Sussman RT et al. (AUG 2013)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 288 33 24234--24246
The epigenetic modifier ubiquitin-specific protease 22 (USP22) regulates embryonic stem cell differentiation via transcriptional repression of sex-determining region Y-box 2 (SOX2)
Pluripotent embryonic stem cells (ESCs) undergo self-renewal until stimulated to differentiate along specific lineage pathways. Many of the transcriptional networks that drive reprogramming of a self-renewing ESC to a differentiating cell have been identified. However,fundamental questions remain unanswered about the epigenetic programs that control these changes in gene expression. Here we report that the histone ubiquitin hydrolase ubiquitin-specific protease 22 (USP22) is a critical epigenetic modifier that controls this transition from self-renewal to differentiation. USP22 is induced as ESCs differentiate and is necessary for differentiation into all three germ layers. We further report that USP22 is a transcriptional repressor of the locus encoding the core pluripotency factor sex-determining region Y-box 2 (SOX2) in ESCs,and this repression is required for efficient differentiation. USP22 occupies the Sox2 promoter and hydrolyzes monoubiquitin from ubiquitylated histone H2B and blocks transcription of the Sox2 locus. Our study reveals an epigenetic mechanism that represses the core pluripotency transcriptional network in ESCs,allowing ESCs to transition from a state of self-renewal into lineage-specific differentiation programs.
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产品号#:
05850
05857
05870
05875
85850
85857
85870
85875
05270
05275
产品名:
mTeSR™1
mTeSR™1
STEMdiff™ APEL™2 培养基
STEMdiff™ APEL™2 培养基
Bruin JE et al. (SEP 2013)
Diabetologia 56 9 1987--1998
Maturation and function of human embryonic stem cell-derived pancreatic progenitors in macroencapsulation devices following transplant into mice
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Islet transplantation is a promising cell therapy for patients with diabetes,but it is currently limited by the reliance upon cadaveric donor tissue. We previously demonstrated that human embryonic stem cell (hESC)-derived pancreatic progenitor cells matured under the kidney capsule in a mouse model of diabetes into glucose-responsive insulin-secreting cells capable of reversing diabetes. However,the formation of cells resembling bone and cartilage was a major limitation of that study. Therefore,we developed an improved differentiation protocol that aimed to prevent the formation of off-target mesoderm tissue following transplantation. We also examined how variation within the complex host environment influenced the development of pancreatic progenitors in vivo.backslashnbackslashnMETHODS: The hESCs were differentiated for 14 days into pancreatic progenitor cells and transplanted either under the kidney capsule or within Theracyte (TheraCyte,Laguna Hills,CA,USA) devices into diabetic mice.backslashnbackslashnRESULTS: Our revised differentiation protocol successfully eliminated the formation of non-endodermal cell populations in 99% of transplanted mice and generated grafts containing textgreater80% endocrine cells. Progenitor cells developed efficiently into pancreatic endocrine tissue within macroencapsulation devices,despite lacking direct contact with the host environment,and reversed diabetes within 3 months. The preparation of cell aggregates pre-transplant was critical for the formation of insulin-producing cells in vivo and endocrine cell development was accelerated within a diabetic host environment compared with healthy mice. Neither insulin nor exendin-4 therapy post-transplant affected the maturation of macroencapsulated cells.backslashnbackslashnCONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Efficient differentiation of hESC-derived pancreatic endocrine cells can occur in a macroencapsulation device,yielding glucose-responsive insulin-producing cells capable of reversing diabetes.
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