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+ | <LI class="column" id="PROJECT"><A title="Team:SYSU-China/NEWS" href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/project">PROJECT</A> | ||
+ | <UL> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Overview">Overview</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Project/Background">Background</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Protocols/Design">Design</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Results">Results</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Future_work ">Future work</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Modeling">Modeling</A></LI></UL></LI> | ||
+ | <LI class="column" id="JUDGING" ><A title="Team:SYSU-China/STORY" href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/JUDGING">JUDGING</A> | ||
+ | <UL> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Biobrick">Biobrick</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Project/Achievements">Achievements</A></LI></UL></LI> | ||
+ | <LI class="column" id="SAFETY_ETHICS"><A title="Team:SYSU-China/PROJECT" href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/SAFETY_ETHICS">SAFETY</A> | ||
+ | <UL> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Project">Safety</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Project/background">Ethics</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Protocols/medals">Human practice</A></LI></UL></LI> | ||
+ | <LI class="column" id="NOTEBOOK"><A title="Team:SYSU-China/TEAM" href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/TEAM">NOTEBOOK</A> | ||
+ | <UL> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Project">Methods</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Project/background">Labnotes</A></LI></UL></LI> | ||
+ | <LI class="column" id="TEAM"><A title="Team:SYSU-China/SPONSORS" href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/SPONSORS">TEAM</A> | ||
+ | <UL> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Project">Member</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Project/background">Attributions</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Protocols/medals">Gallery</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Protocols/medals">Contact us</A></LI> | ||
+ | <LI><A href="https://2013.igem.org/Team:SYSU-China/Modeling">Acknowledgments</A></LI></UL></LI> | ||
+ | </UL> | ||
+ | </DIV> | ||
+ | <DIV id="cont_column"> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <!--正 文 部 分 开 始--> | ||
+ | <DIV class="chapter"> | ||
+ | <span>UPDATE <INS>09/03/2013</INS></span> | ||
+ | <h2>What is iPSCs?</h2> | ||
+ | <h3>A one-way journey?</h3> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | During the first half of the 20th century, researchers always believed that the life's one-way journey also applied to cells: Once a cell has developed into a specialized cell, it would be locked into that state, and unable to return to immature, pluripotent stem cell state. Conrad Hal Waddington, a famous developmental biologist in last century, once illustrated the cellular differentiation as an epigenetic landscape in which cells are seen as marbles rolling down in valleys to reach their end-point destinations as differentiated cells. They do not normally move back towards the top of the mountain to get back to the undifferentiated state, and they are not normally crossing into other valleys to develop into unrelated cell lineages<a class="quote">[1]</a>. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <img src="TeamSYSU-China - 2013_igem_org_files/images/introduction_01.jpg" width="500" height="197" /> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | However, this prevalent view was radically overturned in 1962, when John B. Gurdon demonstrated that the nucleus from a differentiated frog intestinal epithelial cell was capable of generating a fully functional tadpole upon transplantation to an enucleated egg<a class="quote">[2]</a>. This discovery shattered the dogma that cellular differentiation could not be a bidirectional process, but the question remained whether an intact differentiated cell could be fully reprogrammed to become pluripotent again. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
- | + | <img src="TeamSYSU-China - 2013_igem_org_files/images/introduction_02.jpg" width="500" height="213" /> | |
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
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- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
