Pluripotent Stem Cells Induced from Mouse Somatic Cells by Small-Molecule Compounds

Pingping Hou(Center for Life Sciences), Yanqin Li(Center for Life Sciences), Xu Zhang(Peking University), Chun Liu(Peking University), Jingyang Guan(Center for Life Sciences), Honggang Li(Center for Life Sciences), Ting Zhao(Center for Life Sciences), Junqing Ye(Peking University), Weifeng Yang, Kang Liu(Center for Life Sciences), Jian Ge(Peking University), Jun Xu(Center for Life Sciences), Qiang Zhang(Peking University), Yang Zhao(Center for Life Sciences), Hongkui Deng(Peking University)
Science
July 19, 2013
Cited by 1,386

Abstract

Pluripotent stem cells can be induced from somatic cells, providing an unlimited cell resource, with potential for studying disease and use in regenerative medicine. However, genetic manipulation and technically challenging strategies such as nuclear transfer used in reprogramming limit their clinical applications. Here, we show that pluripotent stem cells can be generated from mouse somatic cells at a frequency up to 0.2% using a combination of seven small-molecule compounds. The chemically induced pluripotent stem cells resemble embryonic stem cells in terms of their gene expression profiles, epigenetic status, and potential for differentiation and germline transmission. By using small molecules, exogenous "master genes" are dispensable for cell fate reprogramming. This chemical reprogramming strategy has potential use in generating functional desirable cell types for clinical applications.


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