San
Diego Regenerative Medicine Institute
and Xcelthera announce the
publication of Dr. Parsons’ review article, titled “Embedding the Future of
Regenerative Medicine into the Open Epigenomic
Landscape of Pluripotent Human Embryonic Stem Cells”, in Annual Review &
Research in Biology at http://www.sciencedomain.org/issue.php?iid=239&id=9. In this review article, Dr. Parsons gives
an insight view on the human stem cell epigenomes in discerning the intrinsic
plasticity and regenerative potential of human stem cell derivatives from various
sources as well as recent advances on uncovering the developmental programs
embedded in neural and cardiac lineage-specific differentiation of pluripotent
human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) that lead to efficiency in deriving neural
and cardiac elements for cell-based therapies.
Human stem cells are extremely attractive
for therapeutic development because they have direct pharmacologic utility in
clinical applications, unlike any cells originated from animals and other lower
organisms that are only useful as research materials. The human stem cell is emerging
as a new type of drug of cellular entity that can offer pharmacological utility
and capacity for human tissue and function restoration that the conventional
compound drug of molecular entity lacks. However, to date, the lack of a
clinically-suitable source of engraftable human stem/progenitor cells with
adequate neurogenic potential has been the major setback in developing safe and
effective cell-based therapies for regenerating the damaged or lost central nervous system (CNS) structure and
circuitry in a wide range of neurological disorders. Similarly, the lack of a
clinically-suitable human cardiomyocyte source with adequate myocardium
regenerative potential has been the major setback in regenerating the damaged
human heart. Pluripotent hESCs, derived from the pluripotent inner cell mass or
epiblast of the human blastocyst, have both the unconstrained capacity for long-term
stable undifferentiated growth in culture and the intrinsic potential for differentiation
into all somatic cell types in the human body, holding tremendous potential
for restoring human tissue and organ function. Given the limited capacity of
the CNS and heart for self-repair, transplantation of hESC neuronal and heart
cell therapy derivatives holds
enormous potential in cell replacement
therapy for neurodegenerative and heart diseases that cost the healthcare
system > $500 billions annually. There
is a large unmet healthcare need to develop hESC-based therapeutic solutions to
provide optimal regeneration and reconstruction treatment options for normal
tissue and function restoration in many major health problems. However,
realizing the developmental and therapeutic potential of hESC derivatives has
been hindered by conventional approaches for generating functional cells from
pluripotent cells through uncontrollable, incomplete, and inefficient
multi-lineage differentiation. Growing evidences indicate that incomplete
lineage specification of pluripotent cells via multi-lineage differentiation
often resulted in poor performance of such stem cell derivatives and
tissue-engineering constructs following transplantation. The development of
better differentiation strategies that permit to channel the wide differentiation
potential of pluripotent hESCs efficiently and predictably to desired
phenotypes is vital for realizing the therapeutic potential of pluripotent
hESCs.
