Literature DB >> 29720634

Blastocyst-like structures generated solely from stem cells.

Nicolas C Rivron1,2, Javier Frias-Aldeguer3,4, Erik J Vrij3, Jean-Charles Boisset4, Jeroen Korving4, Judith Vivié4,5, Roman K Truckenmüller3, Alexander van Oudenaarden4, Clemens A van Blitterswijk3, Niels Geijsen4,6.   

Abstract

The blastocyst (the early mammalian embryo) forms all embryonic and extra-embryonic tissues, including the placenta. It consists of a spherical thin-walled layer, known as the trophectoderm, that surrounds a fluid-filled cavity sheltering the embryonic cells 1 . From mouse blastocysts, it is possible to derive both trophoblast 2 and embryonic stem-cell lines 3 , which are in vitro analogues of the trophectoderm and embryonic compartments, respectively. Here we report that trophoblast and embryonic stem cells cooperate in vitro to form structures that morphologically and transcriptionally resemble embryonic day 3.5 blastocysts, termed blastoids. Like blastocysts, blastoids form from inductive signals that originate from the inner embryonic cells and drive the development of the outer trophectoderm. The nature and function of these signals have been largely unexplored. Genetically and physically uncoupling the embryonic and trophectoderm compartments, along with single-cell transcriptomics, reveals the extensive inventory of embryonic inductions. We specifically show that the embryonic cells maintain trophoblast proliferation and self-renewal, while fine-tuning trophoblast epithelial morphogenesis in part via a BMP4/Nodal-KLF6 axis. Although blastoids do not support the development of bona fide embryos, we demonstrate that embryonic inductions are crucial to form a trophectoderm state that robustly implants and triggers decidualization in utero. Thus, at this stage, the nascent embryo fuels trophectoderm development and implantation.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29720634     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0051-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  108 in total

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2.  Organoids by design.

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Journal:  Tissue Eng Part A       Date:  2019-09-20       Impact factor: 3.845

4.  Evaluating totipotency using criteria of increasing stringency.

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5.  The moral status of human embryo-like structures: potentiality matters?: The moral status of human synthetic embryos.

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6.  The dynamics of morphogenesis in stem cell-based embryology: Novel insights for symmetry breaking.

Authors:  Berna Sozen; Jake Cornwall-Scoones; Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz
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7.  First complete model of the human embryo.

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Review 8.  All roads lead to Rome: the many ways to pluripotency.

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Review 9.  Deconstructing and reconstructing the mouse and human early embryo.

Authors:  Marta N Shahbazi; Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz
Journal:  Nat Cell Biol       Date:  2018-07-23       Impact factor: 28.824

Review 10.  The role of connexins during early embryonic development: pluripotent stem cells, gene editing, and artificial embryonic tissues as tools to close the knowledge gap.

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