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+ | <h3>Life there and back again</h3> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | In 2006, Shinya Yamanaka, a Japanese scientist who afterward shared the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with John B. Gurdon<a class="quote">[5]</a>, proved that introduction of a small set of transcription factors into a differentiated cell was sufficient to revert the cell into a pluripotent state. In his strikingly bold experiment, what Yamakana did was introducing 24 genes encoding the transcription factors which were considered as candidates to reinstate pluripotency in somatic cells to skin fibroblasts in one step. Surprisingly, he found out that a few of these cells actually generated colonies that showed a remarkable resemblance to ES cells. Then he reduced the number of genes capable of inducing such colonies one by one, and finally, four factors (Myc, Oct3/4, Sox2 and Klf4) were picked out, whose combination were identified to be sufficient to reprogram the skin fibroblasts to pluripotent stem cells<a class="quote">[3]</a>. These synthetical new stem cells were thereafter named by their Japanese father as iPSCs (induced pluripotent stem cells). A year later, using the same four factor combination from the 2006 paper (Myc, Oct4, Sox2 and Klf4), Yamanka's group successfully produced human iPS cells, whereas another laboratory, James Thomson's lab, achieved the same goal with a somewhat different transcription factors combination (Lin28, Nanog, Oct4 and Sox2)<a class="quote">[4]</a>. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <img src="TeamSYSU-China - 2013_igem_org_files/images/introduction_03.jpg" width="500" height="198" /> | ||
+ | <h3>A technology with many possibilities | ||
+ | </h3> | ||
+ | <p>The groundbreaking work that Yamakana and his group did in 2006 truly opened up a completely new research field to this world. It was a paradigm-shifting fundamental discovery, as it was the first demonstration that an intact differentiated somatic cell could be reprogrammed to become pluripotent. iPSCs technology, a new technology with many possibilities, attracts scientists and researchers all over the world, mainly for its three unique superiorities: | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | <U><EM>- No strong immunological reaction:</EM></U> Since iPS cells can be cultured from the patient's own cells, it is not quite possible to lead to immunological reaction when directionally differentiated iPSCs are transplanted after in vitro culture. While in 2011 several studies argued the weak immune reaction to transgene-free iPSCs, these arguments were subsided later by other scientists and Yamanaka himself, pointing out that "the most prominent study that reported the immunogenicity of the cells examined undifferentiated iPSCs, which will never be used in cell transplantation therapy"<a class="quote">[6]</a>. Recent work by Araki and Guha used syngeneic mouse models to demonstrate that transplanted iPSC-derived embryoid bodies, skin and bone marrow tissues engraft efficiently with almost no signs of rejection<a class="quote">[6]</a>. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | <U><EM>- "Thank god we don't need embryos anymore!":</EM></U> Simultaneously, the technology of iPSC was also hailed by many commentaries as a milestone advance that solved the ethical and political problems in stem cell research field. In the past, stem cell research relied heavily of embryonic stem cells harvested from embryos. Human embryos are not easy to come by, and many people consider research involving use of human embryonic stem cells to be ethically questionable<a class="quote">[8]</a>. With no further evidence, iPSC technology not only breaks the ethical barrier of relying on using eggs or earlier embryos for deriving stem cells, but also leads to a convenient way of obtaining patient-specific stem cells. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | <U><EM>- Wide application in different fields:</EM></U> Nowadays, scientists are making progress toward applying iPSCs in many fields. One of the applications - which has already become reality - is to use iPS cells in both analysis of disease mechanisms and investigation of potential new treatments. In the future scientists hope to be able to use iPS cells to culture cells that can be transplanted into the body and replace diseased cells. Two examples are the dopamine-producing cells in the brain that degenerate in patients with Parkinson disease, and the insulin-producing cells that die off in patients with diabetes[13]. So far, more than 100 reports published in the past three years using disease-specific iPSCs<a class="quote">[8]</a>. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | These advances above together made the iPSC to be the "star cell" which offers immense potential as a source for regenerative therapies. However, the intrinsic qualities of self renewal and pluripotency that make these cells so therapeutically promising are also responsible for an equally fundamental tumorigenic potential, and the the intrinsic shortcomings of the current methods of inducing pluripotency even pose more uncontrollable risks on that. High rates of tumorigenicity has become a most crucial hurdle for large-scale clinical implementation of iPSC technology. | ||
+ | </p></DIV> | ||
+ | <DIV class="chapter"><h2>Challenges</h2> | ||
