Birth of parthenote mice directly from parthenogenetic embryonic stem cells

Z Chen, Z Liu, J Huang, T Amano, C Li, S Cao… - Stem Cells, 2009 - academic.oup.com
Z Chen, Z Liu, J Huang, T Amano, C Li, S Cao, C Wu, B Liu, L Zhou, MG Carter, DL Keefe…
Stem Cells, 2009academic.oup.com
Mammalian parthenogenetic embryos are not viable and die because of defects in placental
development and genomic imprinting. Parthenogenetic ESCs (pESCs) derived from
parthenogenetic embryos might advance regenerative medicine by avoiding immuno-
rejection. However, previous reports suggest that pESCs may fail to differentiate and
contribute to some organs in chimeras, including muscle and pancreas, and it remains
unclear whether pESCs themselves can form all tissue types in the body. We found that …
Abstract
Mammalian parthenogenetic embryos are not viable and die because of defects in placental development and genomic imprinting. Parthenogenetic ESCs (pESCs) derived from parthenogenetic embryos might advance regenerative medicine by avoiding immuno-rejection. However, previous reports suggest that pESCs may fail to differentiate and contribute to some organs in chimeras, including muscle and pancreas, and it remains unclear whether pESCs themselves can form all tissue types in the body. We found that derivation of pESCs is more efficient than of ESCs derived from fertilized embryos, in association with reduced mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling in parthenogenetic embryos and their inner cell mass outgrowth. Furthermore, in vitro culture modifies the expression of imprinted genes in pESCs, and these cells, being functionally indistinguishable from fertilized embryo-derived ESCs, can contribute to all organs in chimeras. Even more surprisingly, our study shows that live parthenote pups were produced from pESCs through tetraploid embryo complementation, which contributes to placenta development. This is the first demonstration that pESCs are capable of full-term development and can differentiate into all cell types and functional organs in the body.
Disclosure of potential conflicts of interest is found at the end of this article.
Oxford University Press