| Literature DB >> 25945098 |
Abstract
Cellular heterogeneity is now considered an inherent property of most stem cell types, including pluripotent stem cells, somatic stem cells, and cancer stem cells, and this heterogeneity can exist at the epigenetic, transcriptional, and posttranscriptional levels. Several studies have indicated that the stochastic activation of signaling networks may promote heterogeneity and further that this heterogeneity may be reduced by their inhibition. But why different cells in the same culture respond in a nonuniform manner to the identical exogenous signals has remained unclear. Recent studies now demonstrate that the cell cycle position directly influences lineage specification and specifically that pluripotent stem cells initiate their differentiation from the G1 phase. These studies suggest that cells in G1 are uniquely "poised" to undergo cell specification. G1 cells are therefore more prone to respond to differentiation cues, which may explain the heterogeneity of developmental factors, such as Gata6, and pluripotency factors, such as Nanog, in stem cell cultures. Overall, this raises the possibility that G1 serves as a "Differentiation Induction Point." In this review, we will reexamine the literature describing heterogeneity of pluripotent stem cells, while highlighting the role of the cell cycle as a major determinant.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25945098 PMCID: PMC4402182 DOI: 10.1155/2015/219514
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Hypothetical model depicting the relationship between heterogeneity, the cell cycle, and pluripotent cell types. Stem cells may transition horizontally on pluripotency spectrum (blue double-arrow) as they differentiate or dedifferentiate. As cells progress through the cell cycle, they transition on the heterogeneity spectrum (black double-arrow). The range of the heterogeneity, or metastable states, is shown in gray and increases as you move down the spectrum of pluripotency from naïve to primed cells. G1 cells exist in a “lineage-poised” state, while S-G2/M cells exist in a “lineage-restricted” state.
Figure 2Fucci hESCs can be used to isolate cell cycle fractions from live cells. (a) Image of live Fucci hESCs. Bar: 25 μm. (b) Flow cytometric analysis of Fucci hESCs, showing early-G1, EG1; late-G1, LG1; S phase, S; and G2/M-phases, G2/M. (c) Diagram showing that transcripts expressed from developmental genes have been found to be cell cycle regulated, peaking in G1 and downregulated in S phase.