+ | <h3>Tumorigenicity as a clinical hurdle </h3> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | The risks of iPSC tumorigenicity have been widely concerned over the past several years. In the study in 2009, Yamakana tested 55 mice transplanted with SNS (secondary neurospheres) from 11 TTP-iPS cell clones, 46 mice among them died or became weak within 9 weeks after transplantation because of tumors. Whereas in contrast group, the number of the tumor-showing mice transplanted with SNS derived from the ES cell clones was only 3 among 34[11]. This result indicated that the mice transplanted with iPSCs have a much higher rate of tumorigenicity than with ESCs. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | <U><EM>- The "fantastic four"are double-edged swords:</EM></U> In the initial study in 2006, Yamanaka has pointed out that among the four transcriptional factors he used, two (Oct-4 and Myc) were oncogenes<a class="quote">[3]</a>. This led to the result that the iPSCs with the four exogenetic oncogenes were more prone to tumorigenesis. However, subsequent studies successively substantiated that both the Oct-4 and Myc are not essentially required for cell self-renewal. For example, in making human iPS cells, Yu et al. used a different set of four factors (Oct-4, Sox-2, Nanog, and Lin-28) to induce pluripotent stem cells from human somatic cells. These results began to raise the scientists' hopes to find the better combination of the cocktails to induce the safer iPSC. However, it turned out to be wishful thinking. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | Scientists figure out that whatever the combination is, almost every inducing/reprogramming factors remaining in the cocktail are oncogenes by definition. Their over-expression has be associated with some forms of cancer. Of particular importance is the MYC transcription factor, which has emerged as one of the fundamental genes shared by iPSCs and cancer. Ectopic activation of OCT4 in somatic cells, induces dysplastic development and features of malignancy. NANOG has a role in the self renewal of CD24+ cancer stem cells in hepatocellular carcinoma. SOX2 has been shown to drive cancer-cell survival and oncogenic fate in several cancer types, including squamous cell carcinomas of the lung and esophagus. Klf-4 has been reported to promote DNA repair checkpoint uncoupling and cellular proliferation in breast cancers by p53 suppression<a class="quote">[7]</a>. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | <U><EM>- Risks from delivery methods:</EM></U> Compared to ESCs, iPSCs are exposed to a number of factors that could promote oncogenic transformation, such as genomic insertion of reprogramming vectors, over expression of oncogenic transcription factors and a global hypomethylation resembling that seen in cancers<a class="quote">[7]</a>. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | Methods of diminishing the tumorigenic transformation of iPSCs have mainly focused on a variety of gene delivery vectors that minimize genomic disruption. These strategies can be generally divided into two categories: integrating vectors that can be excised from the host genome and non-integrating vectors. However, all methods can not escape their shortcomings of low transduction efficiency, or even bring about new risks. Here is a table which concludes the oncogenic risks associated with methods of inducing pluripotency in somatic cells<a class="quote">[7]</a>. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <table width="536"> | ||
+ | <caption>Table 1 Oncogenic risks associated with methods of inducing pluripotency in somatic cells</caption> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <th scope="col">Method of induction</th> | ||
+ | <th scope="col">Strengths</th> | ||
+ | <th scope="col">Weaknesses</th> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr class="first-table-line"> | ||
+ | <td>Lentiviral vector</td> | ||
+ | <td>Robust reprogramming efficiency</td> | ||
+ | <td>Genomic integration, reactivation of integrated transgenes</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>Cre recombinase</td> | ||
+ | <td>Little genomic disruption</td> | ||
+ | <td>Low transduction efficiency, integration of LoxP sites into host genome</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>PiggyBac transposition</td> | ||
+ | <td>Minimal risk of genomic disruption</td> | ||
+ | <td>Low transduction efficiency, risk of uncontrolled rounds of excision and integration</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>Adenoviral vector </td> | ||
+ | <td>Low risk of genomic integration</td> | ||
+ | <td>Low transduction efficiency, limited transgene expression</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>Plasmid transfection</td> | ||
+ | <td>Minimal risk of genomic disruption</td> | ||
+ | <td>Very low transduction efficiency typically requires use of oncogenes such as the SV40LT antigen for successful induction of pluripotency</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>Minicircle</td> | ||
+ | <td>Minimal risk of genomic disruption</td> | ||
+ | <td>Low transduction efficiency</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>Sendai virus</td> | ||
+ | <td>Minimal risk of genomic integration ,relatively high transduction efficiency</td> | ||
+ | <td>Risk of continuous replication of viral vector in cytoplasm, leading to aberrant silencing of pluripotency transgenes</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>Synthetic mRNA</td> | ||
+ | <td>No risk of genomic integration, ability to control transgene expression</td> | ||
+ | <td>Variable transduction efficiencies, high technical expertise required</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>Protein transduction</td> | ||
+ | <td>No risk of genomic integration, ability to control transgene expression</td> | ||
