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New reprogramming factor cocktail produces therapy-grade …

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:53 am

Sep 04, 2014 Stem cells. Credit: Nissim Benvenisty - Wikipedia

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs)adult cells reprogrammed back to an embryonic stem cell-like statemay hold the potential to cure damaged nerves, regrow limbs and organs, and perfectly model a patient's particular disease. Yet through the reprogramming process, these cells can acquire serious genetic and epigenetic abnormalities that lower the cells' quality and limit their therapeutic usefulness.

When the generation of iPSCs was first reported in 2006, efficiency was paramount because only a fraction of a percentage of reprogrammed cells successfully became cell lines. Accordingly, the stem cell field focused on reprogramming efficiency to boost the pool of cells that could be studied. However, as scientists gained an increased understanding of the reprogramming process, they realized that myriad variables, including the ratio of reprogramming factors and the reprogramming environment, can also greatly affect cell quality.

Now researchers working in the lab of Whitehead Institute Founding Member Rudolf Jaenisch together with scientists from the Hebrew University have determined that the reprogramming factors themselves impact the reprogramming efficiency and the quality of the resulting cells. Their work is described in the current issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell.

"Postdoctoral researcher Yosef Buganim and Research Scientist Styliani Markoulaki show that a different combination of reprogramming factors may be less efficient than the original, but can produce much higher quality iPSCs," says Jaenisch, who is also a professor of biology at MIT. "And quality is a really important issue. At this point, it doesn't matter if we get one colony out of 10,000 or one out of 100,000 cells, as long as it is of high quality."

To make iPSCs, scientists expose adult cells to a cocktail of genes that are active in embryonic stem cells. iPSCs can then be pushed to differentiate into almost any other cell type, such as nerve, liver, or muscle cells. Although the original combination of Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and Myc (OSKM) efficiently reprograms cells, a relatively high percentage of the resulting cells have serious genomic aberrations, including aneuploidy, and trisomy 8, which make them unsuitable for use in clinical research.

Using bioinformatic analysis of a network of 48 genes key to the reprogramming process, Buganim and Markoulaki designed a new combination of genes, Sall4, Nanog, Esrrb, and Lin28 (SNEL). Roughly 80% of SNEL colonies made from mouse cells were of high quality and passed the most stringent pluripotency test currently available, the tetraploid complementation assay. By comparison, only 20-30% of high quality OSKM passed the same test. Buganim hypothesizes that SNEL reprograms cells better because, unlike OSKM, the cocktail does not rely on a potent oncogene like Myc, which may be causing some of the genetic problems. More importantly, the cocktail does not rely on the potent key master regulators Oct4 and Sox2 that might abnormally activate some regions in the adult cell genome.

To better understand why some reprogrammed cells are of high quality while others fall short, Buganim and Markoulaki analyzed SNEL colonies down to the genetic and epigenetic level. On their DNA, SNEL cells have deposits of the histone protein H2AX in locations very similar to those in ESCs, and the position of H2AX seems to predict the quality of the cell. The researchers believe this characteristic could be used to quickly screen for high quality colonies.

But for all of its promise, the current version of SNEL seems unable to reprogram human cells, which are generally more difficult to manipulate than mouse cells.

"We know that SNEL is not the ideal combination of factors," says Buganim, who is currently a Principal Investigator at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. "This work is only a proof of principle that says we must find this ideal combination. SNEL is an example that shows if you use bioinformatics tools you can get better quality. Now we should be able to find the optimal combination and try it in human cells to see if it works."

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Stowers Researchers Reveal Molecular Competition Drives …

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:52 am

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Newswise KANSAS CITY, MO Adult organisms ranging from fruit flies to humans harbor adult stem cells, some of which renew themselves through cell division while others differentiate into the specialized cells needed to replace worn-out or damaged organs and tissues.

Understanding the molecular mechanisms that control the balance between self-renewal and differentiation in adult stem cells is an important foundation for developing therapies to regenerate diseased, injured or aged tissue.