The eukaryotic genome is packaged into
chromatin, a nucleoprotein complex in which the DNA helix is wrapped around an
octamer of core histone proteins to form a nucleosomal DNA structure, known as
nucleosome, that is further folded into higher-order chromatin structures with
the involvement of other chromosomal proteins. Chromatin modifications, such as
DNA methylation and histone modifications, serve as important epigenetic marks
for active and inactive chromatin states, thus the principal epigenetic mechanism
in early embryogenesis. Discerning the intrinsic plasticity and regenerative
potential of human stem cell populations reside in chromatin modifications that
shape the respective epigenomes of their derivation routes. The broad potential
of pluripotent hESCs is defined by an epigenome constituted of open
conformation of chromatin. The hESCs are not only pluripotent, but also
incredibly stable and positive, as evident by that only the positive active
chromatin remodeling factors, but not the negative repressive chromatin
remodeling factors, can be found in the pluripotent epigenome of hESCs. The
normality and positivity of hESC open epigenome also differentiate pluripotent
hESCs from any other stem cells, such as the induced pluripotent stem
cells (iPS cells) reprogrammed from adult cells with known oncogenes and the
tissue-resident stem cells. Somatic cell nuclear transfer and
transcription-factor-based reprogramming have been used to revert adult cells
to an embryonic-like state with extremely low efficiencies. Although pluripotent,
the iPS cells and ESC derived from cloned embryos by somatic nuclear transfer are
made from adult cells, therefore, adult cell-originated pluripotent cells carry
many negative repressive chromatin remodeling factors and unerasable genetic
imprints of adult cells that pluripotent hESCs do not have. Somatic
cell nuclear transfer and factor-based reprogramming are incapable of restoring
a correct epigenetic pattern of pluripotent hESCs, which accounts for abnormal
gene expression, accelerated senescence, not graftable, and immune-rejection
following transplantation of reprogrammed cells. These major drawbacks have
severely impaired the utility of reprogrammed or deprogrammed or direct or
trans-differentiated somatic cells as viable therapeutic approaches.
Using hESCs to develop cellular medicine for the brain and the heart must first transform pluripotent hESCs into CNS or heart fate-restricted cell therapy derivatives. Recent advances and breakthroughs in hESC research have overcome some major obstacles in bringing hESC therapy derivatives towards clinical applications, including establishing defined culture systems for de novo derivation and maintenance of clinical-grade pluripotent hESCs and lineage-specific differentiation of pluripotent hESCs by small molecule induction. This technology breakthrough enables high efficient direct conversion of pluripotent hESCs into a large supply of high purity neuronal cells or heart muscle cells with adequate pharmacologic capacity to regenerate CNS neurons and contractile heart muscles for developing safe and effective stem cell therapies. Transforming pluripotent hESCs into fate-restricted therapy derivatives dramatically increases the clinical efficacy of graft-dependent repair and safety of hESC-derived cellular products. Currently, these hESC neuronal and cardiomyocyte therapy derivatives are the only available human cell sources with adequate pharmacologic capacity to regenerate neurons and contractile heart muscles that no conventional drug of molecular entity or tissue-derived stem cells can. Embedding lineage-specific genetic and epigenetic programs into the open epigenomic landscape of pluripotent hESCs offers a new dimension for direct control and modulation of hESC pluripotent fate when deriving clinically-relevant lineages for regenerative therapies. Please read Dr. Parsons’ full open access article at http://www.sciencedomain.org/issue.php?iid=239&id=9.
Using hESCs to develop cellular medicine for the brain and the heart must first transform pluripotent hESCs into CNS or heart fate-restricted cell therapy derivatives. Recent advances and breakthroughs in hESC research have overcome some major obstacles in bringing hESC therapy derivatives towards clinical applications, including establishing defined culture systems for de novo derivation and maintenance of clinical-grade pluripotent hESCs and lineage-specific differentiation of pluripotent hESCs by small molecule induction. This technology breakthrough enables high efficient direct conversion of pluripotent hESCs into a large supply of high purity neuronal cells or heart muscle cells with adequate pharmacologic capacity to regenerate CNS neurons and contractile heart muscles for developing safe and effective stem cell therapies. Transforming pluripotent hESCs into fate-restricted therapy derivatives dramatically increases the clinical efficacy of graft-dependent repair and safety of hESC-derived cellular products. Currently, these hESC neuronal and cardiomyocyte therapy derivatives are the only available human cell sources with adequate pharmacologic capacity to regenerate neurons and contractile heart muscles that no conventional drug of molecular entity or tissue-derived stem cells can. Embedding lineage-specific genetic and epigenetic programs into the open epigenomic landscape of pluripotent hESCs offers a new dimension for direct control and modulation of hESC pluripotent fate when deriving clinically-relevant lineages for regenerative therapies. Please read Dr. Parsons’ full open access article at http://www.sciencedomain.org/issue.php?iid=239&id=9.
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