Search results for "pluripotent"

showing 10 items of 96 documents

Reprogramming of Pericyte-Derived Cells of the Adult Human Brain into Induced Neuronal Cells

2012

SummaryReprogramming of somatic cells into neurons provides a new approach toward cell-based therapy of neurodegenerative diseases. A major challenge for the translation of neuronal reprogramming into therapy is whether the adult human brain contains cell populations amenable to direct somatic cell conversion. Here we show that cells from the adult human cerebral cortex expressing pericyte hallmarks can be reprogrammed into neuronal cells by retrovirus-mediated coexpression of the transcription factors Sox2 and Mash1. These induced neuronal cells acquire the ability of repetitive action potential firing and serve as synaptic targets for other neurons, indicating their capability of integrat…

AdultNeurogenesisCellular differentiationInduced Pluripotent Stem CellsAction PotentialsBiologySynaptic TransmissionMiceNeural Stem CellsSOX2Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription FactorsGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansInduced pluripotent stem cellCells CulturedCerebral CortexNeuronsSOXB1 Transcription FactorsNeurogenesisCell DifferentiationNeurodegenerative DiseasesCell BiologyCellular ReprogrammingNeural stem cellCell biologyRetroviridaemedicine.anatomical_structureImmunologyMolecular MedicineNeuronPericyteNerve NetPericytesReprogrammingStem Cell TransplantationCell Stem Cell
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Progerin expression induces a significant downregulation of transcription from human repetitive sequences in iPSC-derived dopaminergic neurons.

2019

Repetitive DNA sequences represent about half of the human genome. They have a central role in human biology, especially neurobiology, but are notoriously difficult to study. The purpose of this study was to quantify the transcription from repetitive sequences in a progerin-expressing cellular model of neuronal aging. Progerin is a nuclear protein causative of the Hutchinson–Gilford progeria syndrome that is also incrementally expressed during the normal aging process. A dedicated pipeline of analysis allowed to quantify transcripts containing repetitive sequences from RNAseq datasets oblivious of their genomic localization, tolerating a sufficient degree of mutational noise, all with low c…

AgingRetroelementsTranscription GeneticAluInduced Pluripotent Stem CellsAlu elementDown-RegulationSettore BIO/11 - Biologia MolecolareRetrotransposonComputational biologyBiologySettore BIO/19 - Microbiologia GeneraleProgerinProgeriaSettore BIO/13 - Biologia ApplicataAlu ElementsRepetitive sequencemedicineRetrotransposonHumansDNA transposonRepeated sequenceGeneCellular SenescenceProgeriaintegumentary systemDopaminergic NeuronsFibroblastsmedicine.diseaseProgerinLamin Type ASettore BIO/18 - GeneticaSatelliteHuman genomeOriginal ArticleGeriatrics and GerontologyGeroScience
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Heart valve tissue engineering: how far is the bedside from the bench?

2015

Heart disease, including valve pathologies, is the leading cause of death worldwide. Despite the progress made thanks to improving transplantation techniques, a perfect valve substitute has not yet been developed: once a diseased valve is replaced with current technologies, the newly implanted valve still needs to be changed some time in the future. This situation is particularly dramatic in the case of children and young adults, because of the necessity of valve growth during the patient's life. Our review focuses on the current status of heart valve (HV) therapy and the challenges that must be solved in the development of new approaches based on tissue engineering. Scientists and physicia…

Aortic valveHeart diseaseSwine030204 cardiovascular system & hematology0302 clinical medicineHeart valve tissue engineeringHyaluronic AcidChildProsthetic valve0303 health sciencesMARROW-DERIVED CELLSTissue ScaffoldsFetal BloodHeart Valves3. Good healthmedicine.anatomical_structureHeart Valve ProsthesisCardiologyMolecular MedicineCollagenmedicine.medical_specialtyPULMONARY VALVEBONE-MARROWInduced Pluripotent Stem CellsVENTRICULAR OUTFLOW TRACTMESENCHYMAL STEM-CELLS03 medical and health sciencesTissue scaffoldsInternal medicineEXTRACELLULAR-MATRIXmedicineAnimalsHumansHeart valveIntensive care medicineENDOTHELIAL PROGENITOR CELLSMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyBioprosthesisAORTIC-VALVEFibrinSheepTissue Engineeringbusiness.industryEndothelial Cellsmedicine.diseaseTransplantationPulmonary valveUMBILICAL-CORD BLOOD1182 Biochemistry cell and molecular biologybusinessHUMAN AMNIOTIC-FLUIDExpert Reviews in Molecular Medicine
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Spontaneous Cardiomyocyte Differentiation From Adipose Tissue Stroma Cells

2004

Cardiomyocyte regeneration is limited in adult life. Thus, the identification of a putative source of cardiomyocyte progenitors is of great interest to provide a usable model in vitro and new perspective in regenerative therapy. As adipose tissues were recently demonstrated to contain pluripotent stem cells, the emergence of cardiomyocyte phenotype from adipose-derived cells was investigated. We demonstrated that rare beating cells with cardiomyocyte features could be identified after culture of adipose stroma cells without addition of 5-azacytidine. The cardiomyocyte phenotype was first identified by morphological observation, confirmed with expression of specific cardiac markers, immunocy…

AtropineMalemedicine.medical_specialtyStromal cellPhysiologyCellular differentiationHeart VentriclesCholinergic AgentsAdipose tissueAdipose tissueCardiomyocytes ; Adipose tissue ; Differentiation ; Stem cells ; Cell therapyStem cellsBiologyCell therapyCell therapyMiceAdrenergic Agents:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS ::Medicina interna [UNESCO]Internal medicinemedicineAnimalsMyocytes CardiacHeart AtriaProgenitor cellInduced pluripotent stem cellCells CulturedUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICAS ::Medicina internaCardiomyocytesRegeneration (biology)Multipotent Stem CellsIsoproterenolCell Differentiation:CIENCIAS MÉDICAS [UNESCO]Myocardial ContractionPropranololCell biologyClone CellsMice Inbred C57BLEndocrinologyPhenotypeAdipose TissueDifferentiationUNESCO::CIENCIAS MÉDICASRNACarbacholStem cellStromal CellsCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineMyoblasts Cardiac
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Collecting evidence for a stem cell hypothesis in HCC.

2010

Ever since Ernest McCulloch and James E Till defined essential stem cell properties, the field of stem cell biology has attracted increasing interest.1 Manipulating embryonic stem cells has resulted in advanced genetic technologies such as knock-out and transgenic animals, providing valuable models to study genetic influence on a wide variety of diseases.2 The success in manipulating stem cells and the ability to differentiate them into diverse tissues brought with them countless concepts of utilising stem cells in medicine. The idea of perpetually dividing pluripotent cells, capable of differentiating into nearly every possible cell or tissue type, seems like an inexhaustible resource for …

Carcinoma HepatocellularStem cell theory of agingLiver NeoplasmsGastroenterologyClinical uses of mesenchymal stem cellsBiologyEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyRecurrenceImmunologyBiomarkers TumorNeoplastic Stem CellsHumansStem cellProgenitor cellInduced pluripotent stem cellAdult stem cellStem cell transplantation for articular cartilage repairGut
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Wnt signaling recruits KIF2A to the spindle to ensure chromosome congression and alignment during mitosis

2021

Canonical Wnt signaling plays critical roles in development and tissue renewal by regulating β-catenin target genes. Recent evidence showed that β-catenin–independent Wnt signaling is also required for faithful execution of mitosis. However, the targets and specific functions of mitotic Wnt signaling still remain uncharacterized. Using phosphoproteomics, we identified that Wnt signaling regulates the microtubule depolymerase KIF2A during mitosis. We found that Dishevelled recruits KIF2A via its N-terminal and motor domains, which is further promoted upon LRP6 signalosome formation during cell division. We show that Wnt signaling modulates KIF2A interaction with PLK1, which is critical for K…

Cell divisionKinesinsMitosisSpindle ApparatusBiologyPLK1Spindle pole body03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineChromosome SegregationChromosomes HumanHumansInduced pluripotent stem cellChromosome PositioningWnt Signaling PathwayMitosis030304 developmental biologychemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryWnt signaling pathwayLRP6Biological SciencesCell biologyDishevelledchemistry030217 neurology & neurosurgeryProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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Systems Biology and Stem Cell Pluripotency: Revisiting the Discovery of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell

2016

Recent breakthroughs in stem cell biology have accelerated research in the area of regenerative medicine. Over the past years, it has become possible to derive patient-specific stem cells which can be used to generate different cell populations for potential cell therapy. Systems biological modeling of stem cell pluripotency and differentiation have largely been based on prior knowledge of signaling pathways, gene regulatory networks, and epigenetic factors. However, there is a great need to extend the complexity of the modeling and to integrate different types of data, which would further improve systems biology and its uses in the field. In this chapter, we first give a general background…

Cell therapyCellular differentiationSystems biologyComputational biologyBiologyStem cellInduced pluripotent stem cellCell potencyEmbryonic stem cellRegenerative medicine
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Brains in metamorphosis: reprogramming cell identity within the central nervous system

2014

During embryonic development, uncommitted pluripotent cells undergo progressive epigenetic changes that lock them into a final differentiated state. Can mammalian cells change identity within the living organism? Direct lineage reprogramming of cells has attracted attention as a means to achieve organ regeneration. However, it is unclear whether cells in the CNS are endowed with the plasticity to reprogram. Neurons in particular are considered among the most immutable cell types, able to retain their class-specific traits for the lifespan of the organism. Here we focus on two experimental paradigms, glia-to-neuron and neuron-to-neuron conversion, to consider how lineage reprogramming has ch…

Central Nervous SystemNeuronsCell typeLineage (genetic)General Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectCentral nervous systemInduced Pluripotent Stem CellsMetamorphosis BiologicalBiologyCellular ReprogrammingArticlemedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemmedicineAnimalsHumansEpigeneticsMetamorphosisInduced pluripotent stem cellNeuroscienceReprogrammingOrganismmedia_common
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Production of CSSi013-A (9360) iPSC line from an asymptomatic subject carrying an heterozygous mutation in TDP-43 protein

2022

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal disease affecting both upper and lower motoneurons. The transactive response DNA binding protein (TARDBP) gene, encoding for TDP-43, is one of the most commonly mutated gene associated with familial cases of ALS (10%). We generated a human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) line from the fibroblasts of an asymptomatic subject carrying the TARDBP p.G376D mutation. This mutation is very rare and was described in a large Apulian family, in which all ALS affected members are carriers of the mutation. The subject here described is the first identified asymptomatic carrier of the mutation.

DNA-Binding ProteinsHeterozygoteDNA-Binding ProteinAmyotrophic Lateral SclerosisInduced Pluripotent Stem CellsMutationHumansCell BiologyGeneral MedicineInduced Pluripotent Stem CellDevelopmental BiologyAmyotrophic Lateral SclerosiHuman
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Defining the genomic signature of totipotency and pluripotency during early human development.

2013

The genetic mechanisms governing human pre-implantation embryo development and the in vitro counterparts, human embryonic stem cells (hESCs), still remain incomplete. Previous global genome studies demonstrated that totipotent blastomeres from day-3 human embryos and pluripotent inner cell masses (ICMs) from blastocysts, display unique and differing transcriptomes. Nevertheless, comparative gene expression analysis has revealed that no significant differences exist between hESCs derived from blastomeres versus those obtained from ICMs, suggesting that pluripotent hESCs involve a new developmental progression. To understand early human stages evolution, we developed an undifferentiation netw…

EmbryologyBlastomeresMicroarraysCellular differentiationGene ExpressionCell Fate DeterminationMolecular Cell BiologyGene Regulatory NetworksInduced pluripotent stem cellreproductive and urinary physiologyGeneticsMultidisciplinarySystems BiologyStem CellsQTotipotentRGenomic signatureCell DifferentiationGenomicsCell biologyFunctional GenomicsBlastocyst Inner Cell MassBlastocyst Inner Cell Massembryonic structuresMedicineResearch ArticlePluripotent Stem CellsSystems biologyCell PotencyScienceEmbryonic DevelopmentBiologyMolecular GeneticsGeneticsHumansGene NetworksBiologyEmbryonic Stem CellsGenome HumanGene Expression ProfilingBio-OntologiesComputational BiologyMolecular Sequence AnnotationComparative GenomicsMolecular DevelopmentEmbryonic stem cellSignalingSignaling NetworksGene expression profilingGenome Expression AnalysisTotipotent Stem CellsDevelopmental BiologyPLoS ONE
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