PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Telomere reprogramming and maintenance in porcine iPS cells.

  • Guangzhen Ji,
  • Weimin Ruan,
  • Kai Liu,
  • Fang Wang,
  • Despoina Sakellariou,
  • Jijun Chen,
  • Yang Yang,
  • Maja Okuka,
  • Jianyong Han,
  • Zhonghua Liu,
  • Liangxue Lai,
  • Sarantis Gagos,
  • Lei Xiao,
  • Hongkui Deng,
  • Ning Li,
  • Lin Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0074202
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
p. e74202

Abstract

Read online

Telomere reprogramming and silencing of exogenous genes have been demonstrated in mouse and human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells). Pigs have the potential to provide xenotransplant for humans, and to model and test human diseases. We investigated the telomere length and maintenance in porcine iPS cells generated and cultured under various conditions. Telomere lengths vary among different porcine iPS cell lines, some with telomere elongation and maintenance, and others telomere shortening. Porcine iPS cells with sufficient telomere length maintenance show the ability to differentiate in vivo by teratoma formation test. IPS cells with short or dysfunctional telomeres exhibit reduced ability to form teratomas. Moreover, insufficient telomerase and incomplete telomere reprogramming and/or maintenance link to sustained activation of exogenous genes in porcine iPS cells. In contrast, porcine iPS cells with reduced expression of exogenous genes or partial exogene silencing exhibit insufficient activation of endogenous pluripotent genes and telomerase genes, accompanied by telomere shortening with increasing passages. Moreover, telomere doublets, telomere sister chromatid exchanges and t-circles that presumably are involved in telomere lengthening by recombination also are found in porcine iPS cells. These data suggest that both telomerase-dependent and telomerase-independent mechanisms are involved in telomere reprogramming during induction and passages of porcine iPS cells, but these are insufficient, resulting in increased telomere damage and shortening, and chromosomal instability. Active exogenes might compensate for insufficient activation of endogenous genes and incomplete telomere reprogramming and maintenance of porcine iPS cells. Further understanding of telomere reprogramming and maintenance may help improve the quality of porcine iPS cells.