Chemical conversion of human conventional PSCs to TSCs following transient naive gene activation.
Irene ZorzanRiccardo Massimiliano BettoGiada RossignoliMattia ArboitAndrea DrusinClelia CorridoriPaolo MartiniGraziano MartelloPublished in: EMBO reports (2023)
In human embryos, naive pluripotent cells of the inner cell mass (ICM) generate epiblast, primitive endoderm and trophectoderm (TE) lineages, whence trophoblast cells derive. In vitro, naive pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) retain this potential and efficiently generate trophoblast stem cells (TSCs), while conventional PSCs form TSCs at low efficiency. Transient histone deacetylase and MEK inhibition combined with LIF stimulation is used to chemically reset conventional to naive PSCs. Here, we report that chemical resetting induces the expression of both naive and TSC markers and of placental imprinted genes. A modified chemical resetting protocol allows for the fast and efficient conversion of conventional PSCs into TSCs, entailing shutdown of pluripotency genes and full activation of the trophoblast master regulators, without induction of amnion markers. Chemical resetting generates a plastic intermediate state, characterised by co-expression of naive and TSC markers, after which cells steer towards one of the two fates in response to the signalling environment. The efficiency and rapidity of our system will be useful to study cell fate transitions and to generate models of placental disorders.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- genome wide identification
- induced apoptosis
- hiv infected
- pluripotent stem cells
- stem cells
- cell cycle arrest
- endothelial cells
- poor prognosis
- genome wide
- cell fate
- cell therapy
- signaling pathway
- gene expression
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- cell proliferation
- mass spectrometry
- mesenchymal stem cells
- dna methylation
- brain injury
- genome wide analysis
- liquid chromatography