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IGF and FGF cooperatively establish the regulatory...
Journal article

IGF and FGF cooperatively establish the regulatory stem cell niche of pluripotent human cells in vitro

Abstract

Distinctive properties of stem cells are not autonomously achieved, and recent evidence points to a level of external control from the microenvironment. Here, we demonstrate that self-renewal and pluripotent properties of human embryonic stem (ES) cells depend on a dynamic interplay between human ES cells and autologously derived human ES cell fibroblast-like cells (hdFs). Human ES cells and hdFs are uniquely defined by insulin-like growth factor (IGF)- and fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-dependence. IGF 1 receptor (IGF1R) expression was exclusive to the human ES cells, whereas FGF receptor 1 (FGFR1) expression was restricted to surrounding hdFs. Blocking the IGF-II/IGF1R pathway reduced survival and clonogenicity of human ES cells, whereas inhibition of the FGF pathway indirectly caused differentiation. IGF-II is expressed by hdFs in response to FGF, and alone was sufficient in maintaining human ES cell cultures. Our study demonstrates a direct role of the IGF-II/IGF1R axis on human ES cell physiology and establishes that hdFs produced by human ES cells themselves define the stem cell niche of pluripotent human stem cells.

Authors

Bendall SC; Stewart MH; Menendez P; George D; Vijayaragavan K; Werbowetski-Ogilvie T; Ramos-Mejia V; Rouleau A; Yang J; Bossé M

Journal

Nature, Vol. 448, No. 7157, pp. 1015–1021

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

August 30, 2007

DOI

10.1038/nature06027

ISSN

0028-0836

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