Despite advances in four-factor (4F)-induced reprogramming (4FR) in vitro and in vivo, how 4FR interconnects with senescence remains largely under investigated. Here, using genetic and chemical approaches to manipulate senescent cells, we show that removal of p16 cells resulted in the 4FR of somatic cells into totipotent-like stem cells. These cells expressed markers of both pluripotency and the two-cell embryonic state, readily formed implantation-competent blastoids and, following morula aggregation, contributed to embryonic and extraembryonic lineages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMedulloblastoma (MB) is the most common and aggressive paediatric brain tumour. Although the cure rate can be as high as 70%, current treatments (surgery, radio- and chemotherapy) excessively affect the patients' quality of life. Relapses cannot be controlled by conventional or targeted treatments and are usually fatal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe accumulation of senescent cells can drive many age-associated phenotypes and pathologies. Consequently, it has been proposed that removing senescent cells might extend lifespan. Here, we generated two knockin mouse models targeting the best-characterized marker of senescence, p16.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccumulating evidence supports the role of the DNA damage response (DDR) in the negative regulation of tumorigenesis. Here, we found that DDR signaling poises a series of epigenetic events, resulting in activation of pro-tumorigenic genes but can go as far as reactivation of the pluripotency gene OCT4. Loss of DNA methylation appears to be a key initiating event in DDR-dependent OCT4 locus reactivation although full reactivation required the presence of a driving oncogene, such as Myc and macroH2A downregulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe propose a new mathematical model of erythropoiesis that takes a positive feedback of erythrocytes on progenitor apoptosis into account, and incorporates a negative feedback of erythrocytes on progenitor self-renewal. The resulting model is a system of age-structured equations that reduces to a system of delay differential equations where the delays account for progenitor compartment duration and cell cycle length. We compare this model with experimental data on an induced-anemia in mice that exhibit damped oscillations of the hematocrit before it returns to equilibrium.
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