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Multi-omics approach reveals post-transcriptionally regulated genes are essential for human pluripotent stem cells

Authors :
10722811
20961197
20423014
60546993
10379539
10295694
Iwasaki, Mio
Kawahara, Yuka
Okubo, Chikako
Yamakawa, Tatsuya
Nakamura, Michiko
Tabata, Tsuyoshi
Nishi, Yohei
Narita, Megumi
Ohta, Akira
Saito, Hirohide
Yamamoto, Takuya
Nakagawa, Masato
Yamanaka, Shinya
Takahashi, Kazutoshi
10722811
20961197
20423014
60546993
10379539
10295694
Iwasaki, Mio
Kawahara, Yuka
Okubo, Chikako
Yamakawa, Tatsuya
Nakamura, Michiko
Tabata, Tsuyoshi
Nishi, Yohei
Narita, Megumi
Ohta, Akira
Saito, Hirohide
Yamamoto, Takuya
Nakagawa, Masato
Yamanaka, Shinya
Takahashi, Kazutoshi
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The effects of transcription factors on the maintenance and differentiation of human-induced or embryonic pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs/ESCs) have been well studied. However, the importance of posttranscriptional regulatory mechanisms, which cause the quantitative dissociation of mRNA and protein expression, has not been explored in detail. Here, by combining transcriptome and proteome profiling, we identified 228 posttranscriptionally regulated genes with strict upregulation of the protein level in iPSCs/ESCs. Among them, we found 84 genes were vital for the survival of iPSCs and HDFs, including 20 genes that were specifically necessary for iPSC survival. These 20 proteins were upregulated only in iPSCs/ESCs and not in differentiated cells derived from the three germ layers. Although there are still unknown mechanisms that downregulate protein levels in HDFs, these results reveal that posttranscriptionally regulated genes have a crucial role in iPSC survival.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1458635824
Document Type :
Electronic Resource