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Virus free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of reprogramming factors

Reprogramming of somatic cells to pluripotency, thereby creating induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, promises to transform regenerative medicine. Most instances of direct reprogramming have been achieved by forced expression of defined factors using multiple viral vectors1-7. However, such iPS cel...

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Autores principales: Kaji, Keisuke, Norrby, Katherine, Paca, Agnieszka, Mileikovsky, Maria, Mohseni, Paria, Woltjen, Knut
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2667910/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19252477
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature07864
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author Kaji, Keisuke
Norrby, Katherine
Paca, Agnieszka
Mileikovsky, Maria
Mohseni, Paria
Woltjen, Knut
author_facet Kaji, Keisuke
Norrby, Katherine
Paca, Agnieszka
Mileikovsky, Maria
Mohseni, Paria
Woltjen, Knut
author_sort Kaji, Keisuke
collection PubMed
description Reprogramming of somatic cells to pluripotency, thereby creating induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, promises to transform regenerative medicine. Most instances of direct reprogramming have been achieved by forced expression of defined factors using multiple viral vectors1-7. However, such iPS cells contain a large number of viral vector integrations1,8, any one of which could cause unpredictable genetic dysfunction. While c-Myc is dispensable for reprogramming9,10, complete elimination of the other exogenous factors is also desired since ectopic expression of either Oct4 or Klf4 can induce dysplasia11,12. Two transient transfection reprogramming methods have been published to address this issue13,14. However, the efficiency of either approach is extremely low, and neither has thus far been applied successfully to human cells. Here we show that non-viral transfection of a single multiprotein expression vector, which comprises the coding sequences of c-Myc​,​ Klf4​,​ Oct4 and Sox2 linked with 2A peptides, can reprogram both mouse and human fibroblasts. Moreover, the transgene can be removed once reprogramming has been achieved. iPS cells produced with this non-viral vector show robust expression of pluripotency markers, indicating a reprogrammed state confirmed functionally by in vitro differentiation assays and formation of adult chimeric mice. When the single vector reprogramming system was combined with a piggyBac transposon15,16 we succeeded in establishing reprogrammed human cell lines from embryonic fibroblasts with robust expression of pluripotency markers. This system minimizes genome modification in iPS cells and enables complete elimination of exogenous reprogramming factors, efficiently providing iPS cells that are applicable to regenerative medicine, drug screening and the establishment of disease models.
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spelling pubmed-26679102009-10-09 Virus free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of reprogramming factors Kaji, Keisuke Norrby, Katherine Paca, Agnieszka Mileikovsky, Maria Mohseni, Paria Woltjen, Knut Nature Article Reprogramming of somatic cells to pluripotency, thereby creating induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, promises to transform regenerative medicine. Most instances of direct reprogramming have been achieved by forced expression of defined factors using multiple viral vectors1-7. However, such iPS cells contain a large number of viral vector integrations1,8, any one of which could cause unpredictable genetic dysfunction. While c-Myc is dispensable for reprogramming9,10, complete elimination of the other exogenous factors is also desired since ectopic expression of either Oct4 or Klf4 can induce dysplasia11,12. Two transient transfection reprogramming methods have been published to address this issue13,14. However, the efficiency of either approach is extremely low, and neither has thus far been applied successfully to human cells. Here we show that non-viral transfection of a single multiprotein expression vector, which comprises the coding sequences of c-Myc​,​ Klf4​,​ Oct4 and Sox2 linked with 2A peptides, can reprogram both mouse and human fibroblasts. Moreover, the transgene can be removed once reprogramming has been achieved. iPS cells produced with this non-viral vector show robust expression of pluripotency markers, indicating a reprogrammed state confirmed functionally by in vitro differentiation assays and formation of adult chimeric mice. When the single vector reprogramming system was combined with a piggyBac transposon15,16 we succeeded in establishing reprogrammed human cell lines from embryonic fibroblasts with robust expression of pluripotency markers. This system minimizes genome modification in iPS cells and enables complete elimination of exogenous reprogramming factors, efficiently providing iPS cells that are applicable to regenerative medicine, drug screening and the establishment of disease models. 2009-03-01 2009-04-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2667910/ /pubmed/19252477 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature07864 Text en
spellingShingle Article
Kaji, Keisuke
Norrby, Katherine
Paca, Agnieszka
Mileikovsky, Maria
Mohseni, Paria
Woltjen, Knut
Virus free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of reprogramming factors
title Virus free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of reprogramming factors
title_full Virus free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of reprogramming factors
title_fullStr Virus free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of reprogramming factors
title_full_unstemmed Virus free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of reprogramming factors
title_short Virus free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of reprogramming factors
title_sort virus free induction of pluripotency and subsequent excision of reprogramming factors
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2667910/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19252477
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature07864
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