| Literature DB >> 26424535 |
Marinka Brouwer1, Huiqing Zhou2,3, Nael Nadif Kasri4,5,6.
Abstract
The ability to generate human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from somatic cells provides tremendous promises for regenerative medicine and its use has widely increased over recent years. However, reprogramming efficiencies remain low and chromosomal instability and tumorigenic potential are concerns in the use of iPSCs, especially in clinical settings. Therefore, reprogramming methods have been under development to generate safer iPSCs with higher efficiency and better quality. Developments have mainly focused on the somatic cell source, the cocktail of reprogramming factors, the delivery method used to introduce reprogramming factors and culture conditions to maintain the generated iPSCs. This review discusses the developments on these topics and briefly discusses pros and cons of iPSCs in comparison with human embryonic stem cells generated from somatic cell nuclear transfer.Entities:
Keywords: Human induced pluripotent stem cells; Reprogramming
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26424535 PMCID: PMC4720703 DOI: 10.1007/s12015-015-9622-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Rev Rep ISSN: 2629-3277 Impact factor: 5.739
Fig. 1Overview of parameters influencing the reprogramming process. Depending on the purpose of the iPSCs (cell therapy or research), choices concerning the somatic cell type, reprogramming factors, delivery method and culturing conditions have to be made. With each of these aspects, we suggest to make choices on the indicated topics, depending on their ranked priority for the given iPSC purpose. Overall, when using iPSCs for cell therapy, safety should be the primary concern when making choices for the different reprogramming methods. When using iPSCs for research purposes, we recommend to choose methods which optimize the efficiency of the reprogramming process
Fig. 2Overview of factors which should be assessed to characterize reprogrammed iPSCs. iPSCs can be characterized on five different aspects: morphology, pluripotency markers, differentiation potential, epigenetic profile and genetic profile. For each aspect factors are indicated which are important to assess the different aspects
Reprogramming factors capable of reprogramming human cells
| Reprogramming factors | Function | Affected pathway | Effect on pluripotency | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oct4 | maintenance of pluripotency and self-renewal | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| Sox2 | maintenance of pluripotency and self-renewal | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| Klf4 | maintenance of pluripotency and self-renewal | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| c-Myc | maintenance of pluripotency and self-renewal | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| Lin28 | maintenance of pluripotency, translational enhancer, inhibits let7 | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| Nanog | maintenance of pluripotency and self-renewal | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| Sall4 | maintenance of pluripotency and self-renewal | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| Utf1 | maintenance of pluripotency | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| p53 | induces senescence, tumor suppressor | apoptosis/cell cycle | − | [ |
| p21 | induces senescence, tumor suppressor | apoptosis/cell cycle | − | [ |
| P16Ink4a | induces senescence, tumor suppressor | apoptosis/cell cycle | − | [ |
| GLIS1 | activates multiple pro-pluripotency pathways | core transcriptional circuitry; Wnt/β-catenin; PI3k; TGFβ | + | [ |
| L-Myc | suppresses differentiation associated genes | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| TGFβ | Facilitates EMT | TGFβ | + | [ |
| MDM2 | p53 inhibitor | apoptosis/cell cycle | + | [ |
| REM2 | p53 inhibitor | apoptosis/cell cycle | + | [ |
| Cyclin D1 | Stimulates E2F/ G1-S cell cycle transition | apoptosis/cell cycle | + | [ |
| SV40 large T antigen | inhibits p53 tumor suppression | apoptosis/cell cycle | + | [ |
| DOT1L | histone H3K79 methyltransferase | Chromatin remodeling | − | [ |
| Cx43 | Promotes MET transition | E-cadherin/β-catenin | + | [ |
| MBD3 | histone deacetylation, chromatin remodeling | Chromatin remodeling | − | [ |
| Sirt6 | chromatin remodeling/ telomere maintenance | Chromatin remodeling | + | [ |
| TCL1a | stimulates akt pathway | PI3k | + | [ |
