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Converting Adult Somatic Cells To Pluripotent Stem Cells Using A Single 
Virus
ScienceDaily (Jan. 11, 2009) - A Boston University School of Medicine-led 
research team has discovered a more efficient way to create induced 
Pluripotent Stem (iPS) cells, derived from mouse fibroblasts, by using a 
single virus vector instead of multiple viruses in the reprogramming 
process.
The result is a powerful laboratory tool and a significant step toward the 
application of embryonic stem cell-like cells for clinical purposes such as 
the regeneration of organs damaged by inherited or degenerative diseases, 
including emphysema, diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, and Alzheimer's 
Disease.
Prior research studies have required multiple retroviral vectors for 
reprogramming -- steps that depended on four different viruses to transfer 
genes into the cells' DNA - essentially a separate virus for each 
reprogramming gene (Oct4. Klf4, Sox2 and cMyc). Upon activation these genes 
convert the cells from their adult, differentiated status to what amounts to 
an embryonic-like state.
However, the high number of genomic integrations -- 15 to 20 -- that 
typically occurs when multiple viruses are used for reprogramming, poses a 
safety risk in humans, as some of these genes (i.e. cMyc) can cause cancer. 
In addition, the viruses can integrate in cell locations turning on 
potential oncogenes.
The major milestone the six-member research team, led by Gustavo 
Mostoslavsky, Boston University Assistant Professor of Medicine in the 
Gastroenterology Section, achieved was combining the four vectors into a 
single "stem cell cassette" containing all four genes. The cassette (named 
STEMCCA) is comprised of a single multicistronic mRNA encoding the four 
transcription factors using a combination of 2A peptide technology and an 
internal ribosomal entry site (IRES).
With the STEMCCA vector, the researchers were able to generate iPS cells 
more efficiently -- 10 times higher than previously reported studies.
"The use of a single lentiviral vector for the derivation of iPS cells will 
help reduce the variability in efficiency that has been observed between 
different laboratories, thus enabling more consistent genetic and 
biochemical characterizations of iPS cells and the reprogramming process," 
the researchers concluded.
"We believe that the specific design of the cassette together with the fact 
that all four genes are expressed from the same transcript could account for 
the high efficiency we obtained" commented Cesar A. Sommer, first author in 
the paper and a postdoctoral fellow at Boston University Medical School's 
Gastroenterology Section.
Most importantly, several iPS clones were generated with a single viral 
integration, a major advance compared to the multiple integrations observed 
in other studies.
"Now we could move forward toward the elimination of the whole cassette 
using recombination technologies", noted Mostoslavsky.
Darrell N. Kotton, another co-author on the paper and an Assistant Professor 
at Boston University Medical School's Pulmonary Section mentioned that 
preliminary studies already confirmed that the STEMCCA vector works with 
high efficiency for the reprogramming of human cells.
In addition to Mostoslavsky, Sommer and Kotten, the other authors are 
Matthias Stadtfeld and Konrad Hochedlinger, both of Massachusetts General 
Hospital Cancer Center and the Center for Regenerative Medicine, and George 
J. Murphy, of the Department of Genetics at Harvard Medical School.
Their findings in Stem Cells appear on-line as of December 18th.

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
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