| Literature DB >> 31790696 |
Jacob Goodwin1, Andrew L Laslett2, Peter J Rugg-Gunn3.
Abstract
Recent advances in human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC) research have uncovered different subpopulations within stem cell cultures and have captured a range of pluripotent states that hold distinct molecular and functional properties. At the two ends of the pluripotency spectrum are naïve and primed hPSC, whereby naïve hPSC grown in stringent conditions recapitulate features of the preimplantation human embryo, and the conventionally grown primed hPSC align closer to the early postimplantation embryo. Investigating these cell types will help to define the mechanisms that control early development and should provide new insights into stem cell properties such as cell identity, differentiation and reprogramming. Monitoring cell surface marker expression provides a valuable approach to resolve complex cell populations, to directly compare between cell types, and to isolate viable cells for functional experiments. This review discusses the discovery and applications of cell surface markers to study human pluripotent cell types with a particular focus on the transitions between naïve and primed states. Highlighted areas for future study include the potential functions for the identified cell surface proteins in pluripotency, the production of new high-quality monoclonal antibodies to naïve-specific protein epitopes and the use of cell surface markers to characterise subpopulations within pluripotent states.Entities:
Keywords: Antibodies; Cell surface markers; Immunophenotyping; Naïve; Pluripotent stem cells; Primed; Reprogramming
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31790696 PMCID: PMC6983944 DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2019.111749
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Cell Res ISSN: 0014-4827 Impact factor: 3.905
A summary of primed-specific cell surface markers in hPSC.
| Surface antigen | Protein name | Gene symbol | Protein function | Cell culture conditions and references | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High surface antigen expression | Low surface antigen expression | ||||
| SSEA3 | N/A | N/A (glycoprotein) | Unknown | KSR + FGF2 [ | 5iLA(F); t2iLGö [ |
| SSEA4 | N/A | N/A (glycoprotein) | Unknown | KSR + FGF2 [ | 5iLA(F) [ |
| CD24 | Signal transducer CD24 | Sialoglycoprotein; | KSR + FGF2 [ | 5iLA(F); t2iLGö [ | |
| CD57 | Galactosyl-galactosylxylosyl-protein 3-beta-glucuronosyl-transferase 1 | Transfers carbohydrate epitopes onto glycoproteins | KSR + FGF2; RSeT [ | 5iLA(F); t2iLGö [ | |
| CD90 | Thy-1 membrane glycoprotein | Glycoprotein; potential roles in cell adhesion and communication | KSR + FGF2; RSeT [ | 5iLA(F); t2iLGö [ | |
| NLGN4X | Neuroligin-4, X-linked | Carboxylesterase/lipase; potential role in cell-cell interactions | E8; RSeT, NHSM [ | 5iLA(F); t2iLGö [ | |
| PCDH1 | Protocadherin-1 | Potential role in cell adhesion and interactions | KSR + FGF2; E8 [ | 5iLA(F); RSeT; NHSM [ | |
| ADGRG2 | Adhesion G-protein coupled receptor G2 | Orphan receptor | KSR + FGF2; E8 [ | 5iLA(F); RSeT; NHSM [ | |
| CDH3 | Cadherin-3 | Calcium-dependent cell adhesion protein | KSR + FGF2; E8 [ | 5iLA(F); RSeT; NHSM [ | |
A summary of naïve-specific cell surface markers in hPSC.
| Surface antigen | Protein name | Gene symbol | Protein function | Cell culture conditions and references | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High surface antigen expression | Low surface antigen expression | ||||
| CD75 | N/A | N/A (glycoprotein) | Unknown | 5iLA(F); t2iLGö [ | KSR + FGF2; RSeT [ |
| CD130 | Interleukin-6 receptor subunit beta | Cytokine signal transduction | 3iL [ | mTeSR1 [ | |
| CD77 | N/A | N/A (glycoprotein) | Unknown | 2iL/I/F [ | mTeSR1 [ |
| CD7 | T-cell antigen CD7 | Potential signal transducer | 5iLA(F); t2iLGö [ | KSR + FGF2; RSeT [ | |
| F11R | Junctional adhesion molecule A | Required for tight junction formation | 5iLA(F); t2iLGö [ | E8; RSeT, NHSM [ | |
| SUSD2 | Sushi domain-containing protein 2 | Potential roles in cell adhesion, migration and signal transduction. | PXGL [ | E8 [ | |
| CD320 | CD320 antigen | Transcobalamin receptor mediating Vitamin B12 uptake | 5iLA(F) [ | KSR + FGF2 [ | |
Fig. 1Applying cell surface markers to study human pluripotent states. Overview of the progress with applying cell surface markers and their antibodies to demarcate human pluripotent states. Studies using transcriptional profiling and flow cytometry-based antibody screens have identified informative cell surface markers. A direct proteomic measurement of plasma membrane localised proteins has not yet been reported for naïve hPSC, but this dataset would be valuable for unbiased marker discovery. The central part of the figure summarises the current set of cell surface markers that define naïve and primed hPSC. Applying the cell surface markers enables the monitoring and prospective isolation of target cell types, for instance during cell reprogramming.