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http://documenta.ciemat.es/handle/123456789/2532
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Título : | Reprogramming human B cells into induced pluripotent stem cells and its enhancement by C/EBPα |
Autor : | Bueno, C Sardina, JL Di Stefano, B Romero-Moya, D Muñoz-López, A Ariza, L Chillón, MC Balanzategui, A Castaño, J Herreros, A Fraga, MF Fernández, A Granada, I Quintana-Bustamante, O Segovia, JC Nishimura, K Ohtaka, M Nakanishi, M Graf, T Menedez, P |
Fecha de publicación : | mar-2016 |
Editorial : | Leukemia |
Resumen : | B cells have been shown to be refractory to reprogramming and B-cell-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) have only been generated from murine B cells engineered to carry doxycycline-inducible Oct4, Sox2, Klf4 and Myc (OSKM) cassette in every tissue and from EBV/SV40LT-immortalized lymphoblastoid cell lines. Here, we show for the first time that freshly isolated non-cultured human cord blood (CB)- and peripheral blood (PB)-derived CD19+CD20+ B cells can be reprogrammed to iPSCs carrying complete VDJH immunoglobulin (Ig) gene monoclonal rearrangements using non-integrative tetracistronic, but not monocistronic, OSKM-expressing Sendai Virus. Co-expression of C/EBPα with OSKM facilitates iPSC generation from both CB- and PB-derived B cells. We also demonstrate that myeloid cells are much easier to reprogram than B and T lymphocytes. Differentiation potential back into the cell type of their origin of B-cell-, T-cell-, myeloid- and fibroblast-iPSCs is not skewed, suggesting that their differentiation does not seem influenced by 'epigenetic memory'. Our data reflect the actual cell-autonomous reprogramming capacity of human primary B cells because biased reprogramming was avoided by using freshly isolated primary cells, not exposed to cytokine cocktails favoring proliferation, differentiation or survival. The ability to reprogram CB/PB-derived primary human B cells offers an unprecedented opportunity for studying developmental B lymphopoiesis and modeling B-cell malignancies. |
URI : | http://documenta.ciemat.es/handle/123456789/2532 |
Aparece en las colecciones: | Artículos de Investigación Básica
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