In the current issue of the journal Nature, scientists at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research report that competition between two proteins, Bam and COP9, balances the self-renewal and differentiation functions of ovarian germline stem cells (GSCs) in fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster).

Bam is the master differentiation factor in the Drosophila female GSC system, says Stowers Investigator Ting Xie, Ph.D., and senior author of the Nature paper. In order to carry out the switch from self-renewal to differentiation, Bam must inactivate the functions of self-renewing factors as well as activate the functions of differentiation factors.

Bam, which is encoded by the gene with the unusual name of bag-of-marbles, is expressed at high levels in differentiating cells and very low levels in GSCs of fruit flies.

Among the self-renewing factors targeted by Bam is the COP9 signalosome (CSN), an evolutionarily conserved, multi-functional complex that contains eight protein sub-units (CSN1 to CSN8). Xie and his collaborators discovered that Bam and the COP9 sub-unit known as CSN4 have opposite functions in regulating the fate of GSCs in female fruit flies.

Bam can switch COP9 function from self-renewal to differentiation by sequestering and antagonizing CSN4, Xie says. Bam directly binds to CSN4, preventing its association with the seven other COP9 components via protein competition, he adds. CSN4 is the only COP9 sub-unit that can interact with Bam.

This study has offered a novel way for Bam to carry out the switch from self-renewal to differentiation, says Xie, whose lab uses a combination of genetic, molecular, genomic and cell biological approaches to investigate GSCs as well as somatic stem cells of fruit flies.

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YaleNews | How to tell good stem cells from the bad: Yale …

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:52 am

The promise of embryonic stem cell research has been thwarted by an inability to answer a simple question: How do you know a good stem cell from a bad one?

Yale researchers report in the Sept. 4 issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell that they have found a marker that predicts which batch of personalized stem cells will develop into a variety of tissue types and which will develop into unusable placental or tumor-like tissues.

Scientists have been unable to capitalize on revolutionary findings in 2006 that adult cells could be made young again with the simple introduction of four factors. Hopes were raised that doctors would soon have access to unlimited supplies of a patients own iPSCs induced pluripotent stem cells that could be used to repair many types of tissue damage. However, efforts to direct these cells to therapeutic goals have proved difficult. Many attempts to use cells clinically have failed because they form tumors instead of the desired tissue.

The team of Yale Stem Cell Center researchers led by senior author Andrew Xiao identified a variant histone a protein that helps package DNA which can predict the developmental path of iPSC cells in mice. An accompanying paper in the same journal by researchers at the Whitehead Institute at MIT and Hebrew University in Israel also identifies at different marker that also appears to predict stem cell fate.

The trend is to raise the standards and quality very high, so we can think about using these cells in clinic, Xiao said. With our assay, we have a reliable molecular marker that can tell what is a good cell and what is a bad one.

Lead author of the paper is Tao Wu of Yale.

Research is funded by Yale and Connecticut Stem Cell Foundation.

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Northern Colorado Spine Surgeon Successfully Performs …

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:51 am

First Procedure in Phase 2 Clinical Trial of MesoblastsAdult Mesenchymal Precursor Cell (MPC) Product

Dr. Kenneth Pettine of The Spine Institute in Loveland, CO successfully performed the first minimally invasive lumbar disc procedure in the Phase 2 clinical trial of Mesoblasts investigational adult Mesenchymal Precursor Cell (MPC) product for low back pain and degenerative disc disease. The outpatient procedure lasted less than 20 minutes, with the patient fully awake and under light sedation. The patient was shortly discharged and there were no complications.

The procedure took place at The Spine Institute and Loveland Surgery Center in Colorado, a United States Spine Center of Excellence. Dr. Pettine is a founder of The Spine Institute, an international leader in non-fusion surgery of the spine, and the co-inventor of Medtronics Maverick artificial lumbar disc device.

This marks the third renaissance in spine care, Dr. Pettine said. The first was improved diagnosis using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), the second was end-stage replacement with artificial discs, and now there is the potential widespread use of adult stem cells for disc repair and regeneration.

