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Review

Induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells from human fetal stem cells (hFSCs)

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Pages 101-110 | Received 18 Jan 2013, Accepted 28 May 2013, Published online: 01 Apr 2013
 

Abstract

Introduction

 

(1) Human embryonic stem (ES) cells are pluripotent but are difficult to be used for therapy because of immunological, oncological and ethical barriers. (2) Pluripotent cells exist in vivo, i.e., germ cells and epiblast cells but cannot be isolated without sacrificing the developing embryo. (3) Reprogramming to pluripotency is possible from adult cells using ectopic expression of OKSM and other integrative and non-integrative techniques. (4) Hurdles to overcome include i.e stability of the phenotype in relation to epigenetic memory.

Sources of data

We reviewed the literature related to reprogramming, pluripotency and fetal stem cells.

Areas of agreement

(1) Fetal stem cells present some advantageous characteristics compared with their neonatal and postnatal counterparts, with regards to cell size, growth kinetics, and differentiation potential, as well as in vivo tissue repair capacity. (2) Amniotic fluid stem cells are more easily reprogrammed to pluripotency than adult fibroblast. (3) The parental population is heterogeneous and present an intermediate phenotype between ES and adult somatic stem cells, expressing markers of both.

Areas of controversy

(1) It is unclear whether induced pluripotent stem (iPS) derived from amniotic fluid stem cells are fully or partially reprogrammed. (2) Optimal protocols to ensure highest efficiency and phenotype stability remains to be determined. (3) The “level” of reprogramming, fully vs partial, of iPS derived from amniotic fluid stem cells remain to be determined.

Growing points

Banking of fully reprogrammed cells may be important both for (1) autologous and allogenic applications in medicine, and (2) disease modeling.

Submitted

01/18/13

Revised

05/24/13

Accepted

05/28/13

Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest

No potential conflicts of interest were disclosed.

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