Cells derived from pluripotent stem cells are developmentally immature eurekalert.org Public release date: 16-Aug-2011    Contact: Kim Irwin    kirwin@mednet.ucla.edu   310-206-2805    University of California - Los Angeles Health Sciences  
  Stem cell researchers at UCLA have discovered that three types of  cells derived from human embryonic stem cells and induced pluripotent  stem cells are similar to each other, but are much more developmentally  immature than previously thought when compared to those same cell types  taken directly from human tissue. 		The researchers, from the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of  Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA, found that the  progeny of the human embryonic stem cells and induced pluripotent stem  cells (iPS) were more similar to cells found within the first two months  of fetal development than anything later. This could have implications  both clinically and for disease modeling, said William Lowry, senior  author of the study and an assistant professor of molecular, cell and  developmental biology in the Life Sciences.
   		The two-year study was published today in the peer-reviewed journal Cell Research.
   		"Once we found that the human embryonic stem cell- and the  iPS-derived progeny were similar, we wanted to understand how similar  the progeny were to the same cells taken directly from human tissue,"  Lowry said. "What we found, looking at gene expression, was that the  cells we derived were similar to cells found in early fetal development  and were functionally much more immature than cells taken from human  tissue. This finding may lead to exciting new ways to study early human  development, but it also may present a challenge for transplantation,  because the cells you end up with are not something that's indicative of  a cell you'd find in an adult or even in a newborn baby."
   		There might also be challenges in disease modeling, unless you're  modeling diseases that occur within the first two months of development,  Lowry said.
   		Employing the most commonly used methods for deriving cells from  embryonic stem cells and iPS cells, Lowry and his team differentiated  these human pluripotent stem cells into neural progenitor cells, which  create neurons and glia, hepatocytes, the main tissue found in the  liver, and fibroblasts, common to the skin. They selected those cell  types because they are easy to identify and are among the most commonly  differentiated cells made from pluripotent stem cells. They also  represent cell types found in the three germ layers, the endoderm,  mesoderm and ectoderm, where the first cell fate decisions are made,  Lowry said.
   		The progeny of the human pluripotent stem cells were compared to  each other using their gene expression patterns, functionality and  appearance. There was essentially little or no difference between them,  Lowry said. Then the work began to compare them to equivalent cell types  found in humans.
   		"One important reason to do this is to ensure that the cells we are  creating in the Petri dish and potentially using for transplantation  are truly analogous to the cells originally found in humans," said  Michaela Patterson, first author of the study and a graduate student  researcher.  "Ideally, they should be a similar as possible."
   		What the team found was that while the progeny were alike, they  bore striking differences from the same cells found in humans when  analyzing their gene expression. A significant number of genes, about  100, were differentially expressed in the cell types made from  pluripotent stem cells, Lowry said.
   		About half of those differentially expressed genes are normally  thought to be strictly expressed in pluripotent stem cells, which have  the potential to differentiate into any cell of the three germ layers.  Those genes had not been turned off even after the cell had  differentiated into either a neural progenitor cell, hepatocyte or a  fibroblast, Patterson said.
   		"Previously, we assumed that all pluripotency genes get shut off  right away, after the fetus begins developing," Patterson said. "We  found that this is not the case, and in fact some of these genes remain  expressed."
   	The differences in gene expression could be problematic, Lowry said,  because some of these same differentially expressed genes in the  progeny are genes that are expressed during cancer development. Also  worrisome was their developmental maturity – would they work correctly  when transplanted into humans? As part of their study, the team left the  differentiating cells in culture about a month longer to see if they  would further mature, and there was some modest but statistically  significant maturation. However, genetic discrepancies remained.
   		These discrepancies could be critical, Patterson said, particularly  in the hepatocytes. During fetal development, these cells express  proteins that aid the metabolism of the fetus, a role they don't play  later in adults.
   		"The roles these cells play in the fetus and the adult are  inherently different," she said. "It may be that the progeny, if  transplanted into a human, would mature to the same levels as those  found in the adult liver. We don't know."
   		The team then compared the progeny to cells from humans that were  closer to the progeny's developmental maturity and found that the two  types of cells were indeed becoming more similar in gene expression and  functionality, Lowry said.
   		The UCLA team is not the first to suggest that the progeny of human  pluripotent stem cells reflect an early developmental immaturity.  However, these data put a more precise window on their developmental  age.
   		Going forward, Lowry and his team are going to study the 100 genes  being differentially expressed in the progeny to see if manipulating  some or all of them results in the maturation of the cells.
   		"These findings provide support for the idea that human pluripotent  stem cells can serve as useful in vitro models of early human  development, but also raise important issues for disease modeling and  the clinical applications of their derivatives," the study states.
   	 ###  		The study was funded in part by a seed grant and training grants  from the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine, the Basil  O'Connor Started Scholar Award and the Fuller Foundation.
   	The stem cell center was launched in 2005 with a UCLA commitment of  $20 million over five years. A $20 million gift from the Eli and Edythe  Broad Foundation in 2007 resulted in the renaming of the center. With  more than 200 members, the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of  Regenerative  Medicine and Stem Cell Research is committed to a multi-disciplinary,  integrated collaboration of scientific, academic and medical disciplines  for the purpose of understanding adult and human embryonic stem cells.  The center supports innovation, excellence and the highest ethical  standards focused on stem cell research with the intent of facilitating  basic scientific inquiry directed towards future clinical applications  to treat disease. The center is a collaboration of the David Geffen  School of Medicine, UCLA's Jonsson Cancer Center, the Henry Samueli  School of Engineering and Applied Science and the UCLA College of  Letters and Science. To learn more about the center, visit our web site  at stemcell.ucla.edu. To learn more about the center, visit our web site at stemcell.ucla.edu. |