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First published online January 23, 2009
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/dev.020867
Review |
1 Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center and Center for Regenerative
Medicine, Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology, Harvard Stem Cell
Institute, Harvard University, 185 Cambridge Street, Boston, MA 02114,
USA.
2 University of California Los Angeles, David Geffen School of Medicine,
Department of Biological Chemistry, Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center,
Molecular Biology Institute, Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative
Medicine and Stem Cell Research, 615 Charles E. Young Drive South, BSRB 390D,
Los Angeles, CA 90024, USA.
e-mails: khochedlinger{at}helix.mgh.harvard.edu; kplath{at}mednet.ucla.edu
SUMMARY
The cloning of animals from adult cells has demonstrated that the developmental state of adult cells can be reprogrammed into that of embryonic cells by uncharacterized factors within the oocyte. More recently, transcription factors have been identified that can induce pluripotency in somatic cells without the use of oocytes, generating induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. iPS cells provide a unique platform to dissect the molecular mechanisms that underlie epigenetic reprogramming. Moreover, iPS cells can teach us about principles of normal development and disease, and might ultimately facilitate the treatment of patients by custom-tailored cell therapy.
Introduction
Mammalian development is a unidirectional process during which there is a
progressive loss of developmental potential. It begins with the formation of a
unicellular zygote and ends with the establishment of the 220 specialized cell
types of the mammalian body. According to their decreasing differentiation
potential, specific terms have been assigned to the individual cell
populations that arise during development, including totipotency,
pluripotency, multipotency and unipotency
(Fig. 1, see also Glossary in
Box 1). Each cell population is
thought to have a characteristic epigenetic pattern that correlates with its
differentiation potential (Fig.
1). As shown in Fig.
1 (which is adapted from C. H. Waddington's `epigenetic landscape'
model) (Waddington, 1957
), a
marble rolling down a hill into one of several valleys illustrates the
declining developmental potential of individual cell populations. At each
bifurcation point, the potential of the marble (cell) to choose different
routes (cell fates) diminishes.
Under certain experimental conditions, differentiated cells can revert into
a less differentiated state, a process termed `nuclear reprogramming'
(Box 2). Examples include the
generation of pluripotent embryonic stem (ES) cells from unipotent B
lymphocytes or neurons by somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT)
(Eggan et al., 2004
;
Hochedlinger and Jaenisch,
2002a
; Li et al.,
2004
), or the derivation of pluripotent embryonic germ (EG) cells
from unipotent primordial germ cells (PGCs) upon cell explantation
(Matsui et al., 1992
;
Resnick et al., 1992
).
Reprogramming also describes the conversion of one differentiated cell type
into another, for instance of a B lymphocyte into a macrophage
(Xie et al., 2004
), or a
fibroblast into a muscle cell (Davis et
al., 1987
), following the expression of a single transcription
factor (Fig. 1). Because these
two examples of cell fate change may not involve a gain in differentiation
potential, the term `lineage conversion' or `transdifferentiation' is
currently used to describe them (Box
2). In Fig. 1, such
cell fate changes are illustrated by the marble moving uphill
(dedifferentiation) or across valleys (lineage conversion). In addition to
experimentally induced changes of cell fate, the term reprogramming is also
associated with the molecular changes that occur during normal germ cell
development (Surani et al.,
2007
), which are not accompanied by a change in cell fate
(Box 2).
|
Studies on the different forms of reprogramming have yielded important
insights into the molecular mechanisms of normal development and disease, such
as olfactory receptor choice (Eggan et
al., 2004
; Li et al.,
2004
) and cancer (Blelloch et
al., 2004
; Hochedlinger et
al., 2004
; Li et al.,
2003
), and have recently led to the identification of a defined
set of transcription factors that can convert a mature cell into a pluripotent
state in the culture dish, creating induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells
(Takahashi and Yamanaka,
2006
). Reprogramming to pluripotency with defined factors enables
the efficient derivation of patient-specific, autologous stem cells that have
considerable potential in the study and treatment of human diseases. Indeed,
skin cells reprogrammed to pluripotency with the `Yamanaka' transcription
factors have recently been shown to alleviate the symptoms of Parkinson's
disease (Wernig et al.,
2008c
) and sickle cell anemia
(Hanna et al., 2007
) in mouse
models. In addition to cellular therapy, patient-specific iPS cells may enable
the establishment of in vitro models of complex genetic diseases, which are
not yet well understood at the molecular level. To this end, patient-specific
iPS cell lines have been derived from individuals with a variety of diseases,
including diabetes, Parkinson's disease and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
(ALS) (Dimos et al., 2008
;
Park et al., 2008a
); these
cell lines are expected to facilitate the in vitro identification of novel
drugs for the treatment of these disorders.
|
| Box 2. Definitions of nuclear reprogramming
The term nuclear reprogramming is used to describe either functional or
molecular changes to cells undergoing fate changes. When used as a functional
term, reprogramming describes experimentally induced, stable changes in cell
fate. It is most often used in the context of the reprogramming of adult cells
into pluripotent cells, which can be achieved in various ways; for example, by
somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT), by the fusion of somatic cells with
pluripotent cells, by explanting germline cells (see Glossary,
Box 1), or by the expression of
a defined set of transcription factors in somatic cells (for a review, see
Jaenisch and Young, 2008
|
In this manuscript, we set recent advances in the induction of pluripotency in somatic cells with transcription factors into historical context and discuss the mechanisms that underlie this process in relation to alternative routes to reprogramming cell fate, including routes that are induced experimentally or that occur during normal development.
Scientific milestones leading to reprogramming with defined factors
Nuclear transfer (NT) was developed to assess whether the nuclei of
differentiated cells remain equivalent to the nuclei of embryonic cells, and
constituted the first attempts to reprogram an adult cell into a pluripotent
embryonic state. Seminal experiments (see
Box 3 for milestones in nuclear
reprogramming) in amphibians in the 1950s and 1960s
(Briggs and King, 1952
;
Gurdon, 1962
), and later in
mammals (Wilmut et al.,
1997
), demonstrated that the genomes of individual adult cells,
and even those of terminally differentiated cells
(Eggan et al., 2004
;
Hochedlinger and Jaenisch,
2002a
; Inoue et al.,
2005
; Li et al.,
2004
), remain able to generate viable cloned animals, indicating
that the developmental restrictions imposed on the genome during
differentiation must be due to reversible epigenetic modifications, rather
than to permanent genetic changes
(Hochedlinger and Jaenisch,
2002b
). These studies also indicated that the oocyte must contain
factors that mediate the reprogramming of adult cells into an embryonic state;
factors that should be identifiable and that could be used to induce
pluripotency when expressed in somatic cells.
