A newly-created mouse-human embryo contains up to 4% human cells the most human cells yet of any chimera, or an organism made of two different sets of DNA.
Surprisingly, those human cells could learn from the mouse cells and develop faster at the pace of a mouse embryo rather than a more slowly developing human embryo. That finding was "very serendipitous We did not really foresee that," said senior author Jian Feng, a professor in the department of physiology and biophysics at the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Successfully growing human cells in mouse embryos might one day help scientists understand the growth and aging process of our bodies and how diseases such as COVID-19 damage cells and could eventually even serve as a scaffold to grow organs for transplantation, Feng said.
Related: The 9 most interesting transplants
Feng and his team tackled a long-standing issue in creating such chimeras: that in order for human embryonic stem cells and mouse embryonic stem cells to chat and mingle, they needed to be in the same state of development. Embryonic stem cells are pluripotent, meaning they can develop into any type of cell in the body.
But "the human embryonic stem cell looks and behaves very differently from the mouse embryonic stem cell," so past attempts to get them to comingle have all failed, Feng told Live Science. At first, researchers thought the failures were due to some kind of species barrier; but after many years of study, they realized that it wasn't a species issue, but rather a maturity one.
The human stem cells were in a later stage of development called a "primed" state, which normally occurs only after the human embryo has already been implanted in the uterine wall. In contrast, the mouse stem cells were in a more "naive" state, which normally occurs when the mouse embryo is still floating around in the fallopian tubes. In the past, researchers weren't able to convert human cells back to this naive state, Feng said.
In their experiments, Feng and his team were inspired by a process called "embryonic diapause" that occurs in hundreds of mammals from bears to mice: When there's some sort of hardship such as a famine or shortage of water, some animals' embryos can remain in the naive state inside a mother's fallopian tubes for months and sometimes over a year for the environment to become more suitable, Feng said.
It's not clear what triggers the embryos to pause in this state, but a protein called mTOR seems to be a sensor that detects when conditions are bad, he said. Feng and his team figured out that they could target this protein inside human stem cells to make the cells think that they were experiencing famine, and needed to jump to a more naive state where they could conserve energy, Feng said.
The protein mTOR normally promotes the production of proteins and other molecules to support cell growth and proliferation, so by inhibiting it, Feng and his team "shocked" the human cells into changing their metabolism and gene expression. "So it behaves pretty much like the mouse cell," Feng said. What resulted was a naive set of human stem cells that could be cultured together with mouse stem cells and "intermingle very nicely," Feng said. The researchers then injected 10 to 12 of these naive human stem cells into mouse embryos.
In most of the mouse embryos, the naive human stem cells successfully developed into mature human cells in all three germ layers: the ectoderm, or the primary cell layers that develop when the embryo is growing and which later develop to form hair, nails, the epidermis and nerve tissue; the mesoderm, or the cells that make up the organs; and the endoderm, or the inner lining of organs. But no human cells spilled over into germline tissue, which develops into egg and sperm cells.
These germ layers then developed into more differentiated cells, and when the researchers stopped their experiment on the 17th day, 14 embryos were between 0.1% and 4% human (some had less human cells and some had more), with human cells found through the embryo, including in the liver, heart, retina and red blood cells.
Related: First pig-monkey chimeras were just created in China
But what was really "surprising" was the speed at which the human cells developed, Feng said. For example, the embryos were able to generate human red blood cells in 17 days, compared to the roughly 56 days red blood cells take to develop in a growing human embryo. Similarly, human eye cells don't develop until much later on in the embryo, whereas within 17 days, human eye cells including photo receptors formed in the chimera. Basically, the human cells "assumed the clock of the mouse embryo," Feng said. Previously, scientists thought this accelerated development was impossible because the tempo of human cell development was always thought to be "kind of immutable," he added.
This paper identifies a "novel way" of turning primed human pluripotent stem cells into a naive state, said Ronald Parchem, an assistant professor in the Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine Center at Baylor College of Medicine in Texas, who was not a part of the study. But "the level of chimerism is low in this study," compared to another study that developed chimeras with up to 20% human cells per embryo, he said. That study, however, was published to the preprint database Biorxiv on May 24,and hasn't yet been peer-reviewed. "Together, these studies provide insight into capturing pluripotent states in vitro and highlight the barriers preventing successful cross-species chimerism," Parchem said. "Identifying ways to overcome these barriers has the potential to improve regenerative medicine."
These findings might "stimulate research" in the fundamental understanding of human development, especially how time is measured by biological systems, Feng said. Such chimeras could help scientists understand human diseases. For example, researchers might one day be able to regenerate human blood in a mouse model and study diseases such as malaria. Or if you can create human lung cells, or epithelial cells that line the respiratory tract, that mouse can become a "model system" for studying diseases like COVID-19, Feng said. In other words, mice with human cells can be infected with COVID-19 to understand how the virus attacks the body.
