| Literature DB >> 31760627 |
Gele Liu1, Brian T David2, Matthew Trawczynski2, Richard G Fessler2.
Abstract
Over the past 20 years, and particularly in the last decade, significant developmental milestones have driven basic, translational, and clinical advances in the field of stem cell and regenerative medicine. In this article, we provide a systemic overview of the major recent discoveries in this exciting and rapidly developing field. We begin by discussing experimental advances in the generation and differentiation of pluripotent stem cells (PSCs), next moving to the maintenance of stem cells in different culture types, and finishing with a discussion of three-dimensional (3D) cell technology and future stem cell applications. Specifically, we highlight the following crucial domains: 1) sources of pluripotent cells; 2) next-generation in vivo direct reprogramming technology; 3) cell types derived from PSCs and the influence of genetic memory; 4) induction of pluripotency with genomic modifications; 5) construction of vectors with reprogramming factor combinations; 6) enhancing pluripotency with small molecules and genetic signaling pathways; 7) induction of cell reprogramming by RNA signaling; 8) induction and enhancement of pluripotency with chemicals; 9) maintenance of pluripotency and genomic stability in induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs); 10) feeder-free and xenon-free culture environments; 11) biomaterial applications in stem cell biology; 12) three-dimensional (3D) cell technology; 13) 3D bioprinting; 14) downstream stem cell applications; and 15) current ethical issues in stem cell and regenerative medicine. This review, encompassing the fundamental concepts of regenerative medicine, is intended to provide a comprehensive portrait of important progress in stem cell research and development. Innovative technologies and real-world applications are emphasized for readers interested in the exciting, promising, and challenging field of stem cells and those seeking guidance in planning future research direction.Entities:
Keywords: Advances; Applications; Stem Cells; Technologies
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31760627 PMCID: PMC6987053 DOI: 10.1007/s12015-019-09935-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Rev Rep ISSN: 2629-3277 Impact factor: 5.739
Fig. 1.The timeline of major scientific advances during the history of stem cell research. Multipotent stem cells were first discovered in 1961, representing the initial breakthrough in stem cell and regenerative medicine. Dolly the sheep was cloned in 1997. The transition from fundamental research, to pre-clinical research, and finally to clinical trials is driven by many discoveries and milestones. Many advances in reprogramming factor combinations, experimental methods, and the elucidation of signaling pathways have recently contributed to the first clinical trials for retinal cell transplants and spinal cord transplants. Red shading represents fundamental research, yellow shading represents pre-clinical work, and green shading represents clinical trials.
Five Basic Categories of Stem Cells
| Definition | Pluripotent stem cells derived from the inner cell mass of a blastocyst (embryo) | Pluripotent stem cells derived from adult tissues | One new single cell is produced by the transplantation of the donor nucleus into an enucleated oocyte of a donor egg. Reprogramming occurs to form blastocyst. | Pluripotent stem cells generated by reprogramming adult cells. Derived by applying manual laboratory methods to reprogram adult cells (except SCNT). RSCs include iPSCs and direct reprogramming stem cells. | A type of cell in close proximity to rich, nutrient-full microenvironment such as vessels, bone marrow, or organs (heart and brain, etc) in the mature or adult organism; they are able to respond to tissue-specific stimulation to produce stem cells. |
| Development stage | Early-stage pre-implantation embryo; Human embryos generate the blastocyst (50–150 cells) 4–5 days post-fertilization | Early developmental stem cell mass in adult tissues | One blastocyst is about 100 cells at early stage embryo | Early embryonic stage that can be single or multiple cells; or specific tissue-lineage cells | Mature stem cells from adult cells (such as umbilical cord blood cells) or adult organs such as heart and brain |
| Morphology | Blastocyst (multiple cells); uncertain shape without resembling any specific cell | Appears similar to inner cells of blastocyst | Complete single cell; generalized shape without resembling any specific cell | iPSCs: single or multiple cells as blastocyst, generalized, uncertain shape without looking like any specific cell; Specific tissue-lineage cells are similar. | Complete single or multiple cells; the shape looks like mature cells of a particular organ system. |
| First event | hESCs were isolated in US in 1998 | VSELs were isolated in the US in 2006 | Dolly the sheep was cloned in the UK in 1996 | Four Yamanaka factors (Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and cMyc) elucidated in Japan in 2006 | Bone marrow cells in Canada in 1961 |
