Title
Aberrant silencing of imprinted genes on chromosome 12qF1 in mouse induced pluripotent stem cells
Authors
Stadtfeld M, Apostolou E, Akutsu H, Fukuda A, Follett P, Natesan S, Kono T, Shioda T, Hochedlinger K
Institution
Howard Hughes Medical Institute at Massachusetts General Hospital, Center for Regenerative Medicine; Harvard Stem Cell Institute, 185 Cambridge Street, Boston, Massachusetts
Country
United States
Year
2010
Journal
Nature
Abstract
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have been generated by enforced expression of defined sets of transcription factors in somatic cells. It remains controversial whether iPSCs are molecularly and functionally equivalent to blastocyst-derived embryonic stem (ES) cells. By comparing genetically identical mouse ES cells and iPSCs, we show here that their overall messenger RNA and microRNA expression patterns are indistinguishable with the exception of a few transcripts encoded within the imprinted Dlk1-Dio3 gene cluster on chromosome 12qF1, which were aberrantly silenced in most of the iPSC clones. Consistent with a developmental role of the Dlk1-Dio3 gene cluster, these iPSC clones contributed poorly to chimaeras and failed to support the development of entirely iPSC-derived animals ('all-iPSC mice'). In contrast, iPSC clones with normal expression of the Dlk1-Dio3 cluster contributed to high-grade chimaeras and generated viable all-iPSC mice. Notably, treatment of an iPSC clone that had silenced Dlk1-Dio3 with a histone deacetylase inhibitor reactivated the locus and rescued its ability to support full-term development of all-iPSC mice. Thus, the expression state of a single imprinted gene cluster seems to distinguish most murine iPSCs from ES cells and allows for the prospective identification of iPSC clones that have the full development potential of ES cells.
Product use
Isolation and cultivation for measurements of the expression of non-coding RNA Gtl2
Tissue type
Epidermal
Tissue info
Collagen-OKSM mice
Species
Mouse
CELLnTEC Previous products
CnT-07

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