Abstract

Induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines for studies investigating many diseases can be established from peripheral blood mononuclear cells; here, an iPSC line was established from CD34+ cells isolated from the peripheral blood of a healthy woman. The cells were electrotransfected with three different recombinant plasmids to generate a normal-karyotype iPSC line that expresses characteristic surface markers and other pluripotent stem cell genes and can differentiate into all three germ layers in vivo. These newly established iPSC lines, a normal human cell line, can serve as a control line in studies investigating the pathogenesis of various diseases and meet the conditions for organoid studies.

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