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Comparative pluripotency analysis of mouse embryonic stem cells derived from wild-type and infertile hermaphrodite somatic cell nuclear transfer blastocysts

Authors :
Yong Fan
Jouneau Alice
Man Tong
Qi Zhou
Chenhui Ding
Tang Hai
Ruqiang Yao
Zhuo Lv
Yang Yu
Xuemei Li
Chunli Zhao
Xiangpeng Dai
ZanDong Li
Liu Wang
Jie Hao
Source :
Chinese Science Bulletin. 53:3648-3655
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2008.

Abstract

Therapeutic cloning, whereby embryonic stem cells (ESCs) are derived from patient-specific cloned blastocysts via somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT), holds great promise for treating many human diseases using regenerative medicine. Teratoma formation and germline transmission have been used to confirm the pluripotency of mouse stem cells, but human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) have not been proven to be fully pluripotent owing to the ethical impossibility of testing for germ line transmission, which would be the strongest evidence for full pluripotency. Therefore, formation of differentiated cells from the three somatic germ layers within a teratoma is taken as the best indicator of pluripotency in hESC lines. The possibility that these lines lack full multi-or pluripotency has not yet been evaluated. In this study, we established 16 mouse ESC lines, including 3 genetically defective nuclear transfer-ESC (ntESC) lines derived from SCNT blastocysts of infertile hermaphrodite F1 mice and 13 ntESC lines derived from SCNT blastocysts of normal F1 mice. We found that the defective ntESCs expressed all in vitro markers of pluripotency and could form teratomas that included derivatives from all three germ layers, but could not be transmitted via the germ line, in contrast with normal ntESCs. Our results indicate that teratoma formation assays with hESCs might be an insufficient standard to assess full pluripotency, although they do define multipotency to some degree. More rigorous standards are required to assess the safety of hESCs for therapeutic cloning.

Details

ISSN :
18619541 and 10016538
Volume :
53
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chinese Science Bulletin
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........449474a08200f49d7313c8280ff96ba0