Stem Cells International (Jan 2016)

Derivation of Pluripotent Cells from Mouse SSCs Seems to Be Age Dependent

  • Hossein Azizi,
  • Sabine Conrad,
  • Ursula Hinz,
  • Behrouz Asgari,
  • Daniel Nanus,
  • Heike Peterziel,
  • Akbar Hajizadeh Moghaddam,
  • Hossein Baharvand,
  • Thomas Skutella

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/8216312
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2016

Abstract

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Here, we aimed to answer important and fundamental questions in germ cell biology with special focus on the age of the male donor cells and the possibility to generate embryonic stem cell- (ESC-) like cells. While it is believed that spermatogonial stem cells (SSCs) and truly pluripotent ESC-like cells can be isolated from adult mice, it remained unknown if the spontaneous conversion of SSCs to ESC-like cells fails at some age. Similarly, there have been differences in the literature about the duration of cultures during which ESC-like cells may appear. We demonstrate the possibility to derive ESC-like cells from SSC cultures until they reach adolescence or up to 7 weeks of age, but we point out the impossibility to derive these cells from older, mature adult mice. The inability of real adult SSCs to shift to a pluripotent state coincides with a decline in expression of the core pluripotency genes Oct4, Nanog, and Sox2 in SSCs with age. At the same time genes of the spermatogonial differentiation pathway increase. The generated ESC-like cells were similar to ESCs and express pluripotency markers. In vitro they differentiate into all three germ lineages; they form complex teratomas after transplantation in SCID mice and produce chimeric mice.