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I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells V. Concluding thoughts pluripotent stem cell pluripotent stem cell committed cell pluripotent- having the potential to develop into any cell type of the body http://departments.weber.edu/chfam/prenatal/blastocyst.html I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells V. Concluding thoughts Genes are made of DNA DNA is within the nucleus of each of our cells. This DNA is identical in each of the cells of our bodies… …even though different cells have very different structures and functions Q: How do cells with identical genetic compositions become so different from one another? A: Different cells express different subsets of their genes. In neurons, gene A is expressed but not gene B: Gene A Gene B In muscle cells, gene B is expressed but not gene A: Gene A Gene B In muscle cells, gene B is expressed because muscle cells have transcription factors that bind to gene B’s promoter. (muscle cell specific transcription factors) Gene A Gene B (promoter of gene B) In muscle cells, gene B is expressed because muscle cells have transcription factors that bind to gene B’s promoter. Gene A Gene B I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells V. Progress on stem cell therapeutics I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells A. Adult stem cells B. Embryonic stem cells (IVF embryos) C. Induced pluripotent stem cells D. Embryonic stem cells (SCNT-derived) E. Transdifferentiation V. Concluding thoughts Bone marrow contains Hematopoetic Stem Cells irradiation (injection with bone marrow) Adult stem cell types that have been tested clinically Hematopoetic stem cells Mesenchymal stem cells Neural stem cells Adipose stem cells Lin et al., 2013 Most stem cell clinical trials have used adult stem cells Lin, et al., 2013 Adult Stem Cell Therapies pros cons • no ethical dilemmas • autologous (self) donations are possible • cells need not be manipulated or grown in culture • no risks of teratomas (tumors) • few tissues are represented by adult stem cells • those tissues that DO have them have very few • if not autologous, MUST be tissue type matched • evidence of clinical efficacy limited to HSCs • cannot be amplified or maintained in culture I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells A. Adult stem cells B. Embryonic stem cells (IVF embryos) C. Induced pluripotent stem cells D. Embryonic stem cells (SCNT-derived) E. Transdifferentiation V. Concluding thoughts http://departments.weber.edu/chfam/prenatal/blastocyst.html Animal Models in which hESC-Derived Cells have been Effective Deb and Sarda, 2008 Clinical Trials using hESCs 2009-2011 Geron Corporation hESC-derived oligodendrocyte progenitors for treatment of spinal cord injuries (Daley, 2012) -in animal models, these cells car repair damaged neurons -the first hESC clinical study to overcome FDA restrictions -four patients enrolled -no publications yet; no reported negative effects, but unclear if treatments were effective Clinical Trials using hESCs, cont. 2009-present Advanced Cell Technology (ACT) hESC-derived retinal pigment epithelial cells are being used to treat macular degeneration (Schwartz,et al. 2012) -started with 2 patients, both showed vision improvement and no signs of tumors after 4 months -study is continuing with higher doses of cells and in more patients ESCs from IVF pros • source tissue plentiful • cells divide infinitely in culture • easily programmable cells cons • immune response problems • ethical controversy • tumor risks I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells A. Adult stem cells B. Embryonic stem cells (IVF embryos) C. Induced pluripotent stem cells D. Embryonic stem cells (SCNT-derived) E. Transdifferentiation V. Concluding thoughts I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells A. Adult stem cells B. Embryonic stem cells (IVF embryos) C. Induced pluripotent stem cells 1. issues with iPSCs 2. progress with iPSCs D. Embryonic stem cells (SCNT-derived) E. Transdifferentiation V. Concluding thoughts Takahashi and Yamanaka 2006 • DNA inserted randomly could create problems with endogenous DNA. • DNA insertions are inherited by all progeny of manipulated cell. • The genes added could cause cells to be more prone to division. New iPSC protocols do NOT require insertion of foreign DNA • Exposure of differentiated cells to chemical treatments caused them to become pluripotent (Masuda et al., 2013). • Protein transduction of somatic cells can produce iPS cells (Nemes et al., 2013). • Mouse lymphocytes were induced to become pluripotent via acid treatment (Obokata et al., 2014). With iPSCs, the pluripotency must be tested Stadtfield & Hochedlinger 2010 I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells A. Adult stem cells B. Embryonic stem cells (IVF embryos) C. Induced pluripotent stem cells 1. issues with iPSCs 2. progress with iPSCs D. Embryonic stem cells (SCNT-derived) E. Transdifferentiation V. Concluding thoughts Many cell types have been derived from human iPS cells • hepatocytes (Takebe et al., 2014) • neurons (Prilutsky et al, 2014) • folliculogenic stem cells (Yang et al., 2014) • cardiomyocytes (Seki et al., 2014) • pancreatic beta cells (Thatava et al, 2011) First iPSC clinical trial to begin this year • lab of Dr. Masayo Takahashi at Riken in Kobe, Japan • 6 patients with macular degeneration in trial • iPSCs will be reprogrammed in culture to become retinal pigment epithelium • once 50,000 cells per patient are produced, these will be introduced back into the retinas Grskovic, et al. 2011 Successful “disease in a dish” models • Familial dysautonomia, a genetic disease of autonomic nervous system • Rett Syndrome, a disease within the autism spectrum • HGPS (progeria), premature aging • Parkinson’s, degradation of midbrain dopaminergic neurons leading to loss of motor activity Grskovic, et al. 2011 iSPCs • patient-derived pluripotent cells pros • once established, cells divide infinitely in culture • easily programmable cells • less ethical controversy than ESCs • produce excellent tools for studying disease cons • cells require a lot of manipulation to become iSPC • evidence of immunogenicity of iPSCs (Fu, 2013) • low rate of induced pluripotency (~.2%) • tumor risks I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells A. Adult stem cells B. Embryonic stem cells (IVF embryos) C. Induced pluripotent stem cells D. Embryonic stem cells (SCNT-derived) E. Transdifferentiation V. Concluding thoughts Freeman, 2012 ESCs from SCNT pros • cells divide infinitely • easily programmable cells • genetically identical to patient • great for disease modeling cons • ethical controversy • will require oocyte donors • not tested much with human cells I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells A. Adult stem cells B. Embryonic stem cells (IVF embryos) C. Induced pluripotent stem cells D. Embryonic stem cells (SCNT-derived) E. Transdifferentiation V. Concluding thoughts Transdifferentiation Graf, 2011 Graf, 2011 I. Stem cells II. Differential gene expression and cell fate III. Why manipulate stem cells? IV. Potential sources of therapeutic cells A. Adult stem cells B. Embryonic stem cells (IVF embryos) C. Induced pluripotent stem cells D. Embryonic stem cells (SCNT-derived) E. Transdifferentiation V. Concluding thoughts ESCs iPSCs derivation embryos somatic cells cancer risk high very high immunogenicity high some? growth in culture good good ability to program good good ESCs are currently considered the “gold standard” for pluripotency. Current research is investigating whether iPSCs are truly equivalent to ESCs. Many scientists developing iPSCs still must use ESCs for comparison in their experiments. Conditions that might be alleviated using stemcell derived transplantations (a partial list) macular degeneration Parkinson’s Type II Diabetes Altzheimer’s heart disease spinal cord injuries burns Huntington’s Challenges to cell culture-derived transplantations cancer risk from cultured cells immune response from cultured cells creating cultured cells to have all the functions of those cells produced by the body the necessity of producing a LOT of the target cells in culture creating cultured cells that integrate with host tissues iPSCs are outstanding tools for disease modeling useful as a way to test drugs without experimenting on patients a means to generate therapies specific to specific patients can be used also to study diseased cells and figure out what is wrong with them