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Resep Genetik untuk mengubah sel-sel induk darah
Genetic recipe to turn stem cells to blood
Date:
July 14,
2014
Source:
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Summary:
The ability to reliably and safely make in the
laboratory all of the different types of cells in human blood is one key step
closer to reality. Stem cell researchers have discovered two genetic programs
responsible for taking blank-slate stem cells and turning them into both red
and the array of white cells that make up human blood.
.............................
The ability to reliably and safely make in the laboratory
all of the different types of cells in human blood is one key step closer to
reality.
Writing
today (July 14, 2014) in the journal Nature Communications, a group led
by University of Wisconsin-Madison stem cell researcher Igor Slukvin reports
the discovery of two genetic programs responsible for taking blank-slate stem
cells and turning them into both red and the array of white cells that make up
human blood.
The research
is important because it identifies how nature itself makes blood products at
the earliest stages of development. The discovery gives scientists the tools to
make the cells themselves, investigate how blood cells develop and produce
clinically relevant blood products.
"This
is the first demonstration of the production of different kinds of cells from
human pluripotent stem cells using transcription factors," explains
Slukvin, referencing the proteins that bind to DNA and control the flow of
genetic information, which ultimately determines the developmental fate of undifferentiated
stem cells.
During
development, blood cells emerge in the aorta, a major blood vessel in the
embryo. There, blood cells, including hematopoietic stem cells, are generated
by budding from a unique population of what scientists call hemogenic endothelial
cells. The new report identifies two distinct groups of transcription factors
that can directly convert human stem cells into the hemogenic endothelial
cells, which subsequently develop into various types of blood cells.
The factors
identified by Slukvin's group were capable of making the range of human blood
cells, including white blood cells, red blood cells and megakaryocytes,
commonly used blood products.
"By
overexpressing just two transcription factors, we can, in the laboratory dish,
reproduce the sequence of events we see in the embryo" where blood is
made, says Slukvin of the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine in
the UW School of Medicine and Public Health and the Wisconsin National Primate
Research Center.
The method
developed by Slukvin's group was shown to produce blood cells in abundance. For
every million stem cells, the researchers were able to produce 30 million blood
cells.
A critical
aspect of the work is the use of modified messenger RNA to direct stem cells
toward particular developmental fates. The new approach makes it possible to
induce cells without introducing any genetic artifacts. By co-opting nature's
method of making cells and avoiding all potential genetic artifacts, cells for
therapy can be made safer.
"You
can do it without a virus, and genome integrity is not affected," Slukvin
notes. Moreover, while the new work shows that blood can be made by
manipulating genetic mechanisms, the approach is likely to be true as well for
making other types of cells with therapeutic potential, including cells of the
pancreas and heart.
An
unfulfilled aspiration, says Slukvin, is to make hematopoietic stem cells,
multipotent stem cells found in bone marrow. Hematopoietic stem cells are used
to treat some cancers, including leukemia and multiple myeloma. Devising a
method for producing them in the lab remains a significant challenge.
"We
still don't know how to do that," Slukvin notes, "but our new
approach to making blood cells will give us an opportunity to model their development
in a dish and identify novel hematopoietic stem cell factors."
The study
was conducted under the umbrella of the Progenitor Cell Biology Consortium, run
by National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, part of the National Institutes of
Health, and involved a collaboration of scientists at UW-Madison, the Morgridge
Institute for Research, the University of Minnesota at the Twin Cities and the
Houston Methodist Research Institute.
In addition
to Slukvin, authors of the new report include Irina Elcheva, Vera
Brok-Volchanskaya, Akhilesh Kumar, Patricia Liu, Jeong-Hee Lee, Lilian Tong and
Maxim Vodyanik, all of the Wisconsin National Primate Research Center; Scott
Swanson, Ron Stewart and James A. Thomson of the Morgridge Institute for
Research; Michael Kyba of the University of Minnesota's Lillehei Heart
Institute; and Eduard Yakubov and John Cooke of the Center for Cardiovascular
Regeneration of the Houston Methodist Research Institute.
The research
underpinning the new Nature Communications report was supported by the National
Institutes of Health, grant numbers U01HL099773, U01HL100407, U01HL099997 and
P51 RR000167, and the Charlotte Geyer Foundation.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by University of Wisconsin-Madison. The original article was written
by Terry Devitt. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Irina Elcheva, Vera Brok-Volchanskaya, Akhilesh Kumar, Patricia Liu, Jeong-Hee Lee, et al. Direct induction of haematoendothelial programs in human pluripotent stem cells by transcriptional regulators. Nature Communications, 14 July 2014 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5372