The derivation and stable maintenance of pluripotent cell lines was also
instrumental for the reprogramming of somatic cells to pluripotency in vitro
(see Box 3). Specifically, the
study of teratocarcinomas in the 1950s and 1960s
(Stevens, 1967
;
Stevens and Little, 1954
) led
to the isolation of pluripotent embryonal carcinoma (EC) cell lines from
teratocarcinomas (Finch and Ephrussi,
1967
; Kahan and Ephrussi,
1970
; Kleinsmith and Pierce,
1964
), and subsequently to the derivation of ES cells from
blastocysts (Evans and Kaufman,
1981
; Martin,
1981
) and of embryonic germ (EG) cells from primordial germ cells
(PGCs) (Matsui et al., 1992
;
Resnick et al., 1992
)
(Box 1). While these cell lines
remain undifferentiated and immortal in culture, they undergo differentiation
into all cell types when reintroduced into blastocysts
(Bradley et al., 1984
;
Brinster, 1974
;
Matsui et al., 1992
;
Mintz and Illmensee,
1975
).
|
Previous work had already indicated that individual transcription factors,
when overexpressed or deleted, could induce cell fate changes in somatic
cells. For example, experiments by Harold Weintraub and colleagues showed that
the overexpression of the myogenic transcription factor Myod was sufficient to
convert fibroblasts into myogenic cells
(Davis et al., 1987
)
(Fig. 2). Similarly, the
elimination of Pax5 from mouse B cells results in their
dedifferentiation into progenitors that can give rise to multiple
hematopoietic lineages (Nutt et al.,
1999
), and the overexpression of the transcription factor
Cebp
(CCAAT enhancer binding protein alpha) can reprogram mouse B and T
cells into macrophages (Laiosa et al.,
2006
; Xie et al.,
2004
) (Fig. 2).
Similar to the transforming effects of transcription factors in adult cell
lineages, which result in lineage conversion, the perturbation of embryonic
transcription factors can induce major cell fate changes in embryonic cells
(Fig. 2). For instance, the
ectopic expression of the transcription factor Cdx2 in ES cells results in the
formation of trophectodermal stem cells from ES cells
(Niwa et al., 2005
).
Likewise, the ectopic expression of Gata factors induces the formation of
primitive endoderm (Fujikura et al.,
2002
; Shimosato et al.,
2007
). Together, these data indicated that the overexpression of
individual transcription factors in closely related cells could induce stable
cell fate changes. These observations provided the rationale for subsequent
attempts to reprogram cell types beyond the boundaries of their cell lineage
and differentiation state, including attempts to induce pluripotency in
differentiated cells through the overexpression of transcription factors.
| Box 3. Key milestones that led to the reprogramming of somatic cells
into iPS cells by transcription factors
1952 First nuclear transfer experiments with frogs
(Briggs and King, 1952
1962 Cloned tadpoles generated from frog intestinal cells
(Gurdon, 1962
1964 Demonstration that single, teratoma-derived embryonic carcinoma
(EC) cells are pluripotent (Kleinsmith and
Pierce, 1964
1976 Demonstration that EC cells can reprogram somatic cells in
hybrids (Miller and Ruddle,
1976
1981 Isolation of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells from blastocysts
(Evans and Kaufman, 1981
1987 Reprogramming of fibroblasts into muscle cells by Myod
(Davis et al., 1987
1992 Isolation of mouse embryonic germ (EG) cells from fetal germ
cells (Resnick et al., 1992
1997 First animal cloned from an adult cell (Dolly)
(Wilmut et al., 1997
1998 Derivation of human ES cells
(Thomson et al., 1998
2004 Reprogramming of B cells into macrophages by Cebp
2006 First induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells generated from adult
mouse fibroblasts (Takahashi and
Yamanaka, 2006
|
Generation of iPS cells from mouse and human somatic cells
Kazutoshi Takahashi and Shinya Yamanaka extended the observations that ES
cells contain dominant reprogramming activity and that transcription factors
are potent inducers of cell fate changes by identifying four transcription
factors, Oct4, Sox2, Klf4 and cMyc, from 24 predominantly ES cell-specific
genes, that were sufficient to reprogram adult mouse cells (fibroblasts) into
ES-like iPS cells when expressed retrovirally
(Fig. 3)
(Takahashi et al., 2007
).
Initially, reprogrammed cells were identified based on drug selection for the
expression of the ES cell-specific, but non-essential, gene Fbx15.
These first-generation iPS cells were similar, but not identical, to ES cells
(Fig. 3). For example, their
transcriptional and epigenetic patterns appeared to be only partially reset
from the fibroblast to the ES cell state. Moreover, these cells did not
support the development of viable chimeric mice upon injection into
blastocysts, which is indicative of a partially reprogrammed state.
