| Literature DB >> 24995001 |
Abstract
Nearly 12% of the population in the United States will be afflicted with a thyroid related disorder during their lifetime. Common treatment approaches are tailored to the specific disorder and include surgery, radioactive iodine ablation, antithyroid drugs, thyroid hormone replacement, external beam radiation, and chemotherapy. Regenerative medicine endeavors to combat disease by replacing or regenerating damaged, diseased, or dysfunctional body parts. A series of achievements in pluripotent stem cell research have transformed regenerative medicine in many ways by demonstrating "repair" of a number of body parts in mice, of which, the thyroid has now been inducted into this special group. Seminal work in pluripotent cells, namely embryonic stem cells and induced pluripotent stem cells, have made possible their path to becoming key tools and biological building blocks for cell-based regenerative medicine to combat the gamut of human diseases, including those affecting the thyroid.Entities:
Keywords: cell replacement therapy; embryonic stem cells; induced pluripotent stem cells; pluripotent stem cells; regenerative medicine; stem cells; thyroid; thyroid follicular cells
Year: 2014 PMID: 24995001 PMCID: PMC4062909 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2014.00096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the protocol used for . LIF, leukemia inhibitory factor; rhTSH, recombinant human thyroid stimulating hormone. Initial culturing of ESCs in hanging drops (without LIF supplementation) allows for embryoid body differentiation. Nkx2-1 and Pax8 are temporally induced by doxycycline, thereby directing differentiation toward a thyrocyte fate. Forced expression of Nkx2-1/Pax8 results in robust thyroid stimulating hormone receptor expression, suggesting cells are capable of responding to rhTSH. Therefore, the sequential treatment of embryoid bodies with Dox-rhTSH dramatically enhances thyrocyte lineage specification and the formation of follicle-like structures, which are subsequently isolated for transplantation [Ref. (4)].
Figure 2Applications of iPSC technology. Skin fibroblast-derived iPSCs can produce thyroid follicles. These cells can be used for (A) cell-based therapy, (B) disease modeling, and (C) drug discovery. (A) Based on the demonstrated success of ESCs in rescuing thyroid ablated mice, iPSCs derived thyroid follicles have incredible potential as a cell replacement therapy for a variety of thyroid maladies. (B) iPSC lines with genotypes characteristic of varied genetically based thyroid diseases could provide an avenue to study disease mechanisms as well as a screening system for evaluating pharmaceutical and recombinant approaches aimed at treating those diseases. (C) iPSCs derived thyroid follicles would enable easy quantification of drug effects on follicle structure and function.
Comparison between ESC and iPSC.
| iPS | ES cells | |
|---|---|---|
| Reported in humans | Yes | Yes |
| Embryos or donor oocytes required | No | Yes |
| Stemness marker expressed | Yes | Yes |
| Teratomas produced | Yes | Yes |
| Utility as a research tool | Allows repeated development | Allows the study of development |
| Can be used as models for human diseases | Yes | Some |
| Can be used in a screen to identify drugs | Yes | Yes |
| Variable fates | Likely | Yes |
| Develop into specific human tissues | To be shown | Yes |
| Genetically match the patient | Unknown | No |
| Additional information | Cells are genetically modified in current methods | Cells are allogeneic and might cause immune rejection |
Adapted from Nishikawa et al. (.