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Chemical compound-based direct reprogramming for future clinical applications
Yukimasa Takeda, Yoshinori Harada, Toshikazu Yoshikawa, Ping Dai
Bioscience Reports · 2018 · ▲ 56 citations
Epigenetic alterations
Stem-cell exhaustion
Altered intercellular communication
Partial reprogramming (OSK)
Cell culture / in vitro
Human
Mouse
Review
Abstract
Recent studies have revealed that a combination of chemical compounds enables direct reprogramming from one somatic cell type into another without the use of transgenes by regulating cellular signaling pathways and epigenetic modifications. The generation of induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells generally requires virus vector-mediated expression of multiple transcription factors, which might disrupt genomic integrity and proper cell functions. The direct reprogramming is a promising alternative to rapidly prepare different cell types by bypassing the pluripotent state. Because the strategy also depends on forced expression of exogenous lineage-specific transcription factors, the direct reprogramming in a chemical compound-based manner is an ideal approach to further reduce the risk for tumorigenesis. So far, a number of reported research efforts have revealed that combinations of chemical compounds and cell-type specific medium transdifferentiate somatic cells into desired cell types including neuronal cells, glial cells, neural stem cells, brown adipocytes, cardiomyocytes, somatic progenitor cells, and pluripotent stem cells. These desired cells rapidly converted from patient-derived autologous fibroblasts can be applied for their own transplantation therapy to avoid immune rejection. However, complete chemical compound-induced conversions remain challenging particularly in adult human-derived fibroblasts compared with mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). This review summarizes up-to-date progress in each specific cell type and discusses prospects for future clinical application toward cell transplantation therapy.
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Provenance
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- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1042/bsr20171650
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- 2026-06-18 MST
Cite this
APA
Takeda, Y., Harada, Y., Yoshikawa, T., & Dai, P. (2018). Chemical compound-based direct reprogramming for future clinical applications. <em>Bioscience Reports</em>. https://doi.org/10.1042/bsr20171650
Vancouver
Takeda Y, Harada Y, Yoshikawa T, Dai P. Chemical compound-based direct reprogramming for future clinical applications. Bioscience Reports. 2018. doi:10.1042/bsr20171650.
BibTeX
@article{yukimasa2018Chemic,
title = {Chemical compound-based direct reprogramming for future clinical applications},
author = {Yukimasa Takeda and Yoshinori Harada and Toshikazu Yoshikawa and Ping Dai},
journal = {Bioscience Reports},
year = {2018},
doi = {10.1042/bsr20171650},
}
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