Subsequent studies, however, showed that the identification of iPS cells
based on drug selection using the promoters of the essential pluripotency
genes Oct4 or Nanog
(Maherali et al., 2007
;
Okita et al., 2007
;
Wernig et al., 2007
) gives
rise to cells that are more similar to ES cells. The Oct4 and
Nanog genes may become reactivated more selectively in cells
undergoing faithful reprogramming, whereas Fbx15 may be reactivated
more broadly in treated cells, thus enriching for partially reprogrammed
cells. Another important observation was that a delay in drug selection yields
more faithfully reprogrammed iPS colonies
(Maherali et al., 2007
;
Okita et al., 2007
;
Wernig et al., 2007
). This
led to experiments showing that morphological criteria alone are sufficient to
obtain iPS cells (Blelloch et al.,
2007
; Maherali et al.,
2007
; Meissner et al.,
2007
). At the molecular level, completely reprogrammed iPS cells
show transcriptional patterns that are highly similar to those in ES cells, as
well as DNA demethylation of the promoter regions of Oct4 and
Nanog and, in female cells, the reactivation of the somatically
silent X chromosome. Moreover, iPS cells exhibit global patterns of histone
methylation, including histones H3 lysine 4 (K4) and lysine 27 (K27)
trimethylation, that are virtually indistinguishable from those in ES cells
(Maherali et al., 2007
;
Mikkelsen et al., 2008
;
Okita et al., 2007
;
Wernig et al., 2007
)
(Fig. 3). At the functional
level, completely reprogrammed iPS cells produce viable chimeric mice and
contribute to the germline, and even support the development of embryos that
are derived entirely from iPS cells (Hanna
et al., 2008
; Kim et al.,
2008b
; Wernig et al.,
2007
).
|
|
Transcription factor-induced reprogramming to pluripotency is a gradual
process; it takes 1-2 weeks to generate iPS cells from mouse fibroblasts
(Brambrink et al., 2008
;
Stadtfeld et al., 2008b
). To
dissect the mechanism of reprogramming, it has been informative to study
partially reprogrammed cells (Fig.
3), such as cells generated by the method of Fbx15 selection that
was initially used to identify iPS cells
(Takahashi and Yamanaka,
2006
). Partially reprogrammed cells are also frequently obtained
when morphological criteria alone are employed to isolate iPS cells
(Mikkelsen et al., 2008
). In
partially reprogrammed cells lines, the retroviral transgenes that are
generally used to deliver the various reprogramming factors are not silenced,
and the endogenous pluripotency genes show incomplete demethylation and
reactivation (Mikkelsen et al.,
2008
; Takahashi and Yamanaka,
2006
) (Fig. 3).
Genome-wide expression analyses have shown that partially reprogrammed cell
lines derived from B cells and fibroblasts are more similar to each other than
to their cells of origin, suggesting that there could be one or several common
intermediate states in which somatic cells get trapped in the culture dish,
irrespective of the cell of origin (see
Fig. 1).
Interestingly, partially reprogrammed cell lines show the activation of
lineage-specific genes that are not normally expressed in the starting cell
population or in pluripotent cells, such as Gata6, Sox9 and
Pax7 (Mikkelsen et al.,
2008
). Consistent with the notion that the ectopic expression of
these lineage-specific transcription factors might prevent a cell from being
converted into a pluripotent state, the knockdown of any of these genes
resulted in a more efficient transition from the partially to a fully
reprogrammed state (Mikkelsen et al.,
2008
) (Fig. 3). In
agreement with the finding that the inhibition of differentiation-associated
pathways is important for inducing pluripotency, the treatment of partially
reprogrammed iPS cells with inhibitors of the extracellular signal-related
kinase (ERK) and glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3)/Wnt signaling cascades
(Ying et al., 2008
)
facilitates their efficient conversion into fully reprogrammed iPS cells
(Silva et al., 2008
).
Interestingly, the inhibition of differentiation seems to be important also
during normal germ cell development
(Surani et al., 2007
). In
mammals, for example, the repression of the differentiation-associated Hox
genes by the SET domain protein Blimp1 is essential for the specification of
PGCs in vivo (Ohinata et al.,
2005
), indicating similar principles between the maintenance of
germ cell fate and the induction of pluripotency.
While the analysis of partially reprogrammed cell states has been
informative for understanding molecular barriers to reprogramming, a more
detailed analysis of the earlier and later stages of reprogramming is crucial
for establishing the sequence of transcriptional and epigenetic events that
lead to a pluripotent state. In attempts to define such early intermediates,
two studies have shown that the reprogramming of murine fibroblasts into iPS
cells follows a defined sequence of molecular events that begins with the
downregulation of somatic markers, such as Thy1 and collagens, followed by the
reactivation of the embryonic marker stage-specific embryonic antigen 1
(SSEA1; Fig. 3)
(Brambrink et al., 2008
;
Stadtfeld et al., 2008b
).
SSEA1-positive cells then gradually reactivate other markers associated with
pluripotency, including Oct4, Sox2, Nanog, telomerase
(tert), and the silent X chromosome in female fibroblasts. The
reactivation of these late markers correlates with the time window when cells
become independent of retroviral transgene expression and enter a
self-sustaining pluripotent state. It is possible that the partially
reprogrammed cell lines described above are the trapped equivalent of the
transient SSEA1-expressing cell population, although direct evidence for this
relationship is lacking (Fig.
3). The observation that the somatic markers of a cell become
downregulated before it progresses to a pluripotent state supports the notion
that the silencing of its differentiation program is an important initial step
towards re-establishing pluripotency. It further suggests that the
differentiation state of the cell of origin for iPS cells might affect the
efficiency and kinetics of the reprogramming process.
The differentiation status of the starting cell and reprogramming efficiency
NT is a very inefficient process (
1-3% of cloned blastocysts develop
into live newborns) (Hochedlinger and
Jaenisch, 2006
) and the derivation of iPS cells is even less
efficient, ranging from 0.01% to 0.1%
(Table 2). The low efficiency
of both processes has been argued to depend on the presence of rare stem cells
within the starting population. For example, adult stem cells are present in
many tissues at about the same frequency as the success rate of reprogramming.
