Vascular progenitors generated from tankyrase inhibitor-regulated naïve diabetic human iPSC potentiate efficient revascularization of ischemic retina.
Tea Soon ParkLudovic ZimmerlinRebecca Evans-MosesJustin ThomasJeffrey S HuoRiya KanherkarAlice HeNensi M RuzgarRhonda GrebeImran BhuttoMichael BarbatoMichael A KoldobskiyGerard LuttyElias T ZambidisPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
Here, we report that the functionality of vascular progenitors (VP) generated from normal and disease-primed conventional human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) can be significantly improved by reversion to a tankyrase inhibitor-regulated human naïve epiblast-like pluripotent state. Naïve diabetic vascular progenitors (N-DVP) differentiated from patient-specific naïve diabetic hiPSC (N-DhiPSC) possessed higher vascular functionality, maintained greater genomic stability, harbored decreased lineage-primed gene expression, and were more efficient in migrating to and re-vascularizing the deep neural layers of the ischemic retina than isogenic diabetic vascular progenitors (DVP). These findings suggest that reprogramming to a stable naïve human pluripotent stem cell state may effectively erase dysfunctional epigenetic donor cell memory or disease-associated aberrations in patient-specific hiPSC. More broadly, tankyrase inhibitor-regulated naïve hiPSC (N-hiPSC) represent a class of human stem cells with high epigenetic plasticity, improved multi-lineage functionality, and potentially high impact for regenerative medicine.
Keyphrases
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- stem cells
- endothelial cells
- gene expression
- type diabetes
- dna methylation
- pluripotent stem cells
- transcription factor
- bone marrow
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- diabetic retinopathy
- mesenchymal stem cells
- brain injury
- optical coherence tomography
- copy number
- coronary artery bypass grafting
- subarachnoid hemorrhage