+ | <td>Very low transduction efficiency, labor intensive</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>microRNA transfection</td> | ||
+ | <td>No risk of genomic integration</td> | ||
+ | <td>Low reprogramming efficiency</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | <tr> | ||
+ | <td>Small molecules</td> | ||
+ | <td>No risk of genomic integration</td> | ||
+ | <td>Variable off-target effects</td> | ||
+ | </tr> | ||
+ | </table> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | From the table above, we can generally realize that these promising strategies for teratoma prevention mostly improve the safety of iPSC generation at the expense of efficiency, which is still another remaining challenge in iPSC technology. | ||
+ | </p> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | In summary, it wouldn't be more perfect if scientists found a method which guaranteed both the safety and efficiency in iPSCs technology. Just as Andrew S Lee wrote on Nature Medicine, "Ideally, the most stringent safety regimes would utilize a flexible, combinatorial approach that may require tailoring for specific PSC lines or graft types. Should these techniques fail to adequately remove enough residual PSCs, retrospective tumor treatments may also be used, including oncologic chemotherapy, radiation and surgery or the incorporation of suicide ablation genes<a class="quote">[7]</a>." Admittedly, just as the saying goes, "You can't have your cake and eat it!" With our knowledge of iPSC biology, it is not likable that such a perfect regime would emerge in several coming years. However, as a group of young pre-scientists like us, maybe, it is our time to look into this problem and try to figure it out in another way. | ||
+ | </p></DIV> | ||
+ | <DIV class="chapter"><h2>A new way out !</h2> | ||
+ | <p> | ||
+ | Driven by the motivation to minimize the potential risks of iPSCs and accelerate the development of moving iPSC-based therapies to the patient bedside, this summer, SYSU-CHINA iGEM team come up with a new strategy, which was called iPSC Safeguard. | ||
+ | </p></DIV> | ||
+ | <DIV class="chapter" id="references"><h2>References</h2> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[1]</a>The strategy of genes. CH Waddington& H Kacser. -1957</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[2]</a>Gurdon JB (1962). Developmental Capacity of Nuclei Taken From IntestinalEpithelium Cells of Feeding Tadpoles. J Embryol Exp Morph 10: 622‐640.</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[3]</a>Takahashi, K. & Yamanaka, Induction of Pluripotent Stem Cells from Mouse Embryonic and Adult Fibroblast Cultures by Defined Factors. S. Cell 126, 663–676 (2006).</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[4]</a>James A. Thomson et al, Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Lines Derived from Human Somatic Cells. Science 21 December 2007: Vol. 318 no. 5858 pp. 1917-1920 </p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[5]</a>Scientific Background: Mature cells can be reprogrammed to become pluripotent. Nobelprize.org. Nobel Media 2012 </p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[6]</a>Shinya Yamanaka, Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells: Past, Present, and Future. Cell Stem Cell 10, June 14, 2012</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[7]</a>Andrew S Lee et al. Tumorigenicity as a clinical hurdle for pluripotent stem cell therapies. Nature Medicine, valume 19, august 2013;</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[8]</a>SHI V. LIU, iPS Cells: A More Critical Review. Stem cell development. 17:391–397 (2008)</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[9]</a>Tetsuya Ishii,1,* Renee A. Reijo Pera,2 and Henry T. Greely3, Ethical and Legal Issues Arising in Research on Inducing Human Germ Cells from Pluripotent Stem Cells. Cell Stem Cell 13, August 1, 2013</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[10]</a>Martin F Pera & Kouichi Hasegawa, Simpler and safer cell reprogramming, Nature biotechnology, volume 26, january 2008.</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[11]</a>Shinya Yamanaka et al. Variation in the safety of induced pluripotent stem cell lines, Natue biothchnology, volume 27, august 2009.</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[12]</a>Shinya Yamanaka et al. Induction of Pluripotent Stem Cells from Adult Human Fibroblasts by Defined Factors, Cell, 30 November 2007, Pages 861–872</p> | ||
+ | <p><a class="references">[13]</a>Gunnar Hargusa et al. Differentiated Parkinson patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells grow in the adult rodent brain and reduce motor asymmetry in Parkinsonian rats, PNAS, September 7, 2010</p> | ||
+ | </DIV> | ||
+ | <!--正 文 部 分 结 束--> | ||
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+ | </DIV> | ||
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+ | <span></span></DIV> | ||
+ | </DIV> | ||
- | + | <DIV id="address"><p>Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, China</p><p>Address: 135# Xingang Rd.(W.), Haizhu Guangzhou, P.R.China</p></DIV> | |
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Revision as of 17:29, 18 September 2013
What is iPSCs?
