced OPCs (iOPCs) by direct lineage conversion. Forced expression of the three transcription factors Sox10, Olig2 and Zfp536 was sufficient to reprogram mouse and rat fibroblasts into iOPCs with morphologies and gene expression signatures resembling primary OPCs. More importantly, iOPCs gave rise to mature oligodendrocytes that could ensheath multiple host axons when co-cultured with primary dorsal root ganglion cells and formed myelin after transplantation into shiverer mice. We propose direct lineage reprogramming as a viable alternative approach for the generation of OPCs for use in disease modeling and regenerative medicine.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

The mitochondrial heme exporter FLVCR1b mediates erythroid differentiation

Deborah Chiabrando; Samuele Marro; Sonia Mercurio; Carlotta Giorgi; Sara Petrillo; Francesca Vinchi; Veronica Fiorito; Sharmila Fagoonee; Annalisa Camporeale; Emilia Turco; Giorgio R. Merlo; Lorenzo Silengo; Fiorella Altruda; Paolo Pinton; Emanuela Tolosano

Feline leukemia virus subgroup C receptor 1 (FLVCR1) is a cell membrane heme exporter that maintains the balance between heme levels and globin synthesis in erythroid precursors. It was previously shown that Flvcr1-null mice died in utero due to a failure of erythropoiesis. Here, we identify Flvcr1b, a mitochondrial Flvcr1 isoform that promotes heme efflux into the cytoplasm. Flvcr1b overexpression promoted heme synthesis and in vitro erythroid differentiation, whereas silencing of Flvcr1b caused mitochondrial heme accumulation and termination of erythroid differentiation. Furthermore, mice lacking the plasma membrane isoform (Flvcr1a) but expressing Flvcr1b had normal erythropoiesis, but exhibited hemorrhages, edema, and skeletal abnormalities. Thus, FLVCR1b regulates erythropoiesis by controlling mitochondrial heme efflux, whereas FLVCR1a expression is required to prevent hemorrhages and edema. The aberrant expression of Flvcr1 isoforms may play a role in the pathogenesis of disorders characterized by an imbalance between heme and globin synthesis.


American Journal of Pathology | 2005

Plasma Protein Haptoglobin Modulates Renal Iron Loading

Sharmila Fagoonee; Jakub Gburek; Emilio Hirsch; Samuele Marro; Søren K. Moestrup; Jacob Marsvin Laurberg; Erik Ilsø Christensen; Lorenzo Silengo; Fiorella Altruda; Emanuela Tolosano

Haptoglobin is the plasma protein with the highest binding affinity for hemoglobin. The strength of hemoglobin binding and the existence of a specific receptor for the haptoglobin-hemoglobin complex in the monocyte/macrophage system clearly suggest that haptoglobin may have a crucial role in heme-iron recovery. We used haptoglobin-null mice to evaluate the impact of haptoglobin gene inactivation on iron metabolism. Haptoglobin deficiency led to increased deposition of hemoglobin in proximal tubules of the kidney instead of the liver and the spleen as occurred in wild-type mice. This difference in organ distribution of hemoglobin in haptoglobin-deficient mice resulted in abnormal iron deposits in proximal tubules during aging. Moreover, iron also accumulated in proximal tubules after renal ischemia-reperfusion injury or after an acute plasma heme-protein overload caused by muscle injury, without affecting morphological and functional parameters of renal damage. These data demonstrate that haptoglobin crucially prevents glomerular filtration of hemoglobin and, consequently, renal iron loading during aging and following acute plasma heme-protein overload.


