학술논문

A method to recapitulate early embryonic spatial patterning in human embryonic stem cells.
Document Type
Article
Source
Nature Methods. Aug2014, Vol. 11 Issue 8, p847-854. 8p.
Subject
*HUMAN embryonic stem cells
*CELL culture
*CELL differentiation
*BONE morphogenetic proteins
*SERUM albumin
*ACTIVIN
Language
ISSN
1548-7091
Abstract
Embryos allocate cells to the three germ layers in a spatially ordered sequence. Human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) can generate the three germ layers in culture; however, differentiation is typically heterogeneous and spatially disordered. We show that geometric confinement is sufficient to trigger self-organized patterning in hESCs. In response to BMP4, colonies reproducibly differentiated to an outer trophectoderm-like ring, an inner ectodermal circle and a ring of mesendoderm expressing primitive-streak markers in between. Fates were defined relative to the boundary with a fixed length scale: small colonies corresponded to the outer layers of larger ones. Inhibitory signals limited the range of BMP4 signaling to the colony edge and induced a gradient of Activin-Nodal signaling that patterned mesendodermal fates. These results demonstrate that the intrinsic tendency of stem cells to make patterns can be harnessed by controlling colony geometries and provide a quantitative assay for studying paracrine signaling in early development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]