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HUMAN INDUCED PLURIPOTENT STEM CELLS AS A MODEL TO STUDY METABOLIC INHERITED LIVER DISEASES (IPSMILD)
Start date: Dec 1, 2011, End date: Nov 30, 2014 PROJECT  FINISHED 

"Familial hypercholesterolemia type IIa (FH) is a life-threatening disease caused by mutations on the Low Density Lipoprotein Receptor (LDLR). While drug treatments reduce the level of circulating cholesterol in heterozygote patients (1:500) with variable efficiency, homozygote patients (1:106) can only be treated by bimonthly apheresis, an invasive procedure. Hepatocytes are the only cells capable to internalize and degrade cholesterol.We previously shown that we were able to generated iPS from normal human fibroblasts and differentiated them into hepatocyte-like cells.Our aim is to develop preclinical tools and models to study human monogenic liver metabolic diseases and evaluate the ex vivo gene/cell therapy approaches.Our study will be focused on patient specific model for FH. In addition to reproducing the pathology in vitro with hepatocyte-like cells-derived from heterozygote and homozygote FH patients, this model will allow us to study the impact of LDLR mutations on cholesterol homeostasis in a human context. At a more long-term, FH-derived hepatocytes should represent alternative tools for drug screening in an actual current context in which there are no cellular models displaying features of hepatocytes. They will enable testing the efficacy of new drugs on cholesterol pathway and their effects on the specific disease-related hepatocyte phenotype (cell differentiation and proliferation). Finally, this model will provide a tool to evaluate autologous gene/cell therapy with iPS-derived hepatocyte-like cells."

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