Cell Stem Cell | 2015

Inhibition of Pluripotency Networks by the Rb Tumor Suppressor Restricts Reprogramming and Tumorigenesis

Michael S. Kareta; Laura L. Gorges; Sana Hafeez; Bérénice A. Benayoun; Samuele Marro; Anne-Flore Zmoos; Matthew J. Cecchini; Damek V. Spacek; Luis F.Z. Batista; Megan O’Brien; Yi-Han Ng; Cheen Euong Ang; Dedeepya Vaka; Steven E. Artandi; Frederick A. Dick; Anne Brunet; Julien Sage; Marius Wernig

Mutations in the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor gene Rb are involved in many forms of human cancer. In this study, we investigated the early consequences of inactivating Rb in the context of cellular reprogramming. We found that Rb inactivation promotes the reprogramming of differentiated cells to a pluripotent state. Unexpectedly, this effect is cell cycle independent, and instead reflects direct binding of Rb to pluripotency genes, including Sox2 and Oct4, which leads to a repressed chromatin state. More broadly, this regulation of pluripotency networks and Sox2 in particular is critical for the initiation of tumors upon loss of Rb in mice. These studies therefore identify Rb as a global transcriptional repressor of pluripotency networks, providing a molecular basis for previous reports about its involvement in cell fate pliability, and implicate misregulation of pluripotency factors such as Sox2 in tumorigenesis related to loss of Rb function.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Neurons generated by direct conversion of fibroblasts reproduce synaptic phenotype caused by autism-associated neuroligin-3 mutation

Soham Chanda; Samuele Marro; Marius Wernig; Thomas C. Südhof

Significance A major challenge in modeling human diseases is to replicate disease phenotypes in neurons that are differentiated from nonneuronal cells, such as pluripotent stem cells or fibroblasts. However, evidence that phenotypes observed with this approach replicate an endogenous disease phenotype is lacking. This study demonstrates that induced neuronal (iN) cells obtained by direct conversion of fibroblasts to neurons, when produced from a previously described mouse mutant in neuroligin-3 that is linked to autism, exhibited a phenotype similar to that observed in endogenous neurons. These data show that the mutation studied is highly penetrant phenotypically and also that iN cells can faithfully reproduce a phenotype observed in endogenous neurons, thus validating the use of iN cells for studying disease models. Recent studies suggest that induced neuronal (iN) cells that are directly transdifferentiated from nonneuronal cells provide a powerful opportunity to examine neuropsychiatric diseases. However, the validity of using this approach to examine disease-specific changes has not been demonstrated. Here, we analyze the phenotypes of iN cells that were derived from murine embryonic fibroblasts cultured from littermate wild-type and mutant mice carrying the autism-associated R704C substitution in neuroligin-3. We show that neuroligin-3 R704C-mutant iN cells exhibit a large and selective decrease in AMPA-type glutamate receptor-mediated synaptic transmission without changes in NMDA-type glutamate receptor- or in GABAA receptor-mediated synaptic transmission. Thus, the synaptic phenotype observed in R704C-mutant iN cells replicates the previously observed phenotype of R704C-mutant neurons. Our data show that the effect of the R704C mutation is applicable even to neurons transdifferentiated from fibroblasts and constitute a proof-of-concept demonstration that iN cells can be used for cellular disease modeling.


Nature Methods | 2017

Generation of pure GABAergic neurons by transcription factor programming

Nan Yang; Soham Chanda; Samuele Marro; Yi-Han Ng; Justyna A. Janas; Daniel Haag; Cheen Euong Ang; Yunshuo Tang; Quetzal Flores; Moritz Mall; Orly L. Wapinski; Mavis Li; Henrik Ahlenius; John L.R. Rubenstein; Howard Y. Chang; Arturo Alvarez Buylla; Thomas C. Südhof; Marius Wernig

Approaches to differentiating pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) into neurons currently face two major challenges—(i) generated cells are immature, with limited functional properties; and (ii) cultures exhibit heterogeneous neuronal subtypes and maturation stages. Using lineage-determining transcription factors, we previously developed a single-step method to generate glutamatergic neurons from human PSCs. Here, we show that transient expression of the transcription factors Ascl1 and Dlx2 (AD) induces the generation of exclusively GABAergic neurons from human PSCs with a high degree of synaptic maturation. These AD-induced neuronal (iN) cells represent largely nonoverlapping populations of GABAergic neurons that express various subtype-specific markers. We further used AD-iN cells to establish that human collybistin, the loss of gene function of which causes severe encephalopathy, is required for inhibitory synaptic function. The generation of defined populations of functionally mature human GABAergic neurons represents an important step toward enabling the study of diseases affecting inhibitory synaptic transmission.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014

Transdifferentiation of mouse fibroblasts and hepatocytes to functional neurons.

Samuele Marro; Nan Yang

Nuclear reprogramming by defined transcription factors became of broad interest in 2006 with the work of Takahashi and Yamanaka (Cell 126:663-676, 2006), but the first example of cell fate reshaping via ectopic expression of transcription factor was provided back in 1987 when Davis and colleagues induced features of a muscle cell in fibroblast using the muscle transcription factor MyoD (Davis et al., Cell 51:987-1000, 1987). In 2010 our laboratory described how forced expression of the three neuronal transcription factors Ascl1, Brn2, and Myt1l rapidly converts mouse fibroblasts into neuronal cells that exhibit biochemical and electrophysiological properties of neurons. We named these cells induced neuronal cells (iN cells) (Vierbuchen et al., Nature 463:1035-1041, 2010; Vierbuchen and Wernig, Nat Biotechnol 29:892-907, 2011). Interestingly, iN cells can also be derived from defined endodermal cells such as primary hepatocytes, suggesting the existence of a more general reprogramming paradigm (Marro et al., Cell Stem Cell 9:374-382, 2011). In this chapter we describe the detailed methods used to attain the direct conversion.


Science Translational Medicine | 2018

The fragile X mutation impairs homeostatic plasticity in human neurons by blocking synaptic retinoic acid signaling

Zhenjie Zhang; Samuele Marro; Yingsha Zhang; Kristin L. Arendt; Christopher Patzke; Bo Zhou; Tyler Fair; Nan Yang; Thomas C. Südhof; Marius Wernig; Lu Chen

Inactivation of the Fmr1 gene that is mutated in fragile X syndrome leads to loss of retinoic acid–mediated homeostatic plasticity in human neurons. A fragile neuronal network Inactivation of the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) gene leads to fragile X syndrome, the most common genetic neurodevelopmental disorder involving severe intellectual disabilities. However, the effects of FMR1 inactivation on neuronal functions are not well understood. Zhang et al. show that homeostatic synaptic plasticity, the mechanism responsible for optimization of neuronal network activity, was abolished in human neurons generated from fragile X patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells. The inhibition of homeostatic synaptic plasticity was mediated by inhibition of retinoic acid signaling. The results underscore the relevance of neurons derived from patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells for understanding disease pathogenesis and suggest that reactivation of retinoic acid signaling might be a beneficial therapeutic strategy for fragile X syndrome. Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is an X chromosome–linked disease leading to severe intellectual disabilities. FXS is caused by inactivation of the fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1) gene, but how FMR1 inactivation induces FXS remains unclear. Using human neurons generated from control and FXS patient-derived induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells or from embryonic stem cells carrying conditional FMR1 mutations, we show here that loss of FMR1 function specifically abolished homeostatic synaptic plasticity without affecting basal synaptic transmission. We demonstrated that, in human neurons, homeostatic plasticity induced by synaptic silencing was mediated by retinoic acid, which regulated both excitatory and inhibitory synaptic strength. FMR1 inactivation impaired homeostatic plasticity by blocking retinoic acid–mediated regulation of synaptic strength. Repairing the genetic mutation in the FMR1 gene in an FXS patient cell line restored fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP) expression and fully rescued synaptic retinoic acid signaling. Thus, our study reveals a robust functional impairment caused by FMR1 mutations that might contribute to neuronal dysfunction in FXS. In addition, our results suggest that FXS patient iPS cell–derived neurons might be useful for studying the mechanisms mediating functional abnormalities in FXS.

Collaboration


Dive into the Samuele Marro's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge