Human embryonic stem cells (hESC) differentiate spontaneously in culture and develop a complex microenvironment comprising of autologously derived niche that in turn supports their pluripotency. The basic hypothesis that we deal with is that hESCs undergoing differentiation, sequentially generate trophectoderm and endoderm lineages and thereafter influence further events through the production of growth factors. These factors control the fate of hESCs either by promoting or retarding the recruitment of new cells in the differentiation program. This scenario therefore represents an analog of the in vivo situation in which extra-embryonic tissues influence the behavior of the inner cell mass (ICM). The premise of the paper is the Rho kinase inhibitor Y27632 that can spatiotemporally alter this balance between pluripotency and differentiation. To evaluate the composition and inclination of lineage specification during spontaneous differentiation, we have studied the hESC colonies and their surrounding niche as interdependent entities. We show that the population of fibroblastic niche that surrounds hESC colonies co-expresses trophectoderm and niche cell markers including SSEA1, hCG, progesterone, HAND1, pSmad1 and FGFR1 as early as day 4. A sudden increase in the expression of GATA4 and AFP secretion indicated putative endoderm formation on day 6 in both control and Y27632 treated cultures. On day 6, 20 microM of Y27632 supplementation significantly reduced the trophectoderm-like niche population without affecting endoderm formation, enhanced the average size and number of hESC colonies, decreased IGF1 secretion thereby improving the pluripotency. Overall our findings support the afore mentioned hypothesis and demonstrate that closely packed epithelial trophectoderm-like cells bordering the hESC colonies present an initial and imminent localized niche which is spatiotemporally regulated. Such advances in understanding the behavior and modulation of hESC and its surrounding niche would facilitate better differentiation protocols for applications in regenerative medicine and drug screening.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/157488810790442769 | DOI Listing |
Stem Cell Rev Rep
November 2024
INSERM U935/U1310 ESTeam Paris Sud Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Core Facility, Villejuif, France.
The discovery of endothelial progenitor cells has revolutionized our understanding of postnatal blood vessel formation, with endothelial colony-forming cells (ECFCs) emerging as key players in vasculogenesis. Among various ECFC sources, cord blood-derived ECFCs (CB-ECFCs) are of particular interest due to their superior proliferative and clonogenic potential and their ability to promote vascular network formation. Human embryonic stem cell-derived endothelial cells (hESC-ECs) have also shown potential in regenerative medicine, though their vasculogenic efficacy remains unclear compared to CB- and adult blood-derived ECFCs (AB-ECFCs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLife (Basel)
October 2024
Institute of Cytology, 194064 Saint Petersburg, Russia.
J Transl Med
November 2024
Laboratory of Stem Cells and Translational Medicine, Institute for Medical Research, The Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, 510006, China.
Background: Liver cancer stem cells (LCSCs) are thought to drive the metastasis and recurrence, however, the heterogeneity of molecular markers of LCSCs has hindered the development of effective methods to isolate them.
Methods: This study introduced an effective approach to isolate and culture LCSCs from human primary liver cancer (HPLC), leveraging mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) as feeder cells in conjunction with using defined medium. Isolated LCSCs were further characterized by multiple approaches.
Differentiation approaches to obtain mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have gradually developed over the last few decades. The problem is that different protocols give different MSC types, making further research difficult. Here, we tried three different approaches to differentiate embryonic stem cells (ESCs) from early mesoderm to MSCs using serum-containing or xeno-free differentiation medium and observed differences in the cells' morphology, doubling rate, ability to form colonies, surface marker analysis, and multilineage differentiation potential of the obtained cell lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Embryonic hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) have the unique ability to undergo rapid proliferation while maintaining multipotency, a clinically-valuable quality which currently cannot be replicated in vitro. Here, we show that embryonic HSPCs achieve this state by precise spatio-temporal regulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) via Bnip3lb-associated developmentally-programmed mitophagy, a distinct autophagic regulatory mechanism from that of adult HSPCs. While ROS drives HSPC specification in the dorsal aorta, scRNAseq and live-imaging of zebrafish indicate that mitophagy initiates as HSPCs undergo endothelial-to-hematopoietic transition and colonize the caudal hematopoietic tissue (CHT).
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