Some adult stem cells share transcriptional regulators with ES cells, such as
the Zinc finger protein X-linked (Zfx)
(Galan-Caridad et al., 2007
)
and Sox2 (Ellis et al., 2004
),
and may require less epigenetic reprogramming than terminally differentiated
cells. While NT experiments have clearly demonstrated that fully
differentiated lymphocytes (Hochedlinger
and Jaenisch, 2002a
; Inoue et
al., 2005
) and neurons (Eggan
et al., 2004
; Li et al.,
2004
) can be reprogrammed into pluripotent ES cells, these
experiments did not exclude the possibility that adult stem cells were the
selective donors in most successful cloning experiments. In agreement with
this idea, neural stem cells (NSCs) and keratinocyte stem cells give rise to
cloned mice with greater efficiency than do mature fibroblasts, epidermal
transit amplifying cells, or neurons
(Blelloch et al., 2006
;
Eggan et al., 2004
;
Li et al., 2007
;
Li et al., 2004
;
Wakayama and Yanagimachi,
1999
). By contrast, experiments in the hematopoietic system
suggest that differentiated granulocytes are more efficient donors for NT than
are hematopoietic stem cells (Inoue et
al., 2006
; Sung et al.,
2006
), although these experiments have recently been challenged
(Hochedlinger and Jaenisch,
2007
).
|
The identity of the starting cells that give rise to iPS cells remains
controversial. Two recent experiments addressed the cell-of-origin question in
different cellular systems and came to different conclusions. In the first set
of experiments, Hanna et al. attempted to reprogram B lymphocytes into iPS
cells to evaluate whether terminally differentiated cells can give rise to iPS
cells (Hanna et al., 2008
). B
cells carry differentiation-associated DNA rearrangements, which serve as
unambiguous genetic markers of their differentiation state
(Hochedlinger and Jaenisch,
2002a
). Interestingly, the ectopic expression of Oct4, Sox2,
cMyc and Klf4 alone was insufficient to reprogram B lymphocytes
into iPS cells, even when employing a `secondary' system, in which most, if
not all, cells express the four factors homogeneously
(Wernig et al., 2008a
)
(Table 1). The authors had to
either overexpress the transcription factor Cebp
or knock down the
transcription factor Pax5, in addition to overexpressing the four factors, to
generate iPS cells. The elimination of Pax5 has previously been shown to endow
B cells with multipotency (Nutt et al.,
1999
) and the ectopic expression of Cebp
leads to the
downregulation of Pax5 and thus to the reprogramming of B cells into
macrophages (Xie et al.,
2004
). By contrast, progenitor B (pro-B) cells were permissive to
being reprogrammed by the four factors alone, consistent with the notion that
the differentiation state of the starting cell might affect reprogramming
efficiency.
In another set of experiments, Stadtfeld et al. used genetically marked,
terminally differentiated pancreatic β cells for reprogramming into iPS
cells (Stadtfeld et al.,
2008a
). β cells gave rise to iPS cells at a frequency
comparable to that of fibroblasts (0.1-0.2%;
Table 1), demonstrating that
this terminally differentiated cell type can be reprogrammed into iPS cells by
just four factors and that adult stem cells are unlikely to be the selective
cell type in successful reprogramming experiments. There are several
explanations for the different outcomes of the reprogramming of B cells and
β cells. First, B lymphocytes belong to the mesodermal lineage, whereas
β cells are derived from endoderm; liver and stomach cells, which are
also endodermal derivatives, have recently been suggested to be more amenable
to reprogramming than fibroblasts (which are mesodermal in origin)
(Aoi et al., 2008
).
Alternatively, β cells could be more easily reprogrammed than lymphocytes
because the pancreas is not organized into a hierarchical structure, as the
hematopoietic system is (which contains stem, progenitor and differentiated
cells) (Orkin and Zon, 2008
),
but rather reproduces its β cell pool by self duplication
(Dor et al., 2004
).
Technical limitations to reprogramming
Another explanation for the low efficiency of reprogramming could be that
insertional mutagenesis, which can be caused by the retroviruses typically
used to deliver the reprogramming factors, is potentially required for the
nucleus of the starting cell to undergo reprogramming. Previous data have
shown that retroviruses can activate endogenous genes in explanted
hematopoietic stem cells, which promoted their turnover and survival
(Kustikova et al., 2005
).
Similarly, one or several of the viral copies present in iPS cells might
integrate into, and activate, a gene(s) that facilitates the reacquisition of
a pluripotent, self-renewing state. However, the sequencing of viral insertion
sites in iPS cells derived from fibroblasts
(Varas et al., 2008
), liver
and stomach cells (Aoi et al.,
2008
) did not reveal any common integration sites, suggesting that
insertional mutagenesis does not play an essential role in the induction of
pluripotency. The possibility that retroviral insertion is required for the
generation of iPS cells was finally excluded by two recent independent studies
that produced mouse iPS cells by transiently introducing the four
reprogramming factors into somatic cells using either non-integrating
adenoviruses (Stadtfeld et al.,
2008c
) or transient plasmid transfection
(Okita et al., 2008
). The
efficiency of producing iPS cells with these transient expression methods was
one to two orders of magnitude lower than the rates achieved using retroviral
or lentiviral delivery methods, and will thus require further optimization to
be useful in research or for future therapeutic purposes.
When using retroviruses, fibroblast-derived iPS cells carry
10-20
proviral transgenes that express Oct4, Sox2, Klf4 and cMyc
(Maherali et al., 2007
;
Takahashi and Yamanaka, 2006
;
Wernig et al., 2007
), which
are found at different copy numbers per clone, suggesting that precise
relative amounts of the individual transcription factors are important for
reprogramming. This is consistent with observations that Oct4 and Sox2 levels
in ES cells are crucial for maintaining a self-renewing pluripotent state
(Kopp et al., 2008
;
Niwa et al., 2000
). In
further support of this idea, reprogramming of NSCs into iPS cells in the
absence of exogenous Sox2 expression increases the overall efficiency by
roughly fourfold (Eminli et al.,
2008
). It is conceivable that the frequency at which a single
somatic cell receives the four viral transgenes at the appropriate
stoichiometry is extremely low, resulting in the low overall efficiency. If
viral infection is indeed the rate-limiting step, one would predict that cells
that can reactivate all four factors at the correct stoichiometry should give
rise to iPS cells at an efficiency close to 100%. The use of iPS cells in
which the four transgenes can be reactivated with a doxycycline-inducible
system (`secondary system') has allowed this question to be addressed. When
mouse or human fibroblasts derived from such iPS cells were treated with
doxycycline, between 3-5% of the cells gave rise to iPS cells
(Hockemeyer et al., 2008
;
Maherali et al., 2008
;
Wernig et al., 2008a
)
(Table 1). This is a 30- to
100-fold increase in efficiency over primary cells infected directly with
viruses, suggesting that viral infection and expression are parameters that
affect reprogramming efficiency. However, these experiments also suggest that
the expression of the four factors alone is insufficient in itself to
reprogram adult cells to pluripotency and that additional rare events must
affect the overall efficiency of reprogramming. As we discuss next, these
events probably involve stochastic epigenetic events.
Stochastic epigenetic events: their impact on reprogramming
Several lines of evidence support the notion that stochastic epigenetic
events contribute to the low efficiency of reprogramming. Indirect evidence
for the involvement of such events comes from the observations that
reprogramming is a gradual process that takes several weeks, and that the
expression of the four factors alone is insufficient to efficiently convert
somatic cells into pluripotent cells (see above). Moreover, a study that used
reporter gene expression has shown that the transcriptional status of
genetically identical cells can be very different. Some clonally derived
daughter cells obtained from early appearing iPS colonies carrying an Oct4-GFP
reporter reactivate GFP early, while others reactive it late, and some do not
express it at all, despite carrying identical proviral integrations
(Meissner et al., 2007
).
Thus, even though the cells are genetically identical, their transcriptional
pattern, and therefore their epigenetic state, is different. Indeed,
genome-wide analyses have confirmed that striking differences exist in the
transcriptional and epigenetic signatures of partially and completely
reprogrammed sibling clones (Mikkelsen et
al., 2008
). Importantly, the treatment of somatic cells or cells
undergoing reprogramming with compounds that affect chromatin modifications,
including DNA and histone methylation inhibitors
(Huangfu et al., 2008a
;
Huangfu et al., 2008b
;
Mikkelsen et al., 2008
;
Shi et al., 2008b
), enhances
the efficiency of reprogramming significantly and facilitates the complete
conversion of partially reprogrammed cells that would otherwise fail to
reprogram into a pluripotent state (Fig.
3).
The requirement for stochastic epigenetic events to occur during the
formation of iPS cell lines might be common to other approaches that aim to
derive pluripotent cell lines from unipotent cells, given the uniformly low
efficiencies of their generation. For example, the derivation of EG cells from
PGCs (Durcova-Hills et al.,
2006
) and that of multipotent germline stem (mGS) cells from germ
line stem (GS) cells (Conrad et al.,
2008
; Guan et al.,
2006
; Kanatsu-Shinohara et
al., 2004
; Seandel et al.,
2007
) is thought to be even less efficient, ranging from 1-3% and
around 0.001%, respectively, even though both PGCs and GS cells express many
pluripotency genes, including Oct4 and Sox2
(Table 2)
(Imamura et al., 2006
;
Surani et al., 2007
).
Similarly, the reprogramming efficiency of somatic cells by ES cells in
hybrids is less than 0.0006%, increasing to 3-4% when Nanog is overexpressed
from the ES cell genome (Silva et al.,
2006
) (Table 2).
These low efficiencies of reprogramming somatic cells into pluripotent cells
are in contrast to the frequencies at which ES cell lines are generated from
pluripotent blastomeres or ICM cells. Specifically, the efficiencies of
deriving ES cell lines from single blastomeres of cleavage-stage embryos range
from 50-69% for two-cell blastomeres, 22-40% for four-cell blastomeres and
10-16% for eight-cell blastomeres (Chung
et al., 2006
; Wakayama et
al., 2007
) (Table
2). Moreover, it has been estimated that, on average, three out of
the
25 ICM cells found in a blastocyst (12%) give rise to ES cell lines
(Brook and Gardner, 1997
).
Together, these results suggest that undifferentiated blastomeres and ICM
cells require fewer epigenetic changes to convert into ES cell lines than do
the more differentiated PGCs and GSCs, which require more changes and thus
convert less efficiently into pluripotent cell lines. Interestingly, the
requirement for stochastic epigenetic events might not be limited to the
derivation of pluripotent cell lines in vitro; they appear to also play a role
in normal development (Box
4).
Assuming that the stochastic events crucial for the derivation of ES cells
from ICM cells are also important for the establishment of EG, mGS and iPS
cells, one might predict that the same genes and compounds that enhance ES
cell derivation should also facilitate the derivation of pluripotent cell
types from other sources. Indeed, the treatment of partially reprogrammed iPS
cells with inhibitors of the ERK kinase and GSK3 signalling cascades, both of
which are crucial for the derivation of ES cells
(Ying et al., 2008
), results
in the efficient conversion of partially reprogrammed cell lines into fully
reprogrammed iPS cells (Silva et al.,
2008
). Moreover, Wnt pathway activation has beneficial effects not
only on the growth of ES cells (Sato et
al., 2004
), but also for the reprogramming of somatic cells into
pluripotent cells by transcription factors
(Marson et al., 2008
) and for
cell fusion between somatic cells and ES cells
(Lluis et al., 2008
).
Likewise, loss of the tumor suppressor protein p53, which normally inhibits
the immortal growth of primary fibroblasts, enhances the transformation of
PGCs into embryonal carcinomas (Lam and
Nadeau, 2003
) and increases the number of mGS cells derived from
GS cells (Kanatsu-Shinohara et al.,
2004
), as well as the number of iPS colonies derived from
fibroblasts (Zhao et al.,
2008
), possibly by conferring immortality and/or by de-repressing
Nanog (Lin et al., 2005
).
