Effect of initial seeding density on cell behavior-driven epigenetic memory and preferential lineage differentiation of human iPSCs

STEM CELL RESEARCH(2021)

Cited 4|Views4
No score
Abstract
Understanding the cellular behavioral mechanisms underlying memory formation and maintenance in human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) culture provides key strategies for achieving stability and robustness of cell differentiation. Here, we show that changes in cell behavior-driven epigenetic memory of hiPSC cultures alter their pluripotent state and subsequent differentiation. Interestingly, pluripotency-associated genes were activated during the entire cell growth phases along with increased active modifications and decreased repressive modifications. This memory effect can last several days in the long-term stationary phase and was sustained in the aspect of cell behavioral changes after subculture. Further, changes in growth-related cell behavior were found to induce nucleoskeletal reorganization and active versus repressive modifications, thereby enabling hiPSCs to change their differentiation potential. Overall, we discuss the cell behavior-driven epigenetic memory induced by the culture environment, and the effect of previous memory on cell lineage specification in the process of hiPSC differentiation.
More
Translated text
Key words
Human induced pluripotent stem cells, Proliferation, Differentiation potential, Mechanical effects, Behavioral epigenetic memory
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined