| Literature DB >> 32954504 |
Yusuke Murase1,2, Yukihiro Yabuta1,2, Hiroshi Ohta1,2, Chika Yamashiro1,2, Tomonori Nakamura1,2, Takuya Yamamoto1,3,4,5, Mitinori Saitou1,2,3.
Abstract
Human germ cells perpetuate human genetic and epigenetic information. However, the underlying mechanism remains elusive, due to a lack of appropriate experimental systems. Here, we show that human primordial germ cell-like cells (hPGCLCs) derived from human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) can be propagated to at least ~106 -fold over a period of 4 months under a defined condition in vitro. During expansion, hPGCLCs maintain an early hPGC-like transcriptome and preserve their genome-wide DNA methylation profiles, most likely due to retention of maintenance DNA methyltransferase activity. These characteristics contrast starkly with those of mouse PGCLCs, which, under an analogous condition, show a limited propagation (up to ~50-fold) and persist only around 1 week, yet undergo cell-autonomous genome-wide DNA demethylation. Importantly, upon aggregation culture with mouse embryonic ovarian somatic cells in xenogeneic-reconstituted ovaries, expanded hPGCLCs initiate genome-wide DNA demethylation and differentiate into oogonia/gonocyte-like cells, demonstrating their germline potential. By creating a paradigm for hPGCLC expansion, our study uncovers critical divergences in expansion potential and the mechanism for epigenetic reprogramming between the human and mouse germ cell lineage.Entities:
Keywords: epigenetic reprogramming; hPGC-like cells; human primordial germ cells; in vitro expansion; oogonia
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32954504 PMCID: PMC7604613 DOI: 10.15252/embj.2020104929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO J ISSN: 0261-4189 Impact factor: 11.598