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  4. Non-integrating episomal plasmid-based reprogramming of human amniotic fluid stem cells into induced pluripotent stem cells in chemically defined conditions
 
research article

Non-integrating episomal plasmid-based reprogramming of human amniotic fluid stem cells into induced pluripotent stem cells in chemically defined conditions

Slamecka, Jaroslav
•
Salimova, Lilia
•
Mcclellan, Steven
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2016
Cell Cycle

Amniotic fluid stem cells (AFSC) represent an attractive potential cell source for fetal and pediatric cell-based therapies. However, upgrading them to pluripotency confers refractoriness toward senescence, higher proliferation rate and unlimited differentiation potential. AFSC were observed to rapidly and efficiently reacquire pluripotency which together with their easy recovery makes them an attractive cell source for reprogramming. The reprogramming process as well as the resulting iPSC epigenome could potentially benefit from the unspecialized nature of AFSC. iPSC derived from AFSC also have potential in disease modeling, such as Down syndrome or -thalassemia. Previous experiments involving AFSC reprogramming have largely relied on integrative vector transgene delivery and undefined serum-containing, feeder-dependent culture. Here, we describe non-integrative oriP/EBNA-1 episomal plasmid-based reprogramming of AFSC into iPSC and culture in fully chemically defined xeno-free conditions represented by vitronectin coating and E8 medium, a system that we found uniquely suited for this purpose. The derived AF-iPSC lines uniformly expressed a set of pluripotency markers Oct3/4, Nanog, Sox2, SSEA-1, SSEA-4, TRA-1-60, TRA-1-81 in a pattern typical for human primed PSC. Additionally, the cells formed teratomas, and were deemed pluripotent by PluriTest, a global expression microarray-based in-silico pluripotency assay. However, we found that the PluriTest scores were borderline, indicating a unique pluripotent signature in the defined condition. In the light of potential future clinical translation of iPSC technology, non-integrating reprogramming and chemically defined culture are more acceptable.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1080/15384101.2015.1121332
Web of Science ID

WOS:000369854900013

Author(s)
Slamecka, Jaroslav
Salimova, Lilia
Mcclellan, Steven
Van Kelle, Mathieu
Kehl, Debora
Laurini, Javier
Cinelli, Paolo
Owen, Laurie
Hoerstrup, Simon P.
Weber, Benedikt
Date Issued

2016

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Inc

Published in
Cell Cycle
Volume

15

Issue

2

Start page

234

End page

249

Subjects

amniotic fluid stem cells

•

episomal reprogramming

•

E8

•

induced pluripotent stem cells

•

PluriTest

•

vitronectin

•

xeno-free culture

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
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Available on Infoscience
April 1, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/125436
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