(
Weizmann Institute of Science - Publications and Media Relations)
Embryonic
stem cells have the enormous potential to treat and cure many medical
problems. That is why the discovery that induced embryonic-like stem
cells can be created from skin cells (iPS cells) was rewarded with a
Nobel Prize in 2012. But the process has remained frustratingly slow and
inefficient, and the resulting stem cells are not yet ready for medical
use. Research in the lab of the Weizmann Institute’s Dr. Yaqub Hanna,
just published in
Nature, dramatically changes that.
Dr.
Hanna and his group revealed the “brake” that holds back the production
of stem cells, and found that releasing this brake can both synchronize
the process and increase its efficiency from around 1% or less today to
100%. These findings may help facilitate the production of stem cells
for medical use, as well as advancing our understanding of the
mysterious process by which adult cells can revert back into their
original, embryonic state.
Embryonic stem cells are those that
have not undergone any “specialization”; thus they can give rise to any
type of cell in the body. This is what makes them so valuable: They can
be used, among other things, to repair damaged tissue, treat autoimmune
disease and even grow transplant organs.
Using stem cells taken
from embryos is problematic because of availability and ethical
concerns, but the hopes for their use were renewed in 2006, when a team
led by Shinya Yamanaka of Kyoto University discovered that it is
possible to “reprogram” adult cells. The resulting cells, called
“induced pluripotent stem cells” (iPSCs), are created by inserting four
genes into their DNA.
Despite this breakthrough, the
reprograming process is fraught with difficulty: It can take up to four
weeks; the timing is not coordinated among the cells; and less than one
percent of the treated cells actually end up becoming stem cells.
Hanna
and his team asked: What is the main obstacle – or obstacles – that
prevent successful reprograming in the majority of cells? In his
postdoctoral research, Hanna had employed mathematical models to show
that a single obstacle was responsible. Of course in biology, Hanna is
the first to admit, experimental proof is required to back up the
models. The present study not only provides the proof, it reveals the
identity of that single obstacle and shows that removing it can
dramatically improve reprograming.
Hanna’s group, led by Dr. Noa
Novershtern, Yoach Rais, Asaf Zviran and Shay Geula of the Molecular
Genetics Department, together with members of the genomics unit of the
Institute’s Israel Structural Proteomics Center, looked at a certain
protein, called MBD3, whose function was unknown. MBD3 had caught their
attention because it is expressed in every cell in the body, at every
stage of development. This is quite rare: In general, most types of
proteins are produced in specific cells, at specific times, for specific
functions.
The team found that there is one exception to the
rule of universal expression of this protein: the first three days after
conception. These are exactly the three days in which the fertilized
egg begins dividing, and the nascent embryo is a growing ball of
pluripotent stem cells that will eventually supply all the cell types in
the body. Starting on the fourth day, differentiation begins and the
cells already start to lose their pluripotent status. And that is just
when the MBD3 proteins first appear.
This finding has
significant implications for the producing iPSCs for medical use. The
researchers showed that removing MBD3 from the adult cells can improve
efficiency and speed the process by several orders of magnitude. The
time needed to produce the stem cells was shortened from four weeks to
eight days. As an added bonus, since the cells all underwent the
reprograming at the same rate, the scientists will now be able, for the
first time, to actually follow it step by step and reveal its mechanisms
of operation.
Hanna points out that his team’s achievement was
based on research into the natural pathways of embryonic development:
“Scientists investigating reprograming can benefit from a deeper
understanding of how embryonic stem cells are produced in nature. After
all, nature still makes them best, in the most efficient manner.”
In March 2013, Dr. Yaqub (Jacob) Hanna received the 2013 Rappaport Prize,
a prestigious and award given for excellence and innovation in
biomedical research - as a young researcher for his "pioneering studies
on embryonic stem cells.” He is also the recipient of the Broad
Institute Collaborative Project Award. In 2010, the MIT Technology Review Magazine named Dr. Jacob Hanna as one of the top innovators in the world under the age of 35.An
Arab Israeli born in Kafr Rama in the Lower Galilee, he received his
B.Med.Sci., M.Sc., M.D., and Ph.D. degrees at the Hebrew University of
Jeruaslem, and from 2007 served as a postdoctoral fellow at the
Whitehead Institute of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is
currently a Senior Scientist in the Department of Molecular Genetics at
the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot.