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Porcine Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Produce Chimeric Offspring

Authors :
Steve L. Terlouw
Jennifer Mumaw
Franklin D. West
Kowser Hasneen
J.R. Dobrinsky
Dae Jin Kwon
Sujoy K. Dhara
Steven L. Stice
Source :
Stem Cells and Development. 19:1211-1220
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc, 2010.

Abstract

Ethical and moral issues rule out the use of human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) in chimera studies that would determine the full extent of their reprogrammed state, instead relying on less rigorous assays such as teratoma formation and differentiated cell types. To date, only mouse iPSC lines are known to be truly pluripotent. However, initial mouse iPSC lines failed to form chimeric offspring, but did generate teratomas and differentiated embryoid bodies, and thus these specific iPSC lines were not completely reprogrammed or truly pluripotent. Therefore, there is a need to address whether the reprogramming factors and process used eventually to generate chimeric mice are universal and sufficient to generate reprogrammed iPSC that contribute to chimeric offspring in additional species. Here we show that porcine mesenchymal stem cells transduced with 6 human reprogramming factors (POU5F1, SOX2, NANOG, KLF4, LIN28, and C-MYC) injected into preimplantation-stage embryos contributed to multiple tissue types spanning all 3 germ layers in 8 of 10 fetuses. The chimerism rate was high, 85.3% or 29 of 34 live offspring were chimeras based on skin and tail biopsies harvested from 2- to 5-day-old pigs. The creation of pluripotent porcine iPSCs capable of generating chimeric offspring introduces numerous opportunities to study the facets significantly affecting cell therapies, genetic engineering, and other aspects of stem cell and developmental biology.

Details

ISSN :
15578534 and 15473287
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stem Cells and Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....765e533ee8ec1055ceeb7d64120680a6