December 12, 2008
What are cell reprogramming and iPS cells?
Cell reprogramming involves taking a cell from the body (typically a cell extracted from skin called a dermal fibroblast) and genetically manipulating it to look and act like an embryonic stem cell. The resulting cell lines, called induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS), can potentially form any cell type in the body.
(Note: pluripotent cells, which include iPS cells and embryonic stem cells (ESCs), cannot make so-called "extra-embryonic" tissues such as the amnion, chorion, and other components of the placenta. Only the first few cells of the mammalian embryo are totipotent, capable of making all these tissues and forming an embryo.)
Thus far, reprogramming has been gene-based, using a retrovirus or adenovirus to carry the genes into a cell. The laboratories of George Q. Daley, MD, PhD, associate director of Children's Stem Cell Program, and others have shown that it requires only three to four genes to transform an adult skin cell into an iPS cell.
What has been the contribution of the Daley lab?
Within a few weeks of each other near the end of 2007, scientists in Japan and the University of Wisconsin, along with Daley’s laboratory, reported reprogramming human skin cells to create pluripotent stem cells. In the December 23 online edition of Nature, the Daley laboratory reported the first use of tissue from a volunteer research subject (rather than cells purchased commercially) to create iPS cells – going directly from skin biopsy to cell line.
In all, Daley’s group reprogrammed six cell lines. They first coaxed existing embryonic stem cells to become fibroblasts -- cells responsible for wound healing -- then converted them back to pluripotency. They also reprogrammed fibroblasts isolated from fetal lung, fetal skin, neonatal foreskin, and adult skin, as well as mesenchymal stem cells, an adult stem cell type isolated from bone marrow that is the precursor of fat, bone, and cartilage.
The researchers reprogrammed the cells by inserting four genes previously shown to work on mouse skin cells. They discovered that less mature fetal cells formed iPS cells far more readily than more mature adult cells. Indeed, the researchers had to add two additional genes to coax neonatal and adult cells to become iPS cells. The lab is now doing extensive research to improve the efficiency of reprogramming at the molecular level.
What work is planned or underway with iPS cells?
The Daley lab is focused on using iPS cells to understand human disease. In August, 2008, in the journal Cell
, the lab reported creating a collection of 10 disease-specific stem cell lines using the new iPS technique. The diseases include Parkinson's Disease, Type I diabetes, Huntington's Disease, Down Syndrome, a form of combined immunodeficiency ("Bubble Boy's Disease"), Lesch-Nyhan syndrome, Gaucher's Disease, and two forms of Muscular Dystrophy, and others.
Researchers at Children’s and elsewhere are using these cell lines to study how diseases unfold during the earliest stages of development. The Harvard Stem Cell Institute, of which Daley is a member, has created an iPS Core, a repository for iPS cells, to make the cell lines available to scientists around the world.
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