Abstract
BackgroundDespite years of research, porcine-induced pluripotent stem cells (piPSCs) with germline chimeric capacity have not been established. Furthermore, the key transcription factors (TFs) defining the naïve state in piPSCs also remain elusive, even though TFs in the inner cell mass (ICM) are believed to be key molecular determinants of naïve pluripotency. In this study, interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF-1) was screened to express higher in ICM than trophectoderm (TE). But the impact of IRF-1 on maintenance of pluripotency in piPSCs was not determined.MethodsTranscriptome profiles of the early ICM were analyzed to determine highly interconnected TFs. Cells carrying these TFs’ reporter were used to as donor cells for somatic cell nuclear transfer to detect expression patterns in blastocysts. Next, IRF1-Flag was overexpressed in DOX-hLIF-2i piPSCs and AP staining, qRT-PCR, and RNA-seq were conducted to examine the effect of IRF-1 on pluripotency. Then, the expression of IRF-1 in DOX-hLIF-2i piPSCs was labeled by GFP and qRT-PCR was conducted to determine the difference between GFP-positive and GFP-negative cells. Next, ChIP-Seq was conducted to identify genes target by IRF-1. Treatment with IL7 in wild-type piPSCs and STAT3 phosphorylation inhibitor in IRF-1 overexpressing piPSCs was conducted to confirm the roles of JAK-STAT3 signaling pathway in IRF-1’s regulation of pluripotency. Moreover, during reprogramming, IRF-1 was overexpressed and knocked down to determine the change of reprogramming efficiency.ResultsIRF-1 was screened to be expressed higher in porcine ICM than TE of d6~7 SCNT blastocysts. First, overexpression of IRF-1 in the piPSCs was observed to promote the morphology, AP staining, and expression profiles of pluripotency genes as would be expected when cells approach the naïve state. Genes, KEGG pathways, and GO terms related to the process of differentiation were also downregulated. Next, in the wild-type piPSCs, high-level fluorescence activated by the IRF-1 promoter was associated with higher expression of naïve related genes in piPSCs. Analysis by ChIP-Seq indicated that genes related to the JAK-STAT pathway, and expression of IL7 and STAT3 were activated by IRF-1. The inhibitor of STAT3 phosphorylation was observed could revert the expression of primed genes in IRF-1 overexpressing cells, but the addition of IL7 in culture medium had no apparent change in the cell morphology, AP staining results, or expression of pluripotency related genes. In addition, knockdown of IRF-1 during reprogramming appeared to reduce reprogramming efficiency, whereas overexpression exerted the converse effect.ConclusionThe IRF-1 expressed in the ICM of pigs’ early blastocyst enhances the pluripotency of piPSCs, in part through promoting the JAK-STAT pathway.
Highlights
Despite years of research, porcine-induced pluripotent stem cells with germline chimeric capacity have not been established
Analysis by Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)-Seq indicated that genes related to the JAK-STAT pathway, and expression of IL7 and STAT3 were activated by interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF-1)
The differentially expressed transcription factors upregulated in inner cell mass (ICM) were associated to the pluripotency and embryonic development, which was proved by Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichment; 9 transcription factors upregulated in ICM (BCL3, IRF-1, DNMT1, GTF3C1, NCOA1, SOX2, STAT3, TCF3, and MCM4) were selected for further analysis
Summary
Porcine-induced pluripotent stem cells (piPSCs) with germline chimeric capacity have not been established. The key transcription factors (TFs) defining the naïve state in piPSCs remain elusive, even though TFs in the inner cell mass (ICM) are believed to be key molecular determinants of naïve pluripotency. The impact of IRF-1 on maintenance of pluripotency in piPSCs was not determined. Due to their high degree of genetic, physiologic, and anatomic similarities with humans, pigs are excellent models of human diseases and are suitable xenograft donors [1, 2]. Compared with pESCs derived from porcine blastocysts, piPSCs were induced from somatic cells by reprogramming with pluripotency-associated transcription factors, which have the advantage of being readily available. PiPSCs that have germline chimeric capacity have not been thoroughly characterized
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