Abstract

Human embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells represent the stem cells of testicular germ cell tumours (TGCTs) and are morphologically, antigenically and functionally related to the stem cells of early mammalian embryos. Despite the large capacity for differentiation displayed by TGCT stem cells, little is known of the factors controlling their developmental potency. We have analyzed the differentiation elicited in NT2D1 human embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells by Bone Morphogenetic Proteins (BMPs) and compared it with that elicited by retinoic acid (RA). We have found that while RA induced expression of neuronal, endodermal and epithelial markers in NT2D1 human EC cells, treatment with BMPs resulted in a predominantly epithelial phenotype. We also provide evidence to suggest that at least some of the effects elicited by RA in human EC cells might be mediated through RA-induced expression of BMP-7. Thus BMPs may play an important role in specifying the type of differentiation arising from human multipotent stem cells. The manipulation of BMP signalling in human embryonic multipotent stem cells may therefore prove a useful approach in attempts to generate specific differentiated cell types in vitro, and loss of the malignant and/or transformed phenotype.

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