Up to 15 percent of people in industrialized countries have chronic low back pain lasting more than six months. For those with progressive, severe and debilitating pain due to ongoing progression of disc degeneration, the only option is major back surgery involving artificial disc replacement or spinal fusion. Both types of surgery are associated with significant risks, and the avoidance of surgery is a major objective of new treatments for degenerative disease of the spine.

Building on these results, Mesoblast aims to show that a single minimally invasive injection of its allogeneic, or off-the-shelf, disc repair MPC product can regenerate damaged discs, thereby reducing pain, improving function, and avoiding surgery. Mesoblasts Phase 2 trial, which was cleared by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in July, will enroll 100 patients with chronic low back pain due to lumbar disc degeneration in 15 centers across the United States and Australia, comparing outcomes at six months in 60 patients receiving MPC injections against 40 patients receiving control injections.

There is a significant need for a minimally invasive biological solution to repair the degenerating disc, reduce back pain, improve function, and eliminate the need for surgery. Mesoblasts adult stem cell product could find broad use in the treatment of both early and late degenerative disc disease, and could additionally reduce spine surgery for this condition by as much as 80 percent, Dr. Pettine added.

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Stem Cells – University of Washington

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:51 am

Can human embryonic stem cells be used to generate new retinal neurons for retinal repair?

Lamba DA, Karl MO, Ware CB, Reh TA. Efficient generation of retinal progenitor cells from human embryonic stem cells. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Aug 22; 103(34): 12769-74

We have recently developed an efficient method for directing hES cells to the retinal progenitor identity based on the known regulatory factors that control eye development (Figure 1A). The current molecular genetic model of vertebrate embryogenesis suggests that there are several sequential induction steps. Forebrain development requires that both BMP and Wnt signaling are antagonized. Although the specific molecular signals required for eye field specification are not completely defined in any model system, insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) mRNA injections into Xenopus embryos specifically promote eye induction. Therefore, to direct the ES cells (Figure 1B) to an anterior neural fate, we treated embryoid bodies (Figure 1C) with a combination of noggin (a potent endogenous inhibitor of the BMP pathway) and Dickkopf-1 (dkk1; a secreted antagonist of the Wnt/beta-catenin signaling pathway) and IGF-1. The embryoid bodies are cultured for 3 days in the three factors (Figure 1A) and then transferred to 6 well plates coated with either Matrigel or laminin where they are allowed to attach (Figure 1D). The cells are then maintained in the same medium, with bFGF added, for an additional three weeks; we refer to this protocol as retinal determination (RD) conditions. Analysis of the cells with RT-PCR and immunofluorescence demonstrates that they express the full complement of eye field transcription factors, including Rx, Pax6, Lhx2, and Six3. 82% (SD+/-23%) of the cells were labeled with Pax6 antibodies at the end of 3 weeks in RD conditions (Figure 1E). Of these, 86% cells co-expressed Chx10 (SD+/-14%). Most of the Pax6 labeled cells were also labeled with antibodies to Sox2. To determine whether the hES cell derived progenitors have the capacity for multi-lineage differentiation characteristic of retinal progenitors, we used immunofluorescence for specific types of retinal neurons, including HuC/D, Neurofilament-M (Figure 2A), and Tuj-1(Figure 2B) for ganglion and amacrine cells, Crx (Figure 2D), Nrl (Figure 2C), recoverin, S-opsin, and rhodopsin for photoreceptors, and Prox1 for amacrine and horizontal cells. Many cells in the hES cultures label with markers of ganglion and amacrine cells: Tuj-1 and Neurofilament-M (while other cells are labeled with photoreceptor-specific antibodies, including Crx, and Nrl. Quantitative analysis shows on average that 12% of all cells expressed Crx (SD+/-2.4) and 12% of all cells expressed Hu C/D (SD+/-6.7) and 5.75% (SD+/-4.2) of the cells expressed Nrl (1646 cells counted). S-opsin and rhodopsin were expressed in a very small percentage of cells (<0.01%). Cells with neuronal morphology displayed synaptophysin labeled puncta, consistent with synaptic development in vitro (Figure 2E).