A one-way journey?
During the first half of the 20th century, researchers always believed that the life's one-way journey also applied to cells: Once a cell has developed into a specialized cell, it would be locked into that state, and unable to return to immature, pluripotent stem cell state. Conrad Hal Waddington, a famous developmental biologist in last century, once illustrated the cellular differentiation as an epigenetic landscape in which cells are seen as marbles rolling down in valleys to reach their end-point destinations as differentiated cells. They do not normally move back towards the top of the mountain to get back to the undifferentiated state, and they are not normally crossing into other valleys to develop into unrelated cell lineages[1].
However, this prevalent view was radically overturned in 1962, when John B. Gurdon demonstrated that the nucleus from a differentiated frog intestinal epithelial cell was capable of generating a fully functional tadpole upon transplantation to an enucleated egg[2]. This discovery shattered the dogma that cellular differentiation could not be a bidirectional process, but the question remained whether an intact differentiated cell could be fully reprogrammed to become pluripotent again.
Life there and back again
In 2006, Shinya Yamanaka, a Japanese scientist who afterward shared the 2012 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with John B. Gurdon[5], proved that introduction of a small set of transcription factors into a differentiated cell was sufficient to revert the cell into a pluripotent state. In his strikingly bold experiment, what Yamakana did was introducing 24 genes encoding the transcription factors which were considered as candidates to reinstate pluripotency in somatic cells to skin fibroblasts in one step. Surprisingly, he found out that a few of these cells actually generated colonies that showed a remarkable resemblance to ES cells. Then he reduced the number of genes capable of inducing such colonies one by one, and finally, four factors (Myc, Oct3/4, Sox2 and Klf4) were picked out, whose combination were identified to be sufficient to reprogram the skin fibroblasts to pluripotent stem cells[3]. These synthetical new stem cells were thereafter named by their Japanese father as iPSCs (induced pluripotent stem cells). A year later, using the same four factor combination from the 2006 paper (Myc, Oct4, Sox2 and Klf4), Yamanka's group successfully produced human iPS cells, whereas another laboratory, James Thomson's lab, achieved the same goal with a somewhat different transcription factors combination (Lin28, Nanog, Oct4 and Sox2)[4].
A technology with many possibilities
The groundbreaking work that Yamakana and his group did in 2006 truly opened up a completely new research field to this world. It was a paradigm-shifting fundamental discovery, as it was the first demonstration that an intact differentiated somatic cell could be reprogrammed to become pluripotent. iPSCs technology, a new technology with many possibilities, attracts scientists and researchers all over the world, mainly for its three unique superiorities:
- No strong immunological reaction: Since iPS cells can be cultured from the patient's own cells, it is not quite possible to lead to immunological reaction when directionally differentiated iPSCs are transplanted after in vitro culture. While in 2011 several studies argued the weak immune reaction to transgene-free iPSCs, these arguments were subsided later by other scientists and Yamanaka himself, pointing out that "the most prominent study that reported the immunogenicity of the cells examined undifferentiated iPSCs, which will never be used in cell transplantation therapy"[6]. Recent work by Araki and Guha used syngeneic mouse models to demonstrate that transplanted iPSC-derived embryoid bodies, skin and bone marrow tissues engraft efficiently with almost no signs of rejection[6].
- "Thank god we don't need embryos anymore!": Simultaneously, the technology of iPSC was also hailed by many commentaries as a milestone advance that solved the ethical and political problems in stem cell research field. In the past, stem cell research relied heavily of embryonic stem cells harvested from embryos. Human embryos are not easy to come by, and many people consider research involving use of human embryonic stem cells to be ethically questionable[8]. With no further evidence, iPSC technology not only breaks the ethical barrier of relying on using eggs or earlier embryos for deriving stem cells, but also leads to a convenient way of obtaining patient-specific stem cells.