| Box 4. Transcriptional fluctuations occurring during normal
development
During normal development, stochastic fluctuations in gene expression are
thought to influence cell fate decisions. For instance, subpopulations of
clonally derived hematopoietic progenitor cells have been found to exhibit
metastable states (which persist over multiple cell divisions), together with
global changes in gene expression and different tendencies to give rise to the
erythroid or myeloid lineages (Chang et
al., 2008
|
Reprogramming to pluripotency versus lineage conversion
How does the efficiency of reprogramming adult cells into a pluripotent
state compare with the efficiency with which one differentiated cell type
converts into another? Interestingly, the direct conversion of B cells and
pre-T cells into macrophages by the retroviral expression of Cebp
(Laiosa et al., 2006
;
Xie et al., 2004
), that of
fibroblasts into myogenic cells by the retroviral expression of Myod
(Davis et al., 1987
), and that
of acinar cells into β cells by adenoviral delivery in vivo of Pdx1, Ngn3
and Mafa (Zhou et al., 2008
)
does not appear to be restrained by major epigenetic barriers, based on the
high efficiency of lineage switching (Table
2). For example, 25-50% of fibroblasts that express Myod convert
into myogenic colonies (Davis et al.,
1987
). Pro- and pre-B cells that ectopically express Cebp
transform into macrophages at a frequency of
65% and mature B cells at a
frequency of
35% (Xie et al.,
2004
). Similarly,
60% of pre-T cells convert into macrophages
upon overexpression of Cebp
(Laiosa
et al., 2006
). Pancreatic acinar cells infected with adenoviruses
that express Pdx1, Ngn3 and Mafa convert into insulin-expressing β cells
at a frequency of 20% (Zhou et al.,
2008
). It is conceivable, therefore, that changing cell fates
within closely related cell types requires less epigenetic remodeling, leading
to the high efficiency of conversion. Consistent with this idea, the
expression of Cebp
and PU.1 in more distantly related fibroblasts gave
rise to cells that were similar, but not identical, to macrophages that had
been obtained from B cells, and their phenotype was not maintained upon
silencing of the viral transgenes (Feng et
al., 2008
).
These observations raise the general question of whether transcription factor-induced conversion across cell lineages and germ layers can ever generate epigenetically stable cell fates that closely mirror cell types found in vivo. It is possible that such dramatic switches in cell identity require more extensive changes in the epigenetic signature or involve very stable chromatin marks that can only be reset after going through a pluripotent ground state, i.e. they require de-differentiation and subsequent re-differentiation. A related question, which was initially raised in NT experiments, is whether iPS cells retain an `epigenetic memory' of their cell of origin (see Box 5).
Possible mechanisms of transcription factor-induced reprogramming
Differential requirement for the reprogramming factors
An open question is how the reprogramming factors induce the epigenetic
changes that are associated with reprogramming to pluripotency. Experiments in
which several combinations and orthologs of the four transcription factors
were tested demonstrated that not all four factors are required for
reprogramming (Nakagawa et al.,
2008
; Wernig et al.,
2008b
; Yu et al.,
2007
). The fact that KLF4 and cMYC can be replaced by NANOG and by
the RNA-binding protein LIN28 in human fibroblast reprogramming experiments
suggests that different molecular pathways can lead to reprogramming or,
alternatively, that these factors perform highly similar functions during this
process. In support of the latter, LIN28 was recently found to function as a
negative regulator of microRNA processing in ES cells, specifically of members
of the let-7 family (Viswanathan et al.,
2008
). cMYC represses the transcription of similar miRNAs,
suggesting that LIN28 and cMYC could perturb the same regulatory mechanisms
that contribute to reprogramming (Chang et
al., 2008
).
iPS colonies can be generated from mouse or human fibroblasts in the
absence of cMyc altogether, albeit at lower frequency and with delayed
kinetics (Nakagawa et al.,
2008
; Wernig et al.,
2008b
). The effect of cMyc can be partially compensated by
treating cells with either the histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor valproic
acid (VPA) or a ligand of the β-catenin pathway, Wnt3a
(Huangfu et al., 2008a
;
Marson et al., 2008
).
Moreover, VPA can replace the function of both cMYC and KLF4 in human cell
reprogramming, such that only the expression of OCT4 and SOX2 are required to
generate iPS cells (Huangfu et al.,
2008b
).
The starting cell also has an effect on the requirement for reprogramming
factors. As mentioned before, NSCs, which already express high levels of
endogenous Sox2, require only the ectopic expression of Oct4 with either Klf4
or cMyc to produce iPS cells (Eminli et
al., 2008
; Kim et al.,
2008b
; Shi et al.,
2008b
), and hepatocytes are as efficiently reprogrammed in the
absence of cMyc as in its presence (Aoi et
al., 2008
). Because cMyc, Klf4 and Sox2 (but not Oct4) are
expressed in multiple adult tissues and can be replaced by other orthologs
during reprogramming into iPS cells
(Nakagawa et al., 2008
), Oct4
appears to be the only irreplaceable, and possibly the most important,
determinant of direct reprogramming. However, a recent study suggested that
even Oct4 might be replaceable in certain cellular contexts: treatment of NSCs
with a chemical inhibitor of the histone methyltransferase G9a, which is
responsible for silencing the Oct4 promoter during normal
differentiation (see below), gave rise to Oct4-GFP-positive iPS cells upon
ectopic expression of Klf4 and cMyc alone
(Shi et al., 2008b
). When
combined with the calcium channel agonist BayK, this inhibitor even
facilitated the reprogramming of murine fibroblasts into iPS cells in the
absence of Sox2 and cMyc (Shi et al.,
2008a
). Although the mechanisms by which these small compounds
mediate reprogramming remain elusive at this point, it may indeed be possible
in the future to generate iPS cells solely with chemicals.
| Box 5. Retention of an `epigenetic memory' in iPS cells?
Does reprogramming erase all of the epigenetic modifications, the
`epigenetic memory', of the somatic donor cell? Interestingly, frog embryos
generated by nuclear transfer (NT) and derived from frog somite cells retain
Myod expression in cells that normally do not express Myod,
even after 24 cell divisions (Ng and
Gurdon, 2008
|
ES cell transcription factor networks
Studies of the transcriptional circuitry that controls the pluripotent
state of ES cells might be helpful for understanding the function of the
reprogramming factors. Recent genome-wide analyses in ES cells have suggested
that the three reprogramming factors Oct4, Sox2 and Klf4, and the
transcription factor Nanog specify ES cell identity by transcriptionally
activating the self-renewal program and by repressing lineage commitment
pathways (Boyer et al., 2005
;
Loh et al., 2006
)
(Fig. 4). Generally, multiple
pluripotency transcription factors co-occupy genes in ES cells that are active
but are repressed upon differentiation, and encode proteins that are important
for ES cell self-renewal and pluripotency
(Fig. 4A). By contrast, when
bound by only one of these transcription factors, target genes are often
transcriptionally repressed in ES cells, and encode regulators of lineage
commitment, which become activated upon the induction of differentiation
(Fig. 4B).
|
It has been proposed that the four reprogramming factors do not act on the
same set of genes, as cMyc binds to many genes that are not bound by Oct4,
Sox2 or Klf4 (Chen et al.,
2008
; Kim et al.,
2008a
). Nevertheless, cMyc shares target genes with other
transcription factors, including the family member nMyc, which can replace
cMyc in reprogramming experiments, and the cell cycle regulator E2F1 and Zfx
(Chen et al., 2008
)
(Fig. 4C), again indicating
cooperation among multiple transcription factors. It remains to be shown
whether cMyc does indeed have separable functions from the other three
reprogramming factors.