The most cited potential application of such chimeras is organ growth. But this likely won't happen in mice but much larger animals such as pigs, he said. Of course, these applications raise ethical issues, he added. One such ethical consideration is that chimeras blur the lines between species and that makes it difficult to determine the morality or the consciousness that those animals possess. For example, chimeras used in animal testing could be given too many human characteristics and have a similar moral status or consciousness to us, according to a previous Live Science report.
Feng said that much discussion needs to take place before such applications can be considered.
"This field requires much more exploration before this becomes a reality," said Carol Ware, the associate director at the University of Washington's Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, who was also not a part of the study. "A couple of the primary hurdles at this point are determining the host species for these human cells," and public acceptance in the work, she added.
"At this point, it would seem that the speed with which this clinical opportunity will become a reality will not be hindered by the ability to grow human organs," she added. "I would have liked to see," what happens when mTOR is taken away inside the lab dish and these naive human cells are allowed to advance again, particularly to see if some key cellular processes resume again, she added.
The findings were published in the journal Science Advances on May 13.
Originally published on Live Science.
See original here:
New human-mouse chimera is the most human yet - Livescience.com
- Advances in regenerative medicine-based approaches for skin ... - March 9th, 2025
- Regenerative Medicine: Case Study for Understanding and Anticipating ... - March 9th, 2025
- Top 3 Grants in Regenerative Medicine: February 2025 - RegMedNet - March 9th, 2025
- Editorial: Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine: Advances, Controversies, and Future Directions by Frontiers in Bioengineering and... - March 9th, 2025
- Malaysia To Host 7th World Conference On Exercise And Regenerative Medicine - BERNAMA - March 9th, 2025
- Advancing Regenerative Medicine: A Comprehensive Outlook on the Global Cell Therapy Market - openPR - March 9th, 2025
- Worlds First 3D-Printed Penis Implant Successfully Restores Function in Pigs and Rabbits - The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel - March 9th, 2025
- AskBio Receives FDA Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy designation for Parkinsons disease investigational gene therapy - Bayer - February 24th, 2025
- What is Regenerative Medicine? | Regenerative Medicine | University of ... - February 24th, 2025
- The quest for a communication device that tells cells to regenerate the body - Big Think - February 24th, 2025
- Transforming the future of regenerative medicine - Reuters - February 24th, 2025
- Breakthrough Alzheimer's Treatment Gets Official WHO Recognition - Major Milestone for Rare Disease Therapy - StockTitan - February 24th, 2025
- Regenerative Medicine Pioneer with 35-Year Track Record Takes Scientific Helm at ZEO ScientifiX - StockTitan - February 24th, 2025
- 101 Guide to Regenerative Medicine Types | Applications, Challenges - February 7th, 2025
- Regenerative Medicine | What is it? | ASCPM - February 7th, 2025
- Regenerative medicine and advanced therapy | NIST - February 7th, 2025
- Therapeutic Reprogramming toward Regenerative Medicine - February 7th, 2025
- Novel living biomaterial aims to advance regenerative medicine - February 7th, 2025
- UC Irvine-led discovery of new skeletal tissue advances regenerative ... - February 7th, 2025
- Top 3 Grants in Regenerative Medicine: January 2025 - RegMedNet - February 7th, 2025
- Advancements in lung regeneration: from bench to bedside - February 7th, 2025
- Entos Pharmaceuticals Awarded $4 Million USD in Funding from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) for its Congenital Generalized... - February 7th, 2025
- Adia Nutrition Officially Enters $15.1 Billion Global Stem Cell Market with Domestic Treatments by Successful Opening of First Florida Location -... - February 7th, 2025
- Cell therapy weekly: iPSC therapy IND for Phase III trial cleared - RegMedNet - February 7th, 2025
- Creative Medical Technology Holdings Expands Collaboration with Greenstone Biosciences to Accelerate iPSCelz - EIN News - February 7th, 2025
- Placental Stem Cell Therapy Solution Market Size And Booming - openPR - February 7th, 2025
- Stem Cells Applications in Regenerative Medicine and Disease ... - December 6th, 2024
- Ageing of stem cells reduces their capacity to form tumours - Nature.com - December 6th, 2024
- Master of Science in Regenerative Medicine and Entrepreneurships FUSION program information session - The Daily | Case Western Reserve University - December 6th, 2024
- BioRestorative Therapies Announces Notice of Allowance of - GlobeNewswire - December 6th, 2024
- Stem Cell Therapy Strategic Business Report 2024 - - GlobeNewswire - December 6th, 2024
- University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus-Led Team Receives Up to $46 Million to Develop Innovative Treatment to Cure Blindness - University of... - December 6th, 2024
- Affimed Announces Acimtamig and AlloNK Combination Granted Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT) Designation by the U.S. Food and Drug... - December 6th, 2024
