Combined hydrogels that switch human pluripotent stem cells from self-renewal to differentiation.
James E Dixon, Disheet A Shah, Catherine Rogers, Stephen Hall, Nicola Weston, Christopher D J Parmenter, Donal McNally, Chris Denning, Kevin M Shakesheff
Index: Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 111(15) , 5580-5, (2014)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
The ability of materials to define the architecture and microenvironment experienced by cells provides new opportunities to direct the fate of human pluripotent stem cells (HPSCs) [Robinton DA, Daley GQ (2012) Nature 481(7381):295-305]. However, the conditions required for self-renewal vs. differentiation of HPSCs are different, and a single system that efficiently achieves both outcomes is not available [Giobbe GG, et al. (2012) Biotechnol Bioeng 109(12):3119-3132]. We have addressed this dual need by developing a hydrogel-based material that uses ionic de-cross-linking to remove a self-renewal permissive hydrogel (alginate) and switch to a differentiation-permissive microenvironment (collagen). Adjusting the timing of this switch can preferentially steer the HPSC differentiation to mimic lineage commitment during gastrulation to ectoderm (early switch) or mesoderm/endoderm (late switch). As an exemplar differentiated cell type, we showed that directing early lineage specification using this single system can promote cardiogenesis with increased gene expression in high-density cell populations. This work will facilitate regenerative medicine by allowing in situ HPSC expansion to be coupled with early lineage specification within defined tissue geometries.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2013-07-01
[J. Surg. Res. 183(1) , 442-9, (2013)]
2013-09-01
[Pak. J. Pharm. Sci. 26(5) , 929-37, (2013)]
2013-09-15
[Int. J. Pharm. 454(1) , 125-34, (2013)]
2013-10-01
[Colloids Surf. B Biointerfaces 110 , 395-402, (2013)]
2015-01-01
[Eur. Cell. Mater. 30 , 132-46; discussion 146-7, (2015)]