How do the transcription factors induce reprogramming?
Reprogramming needs to inactivate the somatic cell program and to activate
the ES cell-specific transcription programs of self-renewal and pluripotency.
One could speculate that the reprogramming factors contribute to both
functions, as they can, in ES cells, be both repressive and activating. Thus,
genes that encode somatic cell regulators could be repressed by the binding of
the reprogramming factors, while self-renewal and pluripotency genes would be
turned on (Fig. 4).
Autoregulatory loops, i.e. the binding of factors to their own promoters
(Boyer et al., 2005
), could
provide a platform on which ectopic transcription factors can jump-start the
transcription of their endogenous counterparts to a level that is sufficient
to maintain their own expression. Furthermore, the ectopic activation of
lineage differentiation programs that has been observed in partially
reprogrammed cells might reflect a function of Klf4 and Sox2 in normal
development (Mikkelsen et al.,
2008
). These transcription factors are also expressed in neural
and epidermal lineages, and could, potentially in combination with other
lineage-specific transcription factors, target genes during reprogramming that
they would not normally associate with in pluripotent cells.
The reprogramming factors could also have more global functions that do not
involve direct transcriptional control, which remain completely unexplored. A
few pleiotropic functions have been suggested for cMyc, ranging from the
control of initiation of DNA replication
(Dominguez-Sola et al., 2007
)
to global effects on chromatin structure, especially on histone acetylation
(Knoepfler, 2008
), which could
be important for providing the other reprogramming factors access to target
sites. In agreement with the latter observation, the inhibition of histone
deacetylation can replace cMyc in reprogramming experiments
(Huangfu et al., 2008a
;
Huangfu et al., 2008b
). One
could also envision that ectopically expressed factors titrate proteins
important for somatic cell transcription away from the DNA and sequester them
in inactive complexes, thereby acting as differentiation antagonists, as has
been described for Myod in muscle specification
(Puri et al., 2001
). Thus,
reprogramming is likely to be more complex than a simple model suggests, and
will involve a number of different mechanisms to overcome the epigenetic
barriers that are imposed during differentiation.
Overcoming epigenetic barriers
The inefficient activation of Oct4 in somatic cells following NT
is associated with the embryonic lethality of cloned mouse embryos
(Boiani et al., 2002
;
Bortvin et al., 2004
), and
Oct4 activation is a stringent measure of reprogramming success
during iPS cell generation (Meissner et
al., 2007
; Wernig et al.,
2007
), which is in agreement with the notion that Oct4 is
absolutely required for the establishment and maintenance of pluripotency
during normal development (Nichols et
al., 1998
). The Oct4 gene undergoes a complex process of
inactivation during post-implantation development, which involves multiple
layers of repression. Using differentiating ES cells as a model system, it was
shown that the binding of transiently acting transcriptional repressors, such
as Coup-TF1/2 (chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter-transcription factor) and
Gcnf (germ cell nuclear factor)
(Ben-Shushan et al., 1995
;
Fuhrmann et al., 2001
), leads
to the recruitment of histone deacetylases and the methyltransferase G9a,
which in turn triggers de novo methylation of the Oct4 promoter by
the de novo DNA methyltransferases Dnmt3a and Dnmt3b. Prior to de novo DNA
methylation, Oct4 can be readily reactivated when differentiating
cells are returned to ES cell culture conditions
(Feldman et al., 2006
),
indicating that only DNA methylation stably locks in the repressed state.
Differentiation-induced de novo DNA methylation is not limited to
Oct4 and appears to be a mechanism for the repression of a larger set
of pluripotency genes that includes Nanog, Zfp42, Gdf3, Tdgf1, Dppa4
and Tcl1 (Deb-Rinker et al.,
2005
; Farthing et al.,
2008
; Mohn et al.,
2008
), suggesting that DNA methylation lowers the chance of these
genes being inappropriately activated upon lineage commitment.
The observation that in GS cells many pluripotency genes show demethylation
but are not expressed might explain their tendency to spontaneously reprogram
into mGS cells upon explantation (see Glossary,
Box 1)
(Imamura et al., 2006
;
Kanatsu-Shinohara et al.,
2004
; Seandel et al.,
2007
). Interestingly, Oct4 continues to be highly
methylated in differentiated cells that are deficient in DNA methyltransferase
1 (DNMT1), the main enzyme that enables the inheritance of DNA methylation
patterns through mitosis, despite the fact that many other genes become
demethylated immediately (Feldman et al.,
2006
). This is presumably because of the constant recruitment of
de novo methyltransferases to the Oct4 promoter
(Feldman et al., 2006
).
Consistent with this observation, the reactivation of Oct4, and
probably its demethylation, occur at a very late stage of reprogramming
(Brambrink et al., 2008
;
Stadtfeld et al., 2008b
).
However, not all pluripotency regulators are repressed through the acquisition
of DNA methylation in somatic tissues. For example, Sox2 does not acquire this
chromatin mark (Mikkelsen et al.,
2008
; Mohn et al.,
2008
). Thus, multiple repressive mechanisms function to silence
the embryonic program, which need to be overcome during nuclear reprogramming.
In agreement with this notion, interfering with the three repressive
mechanisms that are implicated in the silencing of Oct4 and other
pluripotency genes - histone deacetylation, histone methylation and DNA
methylation - improves the efficiency of transcription factor-induced
reprogramming (Huangfu et al.,
2008a
; Huangfu et al.,
2008b
; Mikkelsen et al.,
2008
; Shi et al.,
2008b
). Whether these inhibitors function by directly targeting
the promoter regions of pluripotency genes or by acting indirectly remains to
be determined.