- Navigating the hope and hype of regenerative medicine - October 14th, 2024
- Cell and Gene Therapy Investment Ticks Up After Hard Few Years - BioSpace - October 14th, 2024
- Crackdowns on Unproven Stem Cell Therapies Worked Abroad - Medpage Today - October 14th, 2024
- How Regenerative Medicine can help you get out of pain without surgery - WJLA - October 14th, 2024
- Regenity Biosciences Receives 510(k) Clearance for RejuvaKnee, a Groundbreaking Regenerative Meniscus Implant Device to Redefine the Standard of Care... - October 14th, 2024
- Buy, Sell, Hold: Cell and Gene Therapy - BioPharm International - October 14th, 2024
- Mayo Clinic offers unique regenerative medicine procedure for knee and ... - September 13th, 2024
- Regenerative Medicine to the Rescue - Cleveland Clinic - September 13th, 2024
- Regenerative medicine applications: An overview of clinical trials - September 13th, 2024
- The Progression of Regenerative Medicine and its Impact on Therapy ... - September 13th, 2024
- Immune cell injection significantly boosts healing of bone, muscle & skin - September 13th, 2024
- Regenerative Medicine Foundation - September 13th, 2024
- BridgeBio Receives FDAs Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT ... - September 13th, 2024
- Tissue engineering and regenerative medicine approaches in colorectal ... - September 13th, 2024
- Tubular scaffolds boost stem cell-driven bone regeneration in skull defects - Phys.org - September 13th, 2024
- Finding the right path(way) to reduce fat accumulation in the liver - Medical University of South Carolina - September 13th, 2024
- NAMRU EURAFCENT Signs Agreement with Egypt Center for Research and Regenerative Medicine - DVIDS - September 13th, 2024
- BridgeBio Receives FDAs Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT) Designation for BBP-812 Canavan Disease Gene Therapy Program - StockTitan - September 13th, 2024
- BioNexus Gene Lab Corp. Signs Strategic Partnership MOU with Shenzhen Rongguang Group to Advance Cancer Screening, Precision Medicine, and... - September 13th, 2024
- Neurona Therapeutics Receives $3.8 Million CIRM Grant for the Development of Next Generation Neural Cell Therapy Candidate - Yahoo Finance - September 13th, 2024
- Aging is associated with functional and molecular changes in distinct hematopoietic stem cell subsets - Nature.com - September 13th, 2024
- Cellino Awarded $25M in Funding from the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H) - Business Wire - September 13th, 2024
- HepaTx Enters Collaboration with Mayo Clinic to Advance Cell Therapy Technology for Liver Disease to Clinical Trials - Longview News-Journal - September 13th, 2024
- Obsidian Therapeutics Receives FDA Regenerative Medicine Advanced Therapy (RMAT) Designation for OBX-115 for the Treatment of Advanced Melanoma -... - September 4th, 2024
- Regenerative Medicine in Orthopedic Surgery: Expanding Our Toolbox - Cureus - September 4th, 2024
- Somite.ai takes pre-seed to $10M as it eyes to become the OpenAI of stem cell biology - CTech - September 4th, 2024
- Longeveron Announces Positive Type C Meeting with U.S. FDA Regarding Pathway to BLA for Lomecel-B in Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome (HLHS) - Yahoo... - September 4th, 2024
- Study Explores Potential Of 3D Printed Regenerative Breast Implants - Forbes - September 4th, 2024
- Nikon Announces New Image Analysis Functions to Empower Drug Discovery Research for Cancer, Neurological Disease, and Regenerative Medicine - PR... - September 4th, 2024
- Trinity researcher scores 800,000 to boost regenerative medicine - SiliconRepublic.com - September 4th, 2024
- Seeing the future: Zebrafish regenerates fully functional photoreceptor cells and restores its vision - EurekAlert - September 4th, 2024
- Regenerative Medicine Industry Projected to Surge to USD 73,084.2 Million by 2033, Growing at an 18.5% CAGR - Future Market Insights - September 4th, 2024
- What is regenerative medicine? | Northwell Health - July 2nd, 2024
- Science Saturday: A regenerative reset for aging - July 2nd, 2024
- Science Saturday: A year of new directions and advancements for ... - March 29th, 2024
- Diverse ways regenerative medicine is advancing health care - March 29th, 2024
- Stem cell-based regenerative medicine - PMC - National Center for ... - February 27th, 2024
- Regenerative medicine | NIST - February 10th, 2024
- San Jose blood stem cell donor meets 15-year-old whose life he saved in Los Angeles - The Mercury News - May 17th, 2023
- Regenerative medicine: Current therapies and future directions - April 23rd, 2023
- What Is Regenerative Medicine? | Goals and Applications | ISCRM - April 23rd, 2023
- Important Patient and Consumer Information About Regenerative Medicine ... - April 23rd, 2023
- Regenerative medicine can be a boon for those with Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis - Hindustan Times - April 23rd, 2023
- About Regenerative Medicine - Center for Regenerative ... - Mayo Clinic - April 7th, 2023
- Regenerative Medicine | National Institutes of Health (NIH) - April 7th, 2023
- Porcine Vaccine Market is estimated to be US$ 4.41 billion by 2030 with a CAGR of 7.50%during the forecast - EIN News - April 7th, 2023
- Advancing Safe and Effective Regenerative Medicine Products - March 21st, 2023