An engineered Sox17 induces somatic to neural stem cell fate transitions independently from pluripotency reprogramming.
Mingxi WengHaoqing HuMatthew S GrausDaisylyn Senna TanYa GaoShimiao RenDerek Hoi Hang HoJakob LangerMarkus HolznerYuhua HuangGuang-Sheng LingCora Sau Wan LaiMathias FrancoisRalf JauchPublished in: Science advances (2023)
Advanced strategies to interconvert cell types provide promising avenues to model cellular pathologies and to develop therapies for neurological disorders. Yet, methods to directly transdifferentiate somatic cells into multipotent induced neural stem cells (iNSCs) are slow and inefficient, and it is unclear whether cells pass through a pluripotent state with full epigenetic reset. We report iNSC reprogramming from embryonic and aged mouse fibroblasts as well as from human blood using an engineered Sox17 (eSox17 FNV ). eSox17 FNV efficiently drives iNSC reprogramming while Sox2 or Sox17 fail. eSox17 FNV acquires the capacity to bind different protein partners on regulatory DNA to scan the genome more efficiently and has a more potent transactivation domain than Sox2. Lineage tracing and time-resolved transcriptomics show that emerging iNSCs do not transit through a pluripotent state. Our work distinguishes lineage from pluripotency reprogramming with the potential to generate more authentic cell models for aging-associated neurodegenerative diseases.
Keyphrases
- stem cells
- transcription factor
- single cell
- induced apoptosis
- cell therapy
- cell cycle arrest
- neural stem cells
- endothelial cells
- computed tomography
- dna methylation
- cell fate
- high glucose
- circulating tumor
- single molecule
- cell free
- amino acid
- mesenchymal stem cells
- climate change
- genome wide
- men who have sex with men
- hepatitis c virus