- Wide application in different fields: Nowadays, scientists are making progress toward applying iPSCs in many fields. One of the applications - which has already become reality - is to use iPS cells in both analysis of disease mechanisms and investigation of potential new treatments. In the future scientists hope to be able to use iPS cells to culture cells that can be transplanted into the body and replace diseased cells. Two examples are the dopamine-producing cells in the brain that degenerate in patients with Parkinson disease, and the insulin-producing cells that die off in patients with diabetes[13]. So far, more than 100 reports published in the past three years using disease-specific iPSCs[8].
These advances above together made the iPSC to be the "star cell" which offers immense potential as a source for regenerative therapies. However, the intrinsic qualities of self renewal and pluripotency that make these cells so therapeutically promising are also responsible for an equally fundamental tumorigenic potential, and the the intrinsic shortcomings of the current methods of inducing pluripotency even pose more uncontrollable risks on that. High rates of tumorigenicity has become a most crucial hurdle for large-scale clinical implementation of iPSC technology.
Challenges
Tumorigenicity as a clinical hurdle
The risks of iPSC tumorigenicity have been widely concerned over the past several years. In the study in 2009, Yamakana tested 55 mice transplanted with SNS (secondary neurospheres) from 11 TTP-iPS cell clones, 46 mice among them died or became weak within 9 weeks after transplantation because of tumors. Whereas in contrast group, the number of the tumor-showing mice transplanted with SNS derived from the ES cell clones was only 3 among 34[11]. This result indicated that the mice transplanted with iPSCs have a much higher rate of tumorigenicity than with ESCs.
- The "fantastic four"are double-edged swords: In the initial study in 2006, Yamanaka has pointed out that among the four transcriptional factors he used, two (Oct-4 and Myc) were oncogenes[3]. This led to the result that the iPSCs with the four exogenetic oncogenes were more prone to tumorigenesis. However, subsequent studies successively substantiated that both the Oct-4 and Myc are not essentially required for cell self-renewal. For example, in making human iPS cells, Yu et al. used a different set of four factors (Oct-4, Sox-2, Nanog, and Lin-28) to induce pluripotent stem cells from human somatic cells. These results began to raise the scientists' hopes to find the better combination of the cocktails to induce the safer iPSC. However, it turned out to be wishful thinking.
Scientists figure out that whatever the combination is, almost every inducing/reprogramming factors remaining in the cocktail are oncogenes by definition. Their over-expression has be associated with some forms of cancer. Of particular importance is the MYC transcription factor, which has emerged as one of the fundamental genes shared by iPSCs and cancer. Ectopic activation of OCT4 in somatic cells, induces dysplastic development and features of malignancy. NANOG has a role in the self renewal of CD24+ cancer stem cells in hepatocellular carcinoma. SOX2 has been shown to drive cancer-cell survival and oncogenic fate in several cancer types, including squamous cell carcinomas of the lung and esophagus. Klf-4 has been reported to promote DNA repair checkpoint uncoupling and cellular proliferation in breast cancers by p53 suppression[7].
- Risks from delivery methods: Compared to ESCs, iPSCs are exposed to a number of factors that could promote oncogenic transformation, such as genomic insertion of reprogramming vectors, over expression of oncogenic transcription factors and a global hypomethylation resembling that seen in cancers[7].
Methods of diminishing the tumorigenic transformation of iPSCs have mainly focused on a variety of gene delivery vectors that minimize genomic disruption. These strategies can be generally divided into two categories: integrating vectors that can be excised from the host genome and non-integrating vectors. However, all methods can not escape their shortcomings of low transduction efficiency, or even bring about new risks. Here is a table which concludes the oncogenic risks associated with methods of inducing pluripotency in somatic cells[7].
Method of induction | Strengths | Weaknesses |
---|---|---|
Lentiviral vector | Robust reprogramming efficiency | Genomic integration, reactivation of integrated transgenes |
Cre recombinase | Little genomic disruption | Low transduction efficiency, integration of LoxP sites into host genome |
PiggyBac transposition | Minimal risk of genomic disruption | Low transduction efficiency, risk of uncontrolled rounds of excision and integration |
Adenoviral vector | Low risk of genomic integration | Low transduction efficiency, limited transgene expression |
Plasmid transfection | Minimal risk of genomic disruption | Very low transduction efficiency typically requires use of oncogenes such as the SV40LT antigen for successful induction of pluripotency |
Minicircle | Minimal risk of genomic disruption | Low transduction efficiency |
Sendai virus | Minimal risk of genomic integration ,relatively high transduction efficiency | Risk of continuous replication of viral vector in cytoplasm, leading to aberrant silencing of pluripotency transgenes |
Synthetic mRNA | No risk of genomic integration, ability to control transgene expression | Variable transduction efficiencies, high technical expertise required |
Protein transduction | No risk of genomic integration, ability to control transgene expression | Very low transduction efficiency, labor intensive |
microRNA transfection | No risk of genomic integration | Low reprogramming efficiency |
Small molecules | No risk of genomic integration | Variable off-target effects |
From the table above, we can generally realize that these promising strategies for teratoma prevention mostly improve the safety of iPSC generation at the expense of efficiency, which is still another remaining challenge in iPSC technology.
In summary, it wouldn't be more perfect if scientists found a method which guaranteed both the safety and efficiency in iPSCs technology. Just as Andrew S Lee wrote on Nature Medicine, "Ideally, the most stringent safety regimes would utilize a flexible, combinatorial approach that may require tailoring for specific PSC lines or graft types. Should these techniques fail to adequately remove enough residual PSCs, retrospective tumor treatments may also be used, including oncologic chemotherapy, radiation and surgery or the incorporation of suicide ablation genes[7]." Admittedly, just as the saying goes, "You can't have your cake and eat it!" With our knowledge of iPSC biology, it is not likable that such a perfect regime would emerge in several coming years. However, as a group of young pre-scientists like us, maybe, it is our time to look into this problem and try to figure it out in another way.
A new way out !
Driven by the motivation to minimize the potential risks of iPSCs and accelerate the development of moving iPSC-based therapies to the patient bedside, this summer, SYSU-CHINA iGEM team come up with a new strategy, which was called iPSC Safeguard.
References
[1]The strategy of genes. CH Waddington& H Kacser. -1957
[2]Gurdon JB (1962). Developmental Capacity of Nuclei Taken From IntestinalEpithelium Cells of Feeding Tadpoles. J Embryol Exp Morph 10: 622‐640.
[3]Takahashi, K. & Yamanaka, Induction of Pluripotent Stem Cells from Mouse Embryonic and Adult Fibroblast Cultures by Defined Factors. S. Cell 126, 663–676 (2006).
[4]James A. Thomson et al, Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Lines Derived from Human Somatic Cells. Science 21 December 2007: Vol. 318 no. 5858 pp. 1917-1920
[5]Scientific Background: Mature cells can be reprogrammed to become pluripotent. Nobelprize.org. Nobel Media 2012
[6]Shinya Yamanaka, Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells: Past, Present, and Future. Cell Stem Cell 10, June 14, 2012
[7]Andrew S Lee et al. Tumorigenicity as a clinical hurdle for pluripotent stem cell therapies. Nature Medicine, valume 19, august 2013;
[8]SHI V. LIU, iPS Cells: A More Critical Review. Stem cell development. 17:391–397 (2008)
[9]Tetsuya Ishii,1,* Renee A. Reijo Pera,2 and Henry T. Greely3, Ethical and Legal Issues Arising in Research on Inducing Human Germ Cells from Pluripotent Stem Cells. Cell Stem Cell 13, August 1, 2013
[10]Martin F Pera & Kouichi Hasegawa, Simpler and safer cell reprogramming, Nature biotechnology, volume 26, january 2008.
[11]Shinya Yamanaka et al. Variation in the safety of induced pluripotent stem cell lines, Natue biothchnology, volume 27, august 2009.
[12]Shinya Yamanaka et al. Induction of Pluripotent Stem Cells from Adult Human Fibroblasts by Defined Factors, Cell, 30 November 2007, Pages 861–872
[13]Gunnar Hargusa et al. Differentiated Parkinson patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells grow in the adult rodent brain and reduce motor asymmetry in Parkinsonian rats, PNAS, September 7, 2010
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