Nucleosome packaging and a repressive chromatin structure might `hide' many
of the ES cell-specific targets of the four reprogramming factors and so
prevent them from binding early in the reprogramming process. In some
instances, the reprogramming factors could possess an intrinsic ability to
alter chromatin structure in a manner similar to that of the transcription
factors HNF3 (hepatocyte nuclear factor 3) and GATA4 (GATA binding protein 4),
which bind to the albumin gene enhancer in silent chromatin and facilitate the
opening of an H1-compacted nucleosome array on this enhancer to activate the
gene (Cirillo et al., 2002
).
In other cases, the reprogramming factors might act passively by blocking
processes that would normally act to maintain the repressed state of ES
cell-specific genes. We will discuss the possibilities for overcoming DNA
methylation more specifically below.
Possible mechanisms leading to DNA demethylation
The mechanisms of DNA demethylation in reprogramming and normal development
remain largely elusive. Two waves of global demethylation can be distinguished
in mammalian development. Upon fertilization, the paternal genome becomes
actively demethylated in the zygote, while the maternal genome looses its
methylation marks passively during cleavage divisions
(Jaenisch and Bird, 2003
).
During the specification of PGCs, another round of demethylation occurs in
order to erase and subsequently re-establish methylation marks associated with
imprinted genes. During reprogramming, demethylation may occur passively; that
is, the direct binding of reprogramming factors to promoter or enhancer
regions might interfere with the methylation of newly synthesized DNA during
DNA replication (Fig. 5A). This
process would be stochastic and would be more likely to occur if multiple
transcription factors associate with the target gene
(Lin et al., 2000
). An example
of the localized demethylation that would result from such a physical
hindrance of DNA methylation is seen at the glucocorticoid receptor. This
receptor can induce localized DNA demethylation, which is required for the
subsequent recruitment of other transcription factors to neighboring sites
(Thomassin et al., 2001
).
Similarly, specific factors that contribute to the stable inheritance of
methylation patterns could be stochastically impaired, such as Uhrf1
(Ubiquitin-like, containing PHD and RING finger domains, protein), Dnmt3l,
Suv39h1/2 (Suppressor of variegation 3-9 homologs), Lsh (Lymphoid-specific
helicase), as well as Piwil1/2 (piwi-like homologs 1/2;
Fig. 5A)
(Bostick et al., 2007
;
Bourc'his and Bestor, 2006
;
Kuramochi-Miyagawa et al.,
2008
; Lehnertz et al.,
2003
; Sharif et al.,
2007
; Zhu et al.,
2006
).
|
In vivo versus in vitro reprogramming
As outlined above, the mechanisms that underlie nuclear reprogramming by NT
and transcription factors remain largely elusive. However, both reprogramming
events may involve processes that are similar to the ones that operate during
germ cell reprogramming. PGCs erase DNA and histone methylation patterns, as
well as genomic imprints, and reactivate the X chromosome during their
development. Of note, early PGCs express transcription factors and show a
chromatin signature that is reminiscent of that in pluripotent cells,
correlating with the time window when pluripotent EG cells can be derived
(Hajkova et al., 2008
). Thus,
their methylation and chromatin state must be permissive for their spontaneous
conversion into a pluripotent state and may resemble that of nascent iPS
cells. Other changes in PGCs include active demethylation of DNA followed by
the replacement of histone variants, such as H2A.Z
(Hajkova et al., 2008
). A
comparison of the mechanisms that lead to DNA demethylation and chromatin
changes during PGC differentiation and somatic cell reprogramming to
pluripotency should be quite informative, and may lead to strategies that
improve the efficient and faithful reprogramming of somatic cells by NT or by
defined factors.
Conclusions
Future explorations of the molecular mechanisms of different reprogramming
processes should shed light on two fundamental questions in mammalian
development: how is pluripotency established and how are cell fate decisions
made? It remains to be shown if transcription factor-induced reprogramming
progresses through the intermediate stages that are normally found during
differentiation. A better understanding of transcription factor-induced cell
fate changes should improve the development, and the efficiency, of ES cell
differentiation approaches, as well as attempts to convert one cell type
directly into another. Indeed, recent work on the transcription factor-induced
reprogramming of pancreatic acinar cells into insulin-producing β cells
has been a promising conceptual advance in this direction
(Zhou et al., 2008
). Solving
the question of whether any cell type can be directly derived from skin cells
or if transition through the pluripotent ground state is a requirement for a
switch across germ layers or cell lineages will surely stimulate future
research.
Reprogramming with transcription factors offers tremendous promise for the
future development of patient-specific pluripotent cells and for studies of
human diseases. The identification of optimized protocols for the
differentiation of iPS cells and ES cells into multiple functional cell types
in vitro and their proper engraftment in vivo will be challenges in the coming
years. Moreover, the risk of oncogenic events caused by the use of potent
oncogenes and by the random integration of delivery vectors into the genome is
a major roadblock that needs to be overcome before translating iPS cell
technology into the clinic. Given that the first small-molecule approaches
aimed at activating pluripotency genes have already been devised
(Huangfu et al., 2008a
;
Huangfu et al., 2008b
;
Marson et al., 2008
;
Shi et al., 2008a
;
Shi et al., 2008b
) and that
murine iPS cells have recently been derived by using non-integrative transient
expression strategies of the reprogramming factors
(Okita et al., 2008
;
Stadtfeld et al., 2008c
), we
expect that human iPS cells without permanent genetic alterations will soon be
generated.
Footnotes
We thank Raul Mostoslavsky, Thomas Graf, and members of the Hochedlinger and Plath labs for critical reading of the manuscript. We are grateful to Jim Resnick and Takashi Shinohara for discussion. K.P. is supported by the V and Kimmel Scholar Foundation, an NIH Director's Young Innovator Award and a CIRM Young Investigator Award. K.H. is supported by an NIH Director's Innovator Award, the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, the Kimmel Foundation and the V Foundation. Deposited in PMC for release after 12 months.
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