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Data from Cancer-Related Epigenome Changes Associated with Reprogramming to Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

Posted on 2023-03-30 - 19:46
Abstract

The ability to induce pluripotent stem cells from committed, somatic human cells provides tremendous potential for regenerative medicine. However, there is a defined neoplastic potential inherent to such reprogramming that must be understood and may provide a model for understanding key events in tumorigenesis. Using genome-wide assays, we identify cancer-related epigenetic abnormalities that arise early during reprogramming and persist in induced pluripotent stem cell (iPS) clones. These include hundreds of abnormal gene silencing events, patterns of aberrant responses to epigenetic-modifying drugs resembling those for cancer cells, and presence in iPS and partially reprogrammed cells of cancer-specific gene promoter DNA methylation alterations. Our findings suggest that by studying the process of induced reprogramming, we may gain significant insight into the origins of epigenetic gene silencing associated with human tumorigenesis, and add to means of assessing iPS for safety. Cancer Res; 70(19); 7662–73. ©2010 AACR.

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Cancer Research

AUTHORS (21)

  • Joyce E. Ohm
    Prashant Mali
    Leander Van Neste
    David M. Berman
    Liang Liang
    Kurinji Pandiyan
    Kimberly J. Briggs
    Wei Zhang
    Pedram Argani
    Brian Simons
    Wayne Yu
    William Matsui
    Wim Van Criekinge
    Feyruz V. Rassool
    Elias Zambidis
    Kornel E. Schuebel
    Leslie Cope
    Jonathan Yen
    Helai P. Mohammad
    Linzhao Cheng
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