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| New type of human stem cell may be more easy to manipulate
New type of human stem cell may be more easy to manipulate
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-06/mgh-nto060810.php
Changing growth factors produces cells that should be more useful for research, future
therapies
Researchers from the Massachusetts General Hospital Center for Regenerative Medicine (MGH-CRM)
and the Harvard Stem Cell Institute have a developed a new type of human pluripotent stem cell
that can be manipulated more readily than currently available stem cells. As described in the
June 4 Cell Stem Cell, these new cells could be used to create better cellular models of disease
processes and eventually may permit repair of disease-associated gene mutations.
"It has been fairly easy to manipulate stem cells from mice, but this has not been the
case for traditional human stem cells," explains Niels Geijsen, PhD, of the MGH-CRM, who
led the study. "We had previously found that the growth factors in which mouse stem cells
are derived define what those cells can do, and now we've applied those findings to human stem
cells."
The first mammalian embryonic stem cells (ESCs) were derived from mice and have proven very
useful for studying gene function and the impact of changes to individual genes. But techniques
used in these studies to introduce a different version of a single gene or inactivate a
particular gene were ineffective in human ESCs. In addition, human ESCs proliferate much more
slowly than do cells derived from mice and grow in flat, two-dimensional colonies, while mouse
ESCs form tight, three-dimensional colonies. It is been extremely difficult to propagate human
ESCs from a single cell, which prevents the creation of genetically manipulated human embryonic
stem cell lines.
In previous work, Geijsen and his colleagues demonstrated that the growth factor conditions
under which stem cells are maintained in culture play an important role in defining the cells'
functional properties. Since the growth factors appeared to make such a difference, the
researchers tried to make a more useful human pluripotent cell using a new approach. They
derived human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) – which are created by reprogramming
adult cells and have many of the characteristics of human ECSs, including resistance to
manipulation – in cultures containing the growth factor LIF, which is used in the creation
of mouse ESCs.
The resulting cells visibly resembled mouse ESCs and proved amenable to a standard gene
manipulation technique that exchanges matching sequences of DNA, allowing the targeted
deactivation or correction of a specific gene. The ability to manipulate these new cells
depended on both the continued presence of LIF and expression of the five genes that are used in
reprogramming adult cells into iPSCs. If any of those factors was removed, these hLR5- (for
human LIF and five reprogramming factors) iPSCs reverted to standard iPSCs.
"Genetic changes introduced into hLR5-iPSCs would be retained when they are coverted back
to iPSCs, which we then can use to generate cell lines for future research, drug development and
someday stem-cell based gene-correction therapies," says Geijsen. He is an assistant
professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and a principal faculty member of the Harvard
Stem Cell Institute.
June 8, 2010 (EurekAlert)
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Licenţa de Ministerul Sănătăţii din Ucraina seria AG № 570573 din 10.03.2011
Licenta de Ministerul Sănătăţii din Ucraina seria AB № 511037 din 03.12.2009 ©
Institutul de terapie celulară 2004-2011
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