Effect on Multipotency and Phenotypic Transition of Unrestricted Somatic Stem Cells from Human Umbilical Cord Blood after Treatment with Epigenetic Agents.
Foued GhanjatiSimeon SantourlidisPublished in: Stem cells international (2015)
The epigenetic mechanism of DNA methylation is of central importance for cellular differentiation processes. Unrestricted somatic stem cells (USSCs) from human umbilical cord blood, which have a broad differentiation spectrum, reside in an uncommitted epigenetic state with partial methylation of the regulatory region of the gene coding for the pluripotency master regulator OCT4. Thus we hypothesized that further opening of this "poised" epigenetic state could broaden the differentiation potential of USSCs. Here we document that USSCs drastically change their phenotype after treatment by a new elaborated cultivation protocol which utilizes the DNA hypomethylating compound 5'-aza-2-deoxycytidine (5-Aza-CdR) and the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A (TSA). This treatment leads to a new stable, spheroid-forming cell type which we have named SpheUSSC. These cells can be stably propagated over at least 150 cell divisions, express OCT4, retain the potential to undergo osteogenic differentiation, and have additionally acquired the ability to uniformly differentiate into adipocytes, unlike the source USSC population. Here we describe our treatment protocol and provide evidence that it induces a dedifferentiation step and concomitantly the acquisition of an extended differentiation capability of the new SpheUSSC type.
Keyphrases
- dna methylation
- cord blood
- gene expression
- genome wide
- histone deacetylase
- stem cells
- copy number
- randomized controlled trial
- induced apoptosis
- optical coherence tomography
- single cell
- bone marrow
- adipose tissue
- transcription factor
- mesenchymal stem cells
- signaling pathway
- cell free
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- combination therapy
- metabolic syndrome
- risk assessment
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell cycle arrest
- insulin resistance
- cell proliferation
- smoking cessation