Literature DB >> 16704337

From nuclear transfer to nuclear reprogramming: the reversal of cell differentiation.

J B Gurdon1.   

Abstract

This is a personal historical account of events leading from the earliest success in vertebrate nuclear transfer to the current hope that nuclear reprogramming may facilitate cell replacement therapy. Early morphological evidence in Amphibia for the toti- or multipotentiality of some nuclei from differentiated cells first established the principle of the conservation of the genome during cell differentiation. Molecular markers show that many somatic cell nuclei are reprogrammed to an embryonic pattern of gene expression soon after nuclear transplantation to eggs. The germinal vesicles of oocytes in first meiotic prophase have a direct reprogramming activity on mammalian as well as amphibian nuclei and offer a route to identify nuclear reprogramming molecules. Amphibian eggs and oocytes have a truly remarkable ability to transcribe genes as DNA or nuclei, to translate mRNA, and to modify or localize proteins injected into them. The development of nuclear transplant embryos depends on the ability of cells to interpret small concentration changes of signal factors in the community effect and in morphogen gradients. Many difficulties in a career can be overcome by analyzing in increasing depth the same fundamentally interesting and important problem.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16704337     DOI: 10.1146/annurev.cellbio.22.090805.140144

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol        ISSN: 1081-0706            Impact factor:   13.827


  42 in total

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6.  Trophoblast stem cells derived from nuclear transfer embryos: phenotypically unique, bad neighbors, or poor communicators?

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Review 7.  Nuclear transfer to eggs and oocytes.

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Review 8.  Control of DNA replication by cyclin-dependent kinases in development.

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Review 10.  Molecular mechanisms of pluripotency and reprogramming.

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