332 Derivation of bovine-induced pluripotent stem cells by piggyBac-mediated reprogramming

Induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells are a seminal breakthrough in stem cell research and are promising for the development of advanced regenerative therapies and farm animal biotechnology. Considering the potential of this technology for both basic and clinical research, it is tempting to extend this research to important livestock species, such as cattle, in which authentic embryonic stem cell lines are yet not available. The first attempts to produce iPS cells from livestock species were made using retro- and lentiviral vectors, which are associated with an increased risk of insertional mutagenesis and which are not removable after reprogramming. Here, we describe a nonviral method for the derivation of bovine iPS cells, employing a piggyBac (PB) transposon system. The reprogramming PB transposon encodes the primate cDNA of 6 core reprogramming factors, OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, MYC, LIN28, and NANOG, separated by self-cleaving 2A peptide sequences and driven by the chimeric CAGGS promoter. The derived bovine iPS line expressed typical endogenous genes (OCT4, SOX2, c-MYC, KLF4, NANOG, REX1, and ALP) by RT-PCR and OCT-4 as well as SSEA-1 and 4 pluripotency-related markers by immunostaining, and it exhibited silencing of exogenous reprograming factors. Moreover, the iPS line showed long-term proliferation (until the 40th passage) under feeder-free culture conditions, differentiated into derivatives of the 3 germ layers in vitro, and formed teratomas (4/6) after subcutaneous injection into immunodeficient nude mice. These results are a major step towards the derivation of authentic bovine iPS cells, and thus facilitate the genetic modifications of the bovine genome.

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