Bajpai VK et al. (JAN 2017)
Stem cells (Dayton,Ohio)
Reprogramming Postnatal Human Epidermal Keratinocytes Toward Functional Neural Crest Fates.
During development,neural crest (NC) cells are induced by signaling events at the neural plate border of all vertebrate embryos. Initially arising within the central nervous system,NC cells subsequently undergo an epithelial to mesenchymal transition to migrate into the periphery,where they differentiate into diverse cell types. Here we provide evidence that postnatal human epidermal keratinocytes (KC),in response to fibroblast growth factor 2 and insulin like growth factor 1 signals,can be reprogrammed toward a NC fate. Genome-wide transcriptome analyses show that keratinocyte-derived NC cells are similar to those derived from human embryonic stem cells. Moreover,they give rise in vitro and in vivo to NC derivatives such as peripheral neurons,melanocytes,Schwann cells and mesenchymal cells (osteocytes,chondrocytes,adipocytes,and smooth muscle cells). By demonstrating that human keratin-14+ KC can form NC cells,even from clones of single cells,our results have important implications in stem cell biology and regenerative medicine. Stem Cells 2017.
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Ghule PN et al. (MAY 2011)
Journal of cellular physiology 226 5 1149--56
Reprogramming the pluripotent cell cycle: restoration of an abbreviated G1 phase in human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells.
Induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells derived from terminally differentiated human fibroblasts are reprogrammed to possess stem cell like properties. However,the extent to which iPS cells exhibit unique properties of the human embryonic stem (hES) cell cycle remains to be established. hES cells are characterized by an abbreviated G1 phase (∼ 2.5 h) and accelerated organization of subnuclear domains that mediate the assembly of regulatory machinery for histone gene expression [i.e.,histone locus bodies (HLBs)]. We therefore examined cell cycle parameters of iPS cells in comparison to hES cells. Analysis of DNA synthesis [5-bromo-2'-deoxy-uridine (BrdU) incorporation],cell cycle distribution (FACS analysis and Ki67 staining) and subnuclear organization of HLBs [immunofluorescence microscopy and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH)] revealed that human iPS cells have a short G1 phase (∼ 2.5 h) and an abbreviated cell cycle (16-18 h). Furthermore,HLBs are formed and reorganized rapidly after mitosis (within 1.5-2 h). Thus,reprogrammed iPS cells have cell cycle kinetics and dynamic subnuclear organization of regulatory machinery that are principal properties of pluripotent hES cells. Our findings support the concept that the abbreviated cell cycle of hES and iPS cells is functionally linked to pluripotency.
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Koga C et al. (DEC 2014)
Annals of surgical oncology 21 Suppl 4 4 591--600
Reprogramming Using microRNA-302 Improves Drug Sensitivity in Hepatocellular Carcinoma Cells.
BACKGROUND Although studies have shown that Oct4,Sox2,Klf4,and c-Myc (OKSM)-mediated induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology sensitizes cancer cells to drugs,the potential risk of inserting c-Myc and random insertions of exogenous sequences into the genome persists. Several authors,including us,have presented microRNA (miRNA)-mediated reprogramming as an alternative approach. Herein,we evaluated the efficacy of miRNA-mediated reprogramming on hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells. METHODS Among three miRNAs (miR-200c,miR-302s,and miR-369s) that were previously presented for miRNA-mediated reprogramming,miR-302 was expressed at low levels in HCC cells. After transfecting three times with miR-302,the cells were incubated in ES medium for 3 weeks and then characterized. RESULTS iPSC-like spheres were obtained after the 3-week incubation. Spheres presented high NANOG and OCT4 expression,low proliferation,high apoptosis,low epithelial-mesenchymal transition marker expression (N-cadherin,TGFBR2),and sensitization to drugs. Several miRNAs were changed (e.g.,low oncomiR miR-21,high miR-29b). cMyc was decreased,and methylation was elevated on histone 3 at lysine 4 (H3K4). Differentiated cells expressed markers of each germ layer (GFAP,FABP4,and ALB). AOF2 (also known as LSD1 or KDM1),one of the targets for miR-302,was repressed in iPSC-like-spheres. Silencing of AOF2 resulted in similar features of iPSC-like-spheres,including cMyc down-regulation and H3K4 methylation. In drug-resistant cells,sensitization was achieved through miR-302-mediated reprogramming. CONCLUSIONS miR-302-mediated iPSC technology reprogrammed HCC cells and improved drug sensitivity through AOF2 down-regulation,which caused H3K4 methylation and c-Myc repression.
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Requirement for Dot1l in murine postnatal hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis by MLL translocation.