| Example of representative cells or organism for medical applications | hESC-derived oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs): AST-OPC1s used in the first clinical trial in the US in 2010 | An alternative to monopotent tissue-committed stem cells in adults | Monkeys in China in 2018 | Reprogramming mature cells such as peripheral blood cells, fibroblasts, keratinocytes, and urine cells | Umbilical cord blood cells, bone marrow cells, and endogenous stem cells, such as in heart, brain, and spinal cord |
| Function | Totipotent embryonic stem cells in morula: able to develop into any type of cell | Totipotency of VSELs remains unclear; but cells can differentiate into mesenchymal stem cells, hemangioblasts, and endothelial progenitor cells, as well as tissue-committed stem cells | Single cell generates a whole organism | Develops into any type of cell | Develops into cells of the same systemic type |
| Final products by different competencies | To produce any types of cells, tissues, and organs | Potential to produce various cells across germ layers in adult animals or humans | To generate a living organism | To produce any types of cells, tissues, and organs, like ESCs | To produce cells, tissues, and organs in the same genetic lineage |
| Applications | Four major fields: regenerative and transplant medicine, disease modeling, drug discovery screening, and human developmental biology | Four major fields: regenerative and transplant medicine, disease modeling, drug discovery screening, and human developmental biology | Four major fields: regenerative and transplant medicine, disease modeling, drug discovery screening, and human developmental biology | Four major fields: regenerative and transplant medicine, disease modeling, drug discovery screening, and human developmental biology | Four major fields: regenerative and transplant medicine, disease modeling, drug discovery screening, and human developmental biology |
| To obtain | Harvest from unviable embryo, surgery, abortion | Invasive surgery or noninvasive collection | Surgery to get single nucleus donor and egg donor | Invasive surgery or noninvasive collection | Invasive surgery to obtain or injection of growth factors or small molecular chemicals into certain tissues for stimulation of endogenous stem cells |
| Major issues | Destruction/abortion of embryo; immune rejection, and depletion of cell resources | To determine overall properties and functions | May be abused in human cloning; high requirements for technology, facility, and finance | Genomic instability; can have low efficacy | Invasive surgery, immune rejection (if non-autologous donor), contamination, and infection, as well as cannot naturally cross genetic barriers to differentiate into other lineage |
| Future | Phased out over time | Significant promise | Limited development | Significant promise | Significant promise |
Fig. 2.The four key methods for delivering reprogramming factors. Integrating viral systems were the first to be used to deliver transcription factors to generate stem cells, but they have the disadvantage of incorporating their genetic material and contributing to teratoma formation. By avoiding integration, novel methods (non-integrating vectors, self-excising vectors, and non-integrating non-viral vectors) represent iterative improvements upon this initial methodology. Such approaches provide significant advances in the safety and efficacy of iPSCs, which may then be applied for downstream scientific and clinical applications.
Critical comparisons of cell culture, medium, and material for iPSCs growing environment
| Definition | Plates, wells, and culture are cell-free with the exception of the desired cell type. | Serum-free culture | Material, mechanical, or biological technologies for coating plates/wells to promote growth, maintenance, or differentiation [ |
| Key Substances | Thompson’s inactivated MEFs (gold standard) [ | No animal-derived elements, but contain minimal growth factors [ | Biodegradable polyester-based materials [ |
| Advantages | MEFs secrete vital growth factors including FGF, TGF-β, cytokines, and extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins (e.g. activin A, laminin-511, and vitronectin) [ | To avoid contaminating cultures with unknown proteins or zoonotic viruses; to manage appropriate growth factors for forced differentiation or therapy [ | May improve safety, efficiency, and scalability limitations of conventional iPSC derivation by controlling iPSC behavior |
| Other requirements | Need growth-suppressive (mitotically inactivated) treatments such as mitomycin, γ-irradiation, electric pulses, or chemical fixation [ | Insulin, transferrin, and selenium [ | Low toxicity and biodegradability |
| Risks | May contaminate cultures with unknown proteins or zoonotic viruses [ | Potentially disrupt differentiation or therapeutic capacity [ | To identify and characterize biomaterial properties that are compatible, promotable, non-toxic, and degradable for the transplant |
| Solutions | Synthetic culture surfaces such as recombinant human vitronectin-N–coated dishes or biomaterial coating [ | Xeno-free nutrition supplements such as ThermoFisher Scientific N2 (A1370701) and B27 (A3353501) | The development of novel biomaterials |