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Journal ArticleDOI

Derivation of pluripotent epiblast stem cells from mammalian embryos

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TLDR
It is shown that pluripotent stem cells can be derived from the late epiblast layer of post-implantation mouse and rat embryos using chemically defined, activin-containing culture medium that is sufficient for long-term maintenance of human embryonic stem cells.
Abstract
Although the first mouse embryonic stem (ES) cell lines were derived 25 years ago using feeder-layer-based blastocyst cultures, subsequent efforts to extend the approach to other mammals, including both laboratory and domestic species, have been relatively unsuccessful. The most notable exceptions were the derivation of non-human primate ES cell lines followed shortly thereafter by their derivation of human ES cells. Despite the apparent common origin and the similar pluripotency of mouse and human embryonic stem cells, recent studies have revealed that they use different signalling pathways to maintain their pluripotent status. Mouse ES cells depend on leukaemia inhibitory factor and bone morphogenetic protein, whereas their human counterparts rely on activin (INHBA)/nodal (NODAL) and fibroblast growth factor (FGF). Here we show that pluripotent stem cells can be derived from the late epiblast layer of post-implantation mouse and rat embryos using chemically defined, activin-containing culture medium that is sufficient for long-term maintenance of human embryonic stem cells. Our results demonstrate that activin/Nodal signalling has an evolutionarily conserved role in the derivation and the maintenance of pluripotency in these novel stem cells. Epiblast stem cells provide a valuable experimental system for determining whether distinctions between mouse and human embryonic stem cells reflect species differences or diverse temporal origins.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Stem Cells: A Renaissance in Human Biology Research

TL;DR: The opportunities afforded to delve molecularly into scarce material and to model human embryogenesis and pathophysiological processes are leading to new insights of human development and are changing the authors' understanding of disease and choice of therapy options.
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Pluripotency Surveillance by Myc-Driven Competitive Elimination of Differentiating Cells

TL;DR: Using live tracking of Myc levels, it is shown that Myc-high ESCs approach the naive pluripotency state, whereas MyC-low ESCs are closer to the differentiation-primed state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Zfp281 Coordinates Opposing Functions of Tet1 and Tet2 in Pluripotent States.

TL;DR: A study reveals a molecular circuitry in which opposing functions of Tet1 and Tet2 control acquisition of alternative pluripotent states, and identifies Zfp281 as a key transcriptional regulator for primed pluripotency that also functions as a barrier toward achieving naive pluripOTency in both mouse and human ESCs.
Journal ArticleDOI

The evolving biology of small molecules: controlling cell fate and identity

TL;DR: In a very short period of time, small molecules have defined a perhaps universally attainable naive ground state of pluripotency, and are facilitating the precise, rapid and efficient differentiation of stem cells into somatic cell populations relevant to the clinic.
Journal ArticleDOI

A single-embryo, single-cell time-resolved model for mouse gastrulation

TL;DR: In this paper, a temporal model for mouse gastrulation is introduced, consisting of data from 153 individually sampled embryos spanning 36h of molecular diversification, and using algorithms and precise timing, they infer differentiation flows and lineage specification dynamics over the embryonic transcriptional manifold.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Embryonic Stem Cell Lines Derived from Human Blastocysts

TL;DR: Human blastocyst-derived, pluripotent cell lines are described that have normal karyotypes, express high levels of telomerase activity, and express cell surface markers that characterize primate embryonic stem cells but do not characterize other early lineages.
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Establishment in culture of pluripotential cells from mouse embryos

TL;DR: The establishment in tissue culture of pluripotent cell lines which have been isolated directly from in vitro cultures of mouse blastocysts are reported, able to differentiate either in vitro or after innoculation into a mouse as a tumour in vivo.
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Isolation of a pluripotent cell line from early mouse embryos cultured in medium conditioned by teratocarcinoma stem cells

TL;DR: In this article, the authors described the establishment directly from normal preimplantation mouse embryos of a cell line that forms teratocarcinomas when injected into mice and demonstrated the pluripotency of these embryonic stem cells by the observation that subclonal cultures, derived from isolated single cells, can differentiate into a wide variety of cell types.
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Core transcriptional regulatory circuitry in human embryonic stem cells.

TL;DR: Insight is provided into the transcriptional regulation of stem cells and how OCT4, SOX2, and NANOG contribute to pluripotency and self-renewal and how they collaborate to form regulatory circuitry consisting of autoregulatory and feedforward loops.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative expression of Oct-3/4 defines differentiation, dedifferentiation or self-renewal of ES cells.

TL;DR: A role is established for Oct-3/4 as a master regulator of pluripotency that controls lineage commitment and the sophistication of critical transcriptional regulators is illustrated and the consequent importance of quantitative analyses are illustrated.
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