Published in

Mary Ann Liebert, Stem Cells and Development, 3(22), p. 444-458, 2013

DOI: 10.1089/scd.2012.0267

Links

Tools

Export citation

Search in Google Scholar

Human mid-trimester amniotic fluid stem cells cultured under embryonic stem cell conditions with valproic acid acquire pluripotent characteristics.

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

Full text: Download

Green circle
Preprint: archiving allowed
Green circle
Postprint: archiving allowed
Red circle
Published version: archiving forbidden
Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Human mid-trimester amniotic fluid stem cells (AFSC) have promising applications in regenerative medicine, being broadly multipotent with an intermediate phenotype between embryonic (ES) and mesenchymal stem cells (MSC). Despite this propluripotent phenotype, AFSC are usually cultured in adherence in a serum-based expansion medium, and how expansion in conditions sustaining pluripotency might affect their phenotype remains unknown. We recently showed that early AFSC from first trimester amniotic fluid, which endogenously express Sox2 and Klf4, can be reprogrammed to pluripotency without viral vectors using the histone deacetylase inhibitor valproic acid (VPA). Here, we show that mid-trimester AFSC cultured under MSC conditions contained a subset of cells endogenously expressing telomerase, CD24, OCT4, C-MYC, and SSEA4, but low/null levels of SOX2, NANOG, KLF4, SSEA3, TRA-1-60, and TRA-1-81, with cells unable to form embryoid bodies (EBs) or teratomas. In contrast, AFSC cultured under human ESC conditions were smaller in size, grew faster, formed colonies, upregulated OCT4 and C-MYC, and expressed KLF4 and SOX2, but not NANOG, SSEA3, TRA-1-60, and TRA-1-81. Supplementation with VPA for 5 days further upregulated OCT4, KLF4, and SOX2, and induced expression of NANOG, SSEA3, TRA-1-60, and TRA-1-81, with cells now able to form EBs and teratomas. We conclude that human mid-trimester AFSC, which may be isolated autologously during pregnancy without ethics restriction, can acquire pluripotent characteristics without the use of ectopic factors. Our data suggest that this medium-dependant approach to pluripotent mid-trimester AFSC reflects true reprogramming and not the selection of prepluripotent cells.