| December
26, 2004
UCSD Discovery Shows How Embryonic
Stem Cells Perform 'Quality Control' Inspections
By Kim McDonald
Biologists at
the University of California, San Diego have found a fundamental
mechanism used by embryonic stem cells to assure that genetically
damaged stem cells do not divide and pass along the damage to
daughter stem cells.
Their discovery, detailed
in an advance online publication of the journal Nature Cell
Biology, solves the longstanding mystery of how embryonic
stem cells, which have the potential to divide an unlimited
number of times and differentiate to make all of the cell types
in the body, are able to avoid duplicating cells that have sustained
genetic damage.
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Photo
of mouse embryonic stem cells
Credit: Tongxiang Lin, UCSD |
“What we discovered
is a primary mechanism that allows embryonic stem cells to perform
quality control inspections during their self-renewal, the process
by which these cells undergo unlimited cellular division to
produce an unlimited number of daughter cells,” says Yang
Xu, an associate professor of biology at UCSD who headed the
research team.
“Since DNA damage
can occur during normal cellular propagation as well as after
the exposure of cells to DNA-damaging radiation and chemicals,
it is critical for the embryonic stem cells to develop stringent
mechanisms to ensure the repair of DNA damage and prevent the
passage of DNA damage to their daughter cells. Unrepaired DNA
damage will cause genetic instability and, ultimately, cellular
transformation into cancer cells.”
Xu and his team made
their discovery while working with embryonic stem cell lines
from mice, which possess the same known properties and capabilities
as human embryonic stem cells. They found that a protein, p53,
known to play a critical role in the suppression of tumors in
both humans and mice, is also used to maintain the genetic stability
of embryonic stem cells.
The scientists, who
included Tongxiang Lin, a UCSD postdoctoral fellow and the first
author of the study, and Connie Chao, a graduate student in
Xu’s laboratory, discovered that p53 activated by DNA
damage in mouse embryonic stem cells directly suppresses the
expression of a gene called Nanog, which is necessary for the
self renewal, or unlimited duplication, of these stem cells.
The suppression of Nanog promotes embryonic stem cells to differentiate
into other cell types.
“The end result
of all of these actions by p53 is to deprive embryonic stem
cells with DNA damage the ability to self renew themselves and
pass the DNA damage onto their daughter cells,” says Xu.
“p53 also contributes to the eventual elimination of DNA
damage in the embryonic stem cells that have already differentiated
into specific cell types, thus preventing the development of
cancerous cells.”
“These findings
will open new avenues of research for those of us who study
mouse embryonic stem cells on how these cells maintain genetic
stability and self renewal,” he adds. “They will
also provide a foundation for future studies involving human
embryonic stem cells of how these cells maintain genetic stability
during their self renewal.”
Other scientists involved
in the study included Shin’ichi Saito, Sharlyn Mazur and
Ettore Appella of the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda,
Md., and Maureen Murphy of the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia.
The study was supported by a grant from the National Cancer
Institute.
Comment: Yang
Xu, (858) 822-1084, (858) 699-5265 (cell)
Media Contact: Kim
McDonald (858) 534-7572
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