Reprogramming Efficiency Following Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer in Influenced by the Differentiation and Methylation State of the Donor Nucleus
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Stem Cells
Volume
24
Publication Date
1-1-2006
First Page
2007
Last Page
2013
Abstract
Reprogramming of a differentiated cell nucleus by somatic cell nuclear transplantation is an inefficient process. Following nuclear transfer, the donor nucleus often fails to express early embryonic genes and establish a normal embryonic pattern of chromatin modifications. These defects correlate with the low number of cloned embryos able to produce embryonic stem cells or develop into adult animals. Here, we show that the differentiation and methylation state of the donor cell influence the efficiency of genomic reprogramming. First, neural stem cells, when used as donors for nuclear transplantation, produce embryonic stem cells at a higher efficiency than blastocysts derived from terminally differentiated neuronal donor cells, demonstrating a correlation between the state of differentiation and cloning efficiency. Second, using a hypomorphic allele of DNA methyltransferase-1, we found that global hypomethylation of a differentiated cell genome improved cloning efficiency. Our results provide functional evidence that the differentiation and epigenetic state of the donor nucleus influences reprogramming efficiency.
Recommended Citation
Blelloch R.*, Wang Z.*, Meissner A., Pollard S., Smith A., and Jaenisch R. Reprogramming Efficiency following Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer is Influenced by the Differentiation and Methylation State of the Donor Nucleus. Stem Cells (2006) 24(9):2007-13 (*equal first-author contributions).