Publications by authors named "Carolina Bluguermann"

Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) have proven to be a great model that faithfully recapitulates the events that occur during embryogenesis, making them a unique tool to study the cellular and molecular mechanisms that define tissue specification during embryonic development. Livestock ESCs are particularly attractive and have broad prospects including drug selection and human disease modeling, improvement of reproductive biotechniques and agriculture-related applications such as production of genetically modified animals. While mice and human ESCs have been established many years ago, no significant advances were made in livestock species until recently.

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In vitro embryo production is a widely applied technique that allows the expansion of genetics and accelerated breeding programs. However, in cattle, this technique still needs improvement in order to reach quality and pregnancy rates comparable to in vivo-derived embryos. One of the limitations of this technique is related to in vitro maturation, where a heterogeneous population of oocytes is harvested from follicles and cultured in vitro in the presence of gonadotropic hormones to induce maturation.

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MicroRNAs are small non-coding RNAs involved in post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression related to many cellular functions. We performed a small-RNAseq analysis of cardiac differentiation from pluripotent stem cells. Our analyses identified some new aspects about microRNA expression in this differentiation process.

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Please note that Carolina Blüguermann's surname was misspelled (as Blugüermann) in this article as originally published.

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Leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) is a growth factor with pleiotropic biological functions. It has been reported that LIF acts at different stages during mesoderm development. Also, it has been shown that LIF has a cytoprotective effect on neonatal murine cardiomyocytes (CMs) in culture, but little is known about the role of LIF during human cardiogenesis.

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Human foreskin fibroblasts were used to generate the iPSC line iPSC-FH2.1 using the EF1a-hSTEMCCA-loxP vector expressing OCT4, SOX2, c-MYC and KLF4, in 5% O2 culture conditions. Stemness was confirmed, as was pluripotency both in vivo and in vitro, in normoxia and hypoxia.

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Joint injury and osteoarthritis affect millions of people worldwide, but attempts to generate articular cartilage using adult stem/progenitor cells have been unsuccessful. We hypothesized that recapitulation of the human developmental chondrogenic program using pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) may represent a superior approach for cartilage restoration. Using laser-capture microdissection followed by microarray analysis, we first defined a surface phenotype (CD166(low/neg)CD146(low/neg)CD73(+)CD44(low)BMPR1B(+)) distinguishing the earliest cartilage committed cells (prechondrocytes) at 5-6 weeks of development.

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Human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) are self-renewing pluripotent cells that can differentiate into specialized cells and hold great promise as models for human development and disease studies, cell-replacement therapies, drug discovery and in vitro cytotoxicity tests. The culture and differentiation of these cells are both complex and expensive, so it is essential to extreme aseptic conditions. hESCs are susceptible to Mycoplasma sp.

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Mesenchymal stem or stromal cells (MSCs) were initially isolated from the bone marrow and received their name on the basis of their ability to differentiate into multiple lineages such as bone, cartilage, fat and muscle. However, more recent studies suggest that MSCs residing in perivascular compartments of the small and large blood vessels play a regulatory function supporting physiologic and pathologic responses of parenchymal cells, which define the functional representation of an organ or tissue. MSCs secrete or express factors that reach neighbouring parenchymal cells via either a paracrine effect or a direct cell-to-cell interaction promoting functional activity, survival and proliferation of the parenchymal cells.

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Cysteine-rich secretory protein 2 (CRISP2) is a testicular sperm protein proposed to be involved in fertilization. With the aim of examining the relevance of CRISP2 for fertility and its potential use as a target for contraception, in the present work, male and female rats were immunized with recombinant CRISP2 coupled to maltose-binding protein (MBP) and evaluated for their subsequent fertility. As controls, animals were injected with either MBP or recombinant CRISP1.

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Human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) are self-renewing pluripotent cells that can differentiate to a wide range of specialized cells and hold great promise as models for human development and disease, as well as for drug discovery and cell-replacement therapies. Group B Coxsackie viruses (CVBs) produce acute myocarditis, pancreatitis, non-septic meningitis and encephalitis in neonates, children and young adults. Moreover, CVBs can produce spontaneous miscarriage after early embryo infection.

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Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a promising source of cells for regenerative medicine because of their potential of self renew and differentiation. Multiple evidences highlight the relationship of chromatin remodeling with stem cell properties, differentiation programs and reprogramming for iPSC obtention. With the purpose of finding chromatin modifying factors relevant to these processes, and based on ChIP on chip studies, we selected several genes that could be modulated by Oct4, Sox2 and Nanog, critical transcription factors in stem cells, and studied their expression profile along the differentiation in mouse and human ESCs, and in mouse iPSCs.

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Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a promising type of stem cells, comparable to embryonic stem cells (ESCs) in terms of self-renew and pluripotency, generated by reprogramming somatic cells. These cells are an attractive approach to supply patient-specific pluripotent cells, for producing in vitro models of disease, drug discovery, toxicology and potentially treating degenerative disease circumventing immune rejection. In spite of the great advance since iPSCs' establishment, their obtention and propagation is an increasing area of great interest.

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We studied the susceptibility of human embryonic stem cells and derived contractile embryoid bodies from WAO9, HUES-5 and HUES-16 cell lines to Coxsackievirus B infection. After validating stem cell-like properties and cardiac phenotype, Coxsackievirus B receptors CAR and DAF, as well as type I interferon receptors were detected in all cell lines and differentiation stages studied. Real-time PCR analysis showed that CAR mRNA levels were 3.

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