Whole-blastocyst culture followed by laser drilling technology enhances the efficiency of ICM isolation and ESC derivation from good and poor-quality mouse embryos: new insights for derivation of hESC lines
Metadatos
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2008Résumé
The optimization of human embryonic stem (hES) cell line derivation methods is challenging because
many worldwide laboratories have neither access to spare human embryos nor ethical approval
for using supernumerary human embryos for hES cell derivation purposes. Additionally,
studies performed directly on human embryos imply a waste of precious human biological material.
In this study, we developed a new strategy based on the combination of whole-blastocyst culture
followed by laser drilling destruction of the trophoectoderm for improving the efficiency of inner
cell mass (ICM) isolation and ES cell derivation using murine embryos. Embryos were divided
into good- and poor-quality embryos. We demonstrate that the efficiency of both ICM isolation and
ES cell derivation using this strategy is significantly superior to whole-blastocyst culture or laser
drilling technology itself. Regardless of the ICM isolation method, the ES cell establishment depends
on a feeder cell growth surface. Importantly, this combined methodology can be successfully applied
to poor-quality blastocyts that otherwise would not be suitable for laser drilling itself nor immunosurgery
in an attempt to derive ES cell lines due to the inability to distinguish the ICM. The
ES cell lines derived by this combined method were characterized and shown to maintain a typical
morphology, undifferentiated phenotype, and in vitro and in vivo three germ layer differentiation
potential. Finally, all ES cell lines established using either technology acquired an aneuploid karyotype
after extended culture periods, suggesting that the method used for ES cell derivation does
not seem to influence the karyotype of the ES cells after extended culture. This methodology may
open up new avenues for further improvements for the derivation of hES cells, the majority of which
are derived from frozen, poor-quality human embryos.