To analyze the functional maturation of the retinal neurons produced in these cultures, we re-dissociated the cells and plated them at lower density. This allowed us to analyze small clusters of cells with calcium imaging techniques. We found that some of the cells, particularly those with distinct neuron-like morphology, respond to glutamate, and NMDA with substantial calcium fluxes (arrow, Figure 3). Since most inner retinal neurons have glutamate receptors, and retinal ganglion cells express NMDA receptors, these data lend further support to the immunofluorescent identification of ganglion cells and amacrine cells.

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ALS ice bucket challenge – Carlsbad Stem Cells R&D – Video

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:50 am


ALS ice bucket challenge - Carlsbad Stem Cells R D
Thermo Fisher Scientific Transfection team challenged us and here we are. Keeping in mind the severe drought in California, we used ice used in the lab and carried out the challenge by a water...

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Carol Marchetto, Ph.D. – "Using human pluripotent stem cells to model autism spectrum disorders – Video

Posted: September 6, 2014 at 4:50 am


Carol Marchetto, Ph.D. - "Using human pluripotent stem cells to model autism spectrum disorders
Carol Marchetto is a Senior Staff Scientist in the Laboratory of Dr. Fred Gage at The Salk Institute. Carol is involved in understanding the mechanisms by which human pluripotent stem cells...

By: Salk Institute

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Rudolf Jaenisch Ice Bucket Challenge – Video

Posted: September 5, 2014 at 12:47 pm


Rudolf Jaenisch Ice Bucket Challenge
ISSCR President Dr. Rudolf Jaenisch, Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, takes the #IceBucketChallenge and nominates three former ISSCR presidents, Dr. Fred Gage, Salk Institute for...

By: International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR)

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Stem Cells – LUB DUB's second issue scientific teaser! – Video

Posted: September 5, 2014 at 9:52 am


Stem Cells - LUB DUB #39;s second issue scientific teaser!
A little bit of what you #39;re expecting with the scientific section of our second issue! Don #39;t forget to visit our booth this October! LIKE and FOLLOW us here ...

By: Lub Dub

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How to tell good stem cells from the bad

Posted: September 5, 2014 at 9:52 am

45 minutes ago by Bill Hathaway Separating the good stem cells from the bad. Credit: Matthew Chock, NYC

The promise of embryonic stem cell research has been thwarted by an inability to answer a simple question: How do you know a good stem cell from a bad one?

Yale researchers report in the Sept. 4 issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell that they have found a marker that predicts which batch of personalized stem cells will develop into a variety of tissue types and which will develop into unusable placental or tumor-like tissues.

Scientists have been unable to capitalize on revolutionary findings in 2006 that adult cells could be made young again with the simple introduction of four factors. Hopes were raised that doctors would soon have access to unlimited supplies of a patient's own iPSCsinduced pluripotent stem cellsthat could be used to repair many types of tissue damage. However, efforts to direct these cells to therapeutic goals have proved difficult. Many attempts to use cells clinically have failed because they form tumors instead of the desired tissue.

The team of Yale Stem Cell Center researchers led by senior author Andrew Xiao identified a variant histonea protein that helps package DNAwhich can predict the developmental path of iPSC cells in mice. An accompanying paper in the same journal by researchers at the Whitehead Institute at MIT and Hebrew University in Israel also identifies at different marker that also appears to predict stem cell fate.

"The trend is to raise the standards and quality very high, so we can think about using these cells in clinic," Xiao said. "With our assay, we have a reliable molecular marker that can tell what is a good cell and what is a bad one."

Explore further: New reprogramming factor cocktail produces therapy-grade induced pluripotent stem cells

Journal reference: Cell Stem Cell

Provided by Yale University

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs)adult cells reprogrammed back to an embryonic stem cell-like statemay hold the potential to cure damaged nerves, regrow limbs and organs, and perfectly model a ...

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How to tell good stem cells from the bad

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