| RARy | Binds RAREoct, promotes Oct4 expression | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| SNAIL | Promotes EMT transition | core transcriptional circuitry/TGFβ | + | [ |
| Lrh-1 | Binds RAREoct, promotes Oct4 expression | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| RCOR2 | Facilitates histone demethylation | Chromatin remodeling | + | [ |
| Non-coding RNA | ||||
| miR367 | inhibits EMT | TGFβ | + | [ |
| LincRNA-ROR | regulates expression of core transcriptional factors | core transcriptional circuitry | + | [ |
| miR302 | inhibits EMT/stimulates oct4 expression | TGFβ; core transcriptional circuitry; apoptosis | + | [ |
| miR766 | Inhibits Sirt6 | Chromatin remodeling | − | [ |
| miR200c | inhibits EMT/TGFβ pathway | TGFβ | + | [ |
| miR369 | inhibits EMT/TGFβ pathway | TGFβ | + | [ |
| miR372 | inhibits EMT/TGFβ pathway | TGFβ | + | [ |
| Let7 | regulates expression of core transcriptional factors and prodifferentiation genes | core transcriptional circuitry/TGFβ | − | [ |
| miR19a/b | inhibits PTEN | PI3k | + | [ |
| Small molecules | ||||
| Vitamin C | alleviates cell senescence/antioxidant | Hypoxia response | + | [ |
| Valproic acid | inhibits histone deacetylases | Chromatin remodeling | + | [ |
| CHIR99021 | GSK3-inhibitor | PI3k; Wnt/β-catenin | + | [ |
| Parnate | lysine-specific demethylase 1 inhibitor | Chromatin remodeling | + | [ |
| SB431542 | ALK5/TGFβ receptor inhibitor | TGFβ | + | [ |
| PD0325901 | MEK inhibitor | MAPK/ERK | + | [ |
| BIX-01294 | Methyltransferase G9a inhibitor | Chromatin remodeling | + | [ |
| Lithium | GSK3-inhibitor | PI3k; Wnt/β-catenin | + | [ |
| Maxadilan | downregulates Caspase3 and 9, anti-apoptotic | apoptosis | + | [ |
| 8-Br-cAMP | Protein kinase A activator | cAMP | + | [ |
| A-83-01 | ALK5/TGFβ receptor inhibitor | TGFβ | + | [ |
| Tiazovivin | promotes survival, ROCK inhibitor | PI3k | + | [ |
| Y-27632 | promotes survival, ROCK inhibitor | PI3k | + | [ |
| EPZ004777 | DOT1L inhibitor | Chromatin remodeling | + | [ |
| DAPT | Inhibits Notch/ increases core transcription factor expression/ inhibits p53 pathway | core transcriptional circuitry/ apoptosis | + | [ |
Reprogramming factors include non-coding RNA’s and small molecules. Each factor has a specific function in one or more pathways and has to be upregulated (+) or downregulated (−) to induce reprogramming
Fig. 3Sequential introduction of the OSKM factors induces EMT-MET dependent reprogramming. Upon sequential introduction of OSKM (in the order OK, M, S), somatic cells undergo an initial EMT phase where mesenchymal genes including Slug, SNAIL and N-Cadherin are upregulated. Once the cells reach an optimal mesenchymal state after EMT they undergo MET by downregulating the mesenchymal genes and upregulating epithelial genes including EpCAM, Ocln an E-Cadherin
Delivery methods used to deliver reprogramming factors into human somatic cells. Delivery methods can be divided in integrating and non-integrating methods
| Delivery method | Advantages | Disadvantages | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Integrative | Retrovirus | Very efficient, widely applied | Genomic integration, cell type specificity, requires cell division | [ |
| Lentivirus | Very efficient, does not require cell division, infects wide range of cell types, inducible/excisable | Genomic integration | [ | |
| Transposon | Relatively efficient, xeno-free, excisable | Genomic integration, risk of reintegration | [ | |
| Bacteriophage | Integrates in intergenic regions | Genomic integration | [ | |
| Zinc finger nucleases | Targeted integration, excisable | Genomic integration | [ | |
| Non-integrative | mRNA | No genomic integration, relatively efficient | Needs multiple transfections, triggers immune response | [ |
| Episomal vector | No genomic integration, relatively easy | Very inefficient, requires multiple transfections, risk of genomic integration | [ | |
| Protein | No genomic integration | Very inefficient, requires multiple transfections, requires high levels of proteins | [ | |
| Adenovirus | No genomic integration | Very inefficient, requires multiple infections | [ | |
| Sendai virus | No genomic integration, infects wide range of cell types, easily removable | Requires multiple viruses containing one factor each | [ | |
| Minicircle DNA | No genomic integration, relatively easy, small constructs, xeno-free | Very inefficient, requires multiple transfections | [ |
Each method has advantages and disadvantages for use in reprogramming