Disruptor of telomeric silencing 1-like (Dot1l) is a histone 3 lysine 79 methyltransferase. Studies of constitutive Dot1l knockout mice show that Dot1l is essential for embryonic development and prenatal hematopoiesis. DOT1L also interacts with translocation partners of Mixed Lineage Leukemia (MLL) gene,which is commonly translocated in human leukemia. However,the requirement of Dot1l in postnatal hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis of MLL translocation proteins has not been conclusively shown. With a conditional Dot1l knockout mouse model,we examined the consequences of Dot1l loss in postnatal hematopoiesis and MLL translocation leukemia. Deletion of Dot1l led to pancytopenia and failure of hematopoietic homeostasis,and Dot1l-deficient cells minimally reconstituted recipient bone marrow in competitive transplantation experiments. In addition,MLL-AF9 cells required Dot1l for oncogenic transformation,whereas cells with other leukemic oncogenes,such as Hoxa9/Meis1 and E2A-HLF,did not. These findings illustrate a crucial role of Dot1l in normal hematopoiesis and leukemogenesis of specific oncogenes.
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Puri MC and Bernstein A (OCT 2003)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 100 22 12753--8
Requirement for the TIE family of receptor tyrosine kinases in adult but not fetal hematopoiesis.
In mammals,the continuous production of hematopoietic cells (HCs) is sustained by a small number of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) residing in the bone marrow. Early HSC activity arises in the aorta-gonad mesonephros region,within cells localized to the ventral floor of the major blood vessels,suggesting that the first HSCs may be derived from cells capable of giving rise to the hematopoietic system and to the endothelial cells of the vasculature. TIE1 (TIE) and TIE2 (TEK) are related receptor tyrosine kinases with an embryonic expression pattern in endothelial cells,their precursors,and HCs,suggestive of a role in the divergence and function of both lineages. Indeed,gene targeting approaches have shown that TIE1,TIE2,and ligands for TIE2,the angiopoietins,are essential for vascular development and maintenance. To explore possible roles for these receptors in HCs,we have examined the ability of embryonic cells lacking both TIE1 and TIE2 to contribute to developmental and adult hematopoiesis by generating chimeric animals between normal embryonic cells and cells lacking these receptors. We show here that TIE receptors are not required for differentiation and proliferation of definitive hematopoietic lineages in the embryo and fetus; surprisingly,however,these receptors are specifically required during postnatal bone marrow hematopoiesis.
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Lidonnici MR et al. (MAY 2008)
Blood 111 9 4771--9
Requirement of c-Myb for p210(BCR/ABL)-dependent transformation of hematopoietic progenitors and leukemogenesis.
The c-Myb gene encodes a transcription factor required for proliferation and survival of normal myeloid progenitors and leukemic blast cells. Targeting of c-Myb by antisense oligodeoxynucleotides has suggested that myeloid leukemia blasts (including chronic myelogenous leukemia [CML]-blast crisis cells) rely on c-Myb expression more than normal progenitors,but a genetic approach to assess the requirement of c-Myb by p210(BCR/ABL)-transformed hematopoietic progenitors has not been taken. We show here that loss of a c-Myb allele had modest effects (20%-28% decrease) on colony formation of nontransduced progenitors,while the effect on p210(BCR/ABL)-expressing Lin(-) Sca-1(+) and Lin(-) Sca-1(+)Kit(+) cells was more pronounced (50%-80% decrease). Using a model of CML-blast crisis,mice (n = 14) injected with p210(BCR/ABL)-transduced p53(-/-)c-Myb(w/w) marrow cells developed leukemia rapidly and had a median survival of 26 days,while only 67% of mice (n = 12) injected with p210(BCR/ABL)-transduced p53(-/-)c-Myb(w/d) marrow cells died of leukemia with a median survival of 96 days. p210(BCR/ABL)-transduced c-Myb(w/w) and c-Myb(w/d) marrow progenitors expressed similar levels of the c-Myb-regulated genes c-Myc and cyclin B1,while those of Bcl-2 were reduced. However,ectopic Bcl-2 expression did not enhance colony formation of p210(BCR/ABL)-transduced c-Myb(w/d) Lin(-)Sca-1(+)Kit(+) cells. Together,these studies support the requirement of c-Myb for p210(BCR/ABL)-dependent leukemogenesis.
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Leung CG et al. (JUL 2007)
The Journal of experimental medicine 204 7 1603--11
Requirements for survivin in terminal differentiation of erythroid cells and maintenance of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells.
Survivin,which is the smallest member of the inhibitor of apoptosis protein (IAP) family,is a chromosomal passenger protein that mediates the spindle assembly checkpoint and cytokinesis,and also functions as an inhibitor of apoptosis. Frequently overexpressed in human cancers and not expressed in most adult tissues,survivin has been proposed as an attractive target for anticancer therapies and,in some cases,has even been touted as a cancer-specific gene. Survivin is,however,expressed in proliferating adult cells,including human hematopoietic stem cells,T-lymphocytes,and erythroid cells throughout their maturation. Therefore,it is unclear how survivin-targeted anticancer therapies would impact steady-state blood development. To address this question,we used a conditional gene-targeting strategy and abolished survivin expression from the hematopoietic compartment of mice. We show that inducible deletion of survivin leads to ablation of the bone marrow,with widespread loss of hematopoietic progenitors and rapid mortality. Surprisingly,heterozygous deletion of survivin causes defects in erythropoiesis in a subset of the animals,with a dramatic reduction in enucleated erythrocytes and the presence of immature megaloblastic erythroblasts. Our studies demonstrate that survivin is essential for steady-state hematopoiesis and survival of the adult,and further,that a high level of survivin expression is critical for proper erythroid differentiation.
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Zhang S et al. (AUG 2011)
Human Molecular Genetics 20 16 3176--3187
Rescue of ATP7B function in hepatocyte-like cells from Wilson's disease induced pluripotent stem cells using gene therapy or the chaperone drug curcumin.
Directed hepatocyte differentiation from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) potentially provides a unique platform for modeling liver genetic diseases and performing drug-toxicity screening in vitro. Wilson's disease is a genetic disease caused by mutations in the ATP7B gene,whose product is a liver transporter protein responsible for coordinated copper export into bile and blood. Interestingly,the spectrum of ATP7B mutations is vast and can influence clinical presentation (a variable spectrum of hepatic and neural manifestations),though the reason is not well understood. We describe the generation of iPSCs from a Chinese patient with Wilson's disease that bears the R778L Chinese hotspot mutation in the ATP7B gene. These iPSCs were pluripotent and could be readily differentiated into hepatocyte-like cells that displayed abnormal cytoplasmic localization of mutated ATP7B and defective copper transport. Moreover,gene correction using a self-inactivating lentiviral vector that expresses codon optimized-ATP7B or treatment with the chaperone drug curcumin could reverse the functional defect in vitro. Hence,our work describes an attractive model for studying the pathogenesis of Wilson's disease that is valuable for screening compounds or gene therapy approaches aimed to correct the abnormality. In the future,once relevant safety concerns (including the stability of the mature liver-like phenotype) and technical issues for the transplantation procedure are solved,hepatocyte-like cells from similarly genetically corrected iPSCs could be an option for autologous transplantation in Wilson's disease.
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Takashima Y et al. (SEP 2014)
Cell 158 6 1254--1269
Resetting transcription factor control circuitry toward ground-state pluripotency in human.
Current human pluripotent stem cells lack the transcription factor circuitry that governs the ground state of mouse embryonic stem cells (ESC). Here,we report that short-term expression of two components,NANOG and KLF2,is sufficient to ignite other elements of the network and reset the human pluripotent state. Inhibition of ERK and protein kinase C sustains a transgene-independent rewired state. Reset cells self-renew continuously without ERK signaling,are phenotypically stable,and are karyotypically intact. They differentiate in vitro and form teratomas in vivo. Metabolism is reprogrammed with activation of mitochondrial respiration as in ESC. DNA methylation is dramatically reduced and transcriptome state is globally realigned across multiple cell lines. Depletion of ground-state transcription factors,TFCP2L1 or KLF4,has marginal impact on conventional human pluripotent stem cells but collapses the reset state. These findings demonstrate feasibility of installing and propagating functional control circuitry for ground-state pluripotency in human cells.
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Senatus PB et al. (JAN 2006)
Molecular cancer therapeutics 5 1 20--8
Restoration of p53 function for selective Fas-mediated apoptosis in human and rat glioma cells in vitro and in vivo by a p53 COOH-terminal peptide.
We have shown that a COOH-terminal peptide of p53 (amino acids 361-382,p53p),linked to the truncated homeobox domain of Antennapedia (Ant) as a carrier for transduction,induced rapid apoptosis in human premalignant and malignant cell lines. Here,we report that human and rat glioma lines containing endogenous mutant p53 or wild-type (WT) p53 were induced into apoptosis by exposure to this peptide called p53p-Ant. The peptide was comparatively nontoxic to proliferating nonmalignant human and rat glial cell lines containing WT p53 and proliferating normal human peripheral marrow blood stem cells. Degree of sensitivity to the peptide correlated directly with the level of endogenous p53 expression and mutant p53 conformation. Apoptosis induction by p53p-Ant was quantitated by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling assay and Annexin V staining in human glioma cells in vitro and in a syngeneic orthotopic 9L glioma rat model using convection-enhanced delivery in vivo. The mechanism of cell death by this peptide was solely through the Fas extrinsic apoptotic pathway. p53p-Ant induced a 3-fold increase in extracellular membrane Fas expression in glioma cells but no significant increase in nonmalignant glial cells. These data suggest that p53 function for inducing Fas-mediated apoptosis in gliomas,which express sufficient quantities of endogenous mutant or WT p53,may be restored or activated,respectively,by a cell-permeable peptide derived from the p53 COOH-terminal regulatory domain (p53p-Ant). p53p-Ant may serve as a prototypic model for the development of new anticancer agents with unique selectivity for glioma cancer cells and it can be successfully delivered in vivo into a brain tumor by a convection-enhanced delivery system,which circumvents the blood-brain barrier.
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