Cell fate specification, gene expression and spatial restriction are process finely tuned by epigenetic regulatory mechanisms. At the same time, mechanical forces have been shown to be crucial to drive cell plasticity and boost differentiation. Indeed, several studies have demonstrated that transitions along different specification states are strongly influenced by 3D rearrangement and mechanical properties of the surrounding microenvironment, that can modulate both cell potency and differentiation, through the activation of specific mechanosensing-related pathways. An overview of small molecule ability to modulate cell plasticity and define cell fate is here presented and results, showing the possibility to erase the epigenetic signature of adult dermal fibroblasts and convert them into insulin-producing cells (EpiCC) are described. The beneficial effects exerted on such processes, when cells are homed on an adequate substrate, that shows “in vivo“ tissue-like stiffness are also discussed and the contribution of the Hippo signalling mechano-transduction pathway as one of the mechanisms involved is examined. In addition, results obtained using a genetically modified fibroblast cell line, expressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) under the control of the porcine insulin gene (INS) promoter (INS-eGFP transgenic pigs), are reported. This model offers the advantage to monitor the progression of cell conversion in real time mode. All these observations have a main role in order to allow a swift scale-up culture procedure, essential for cell therapy and tissue engineering applied to human regenerative medicine, and fundamental to ensure an efficient translation process from the results obtained at the laboratory bench to the patient bedside. Moreover, the creation of reliable in vitro model represents a key point to ensure the development of more physiological models that, in turn, may reduce the number of animals used, implementing non-invasive investigations and animal welfare and protection.

Adding a dimension to cell fate / T. Brevini, E.F.M. Manzoni, S. Arcuri, F. Gandolfi. - In: ANIMAL REPRODUCTION. - ISSN 1806-9614. - 16:1(2018), pp. 18-23. ((Intervento presentato al 7. convegno International Symposium on Animal Biology of Reproduction tenutosi a Aracaju nel 2018 [10.21451/1984-3143-AR2018-0096].

Adding a dimension to cell fate

T. Brevini;E.F.M. Manzoni;S. Arcuri;F. Gandolfi
2018

Abstract

Cell fate specification, gene expression and spatial restriction are process finely tuned by epigenetic regulatory mechanisms. At the same time, mechanical forces have been shown to be crucial to drive cell plasticity and boost differentiation. Indeed, several studies have demonstrated that transitions along different specification states are strongly influenced by 3D rearrangement and mechanical properties of the surrounding microenvironment, that can modulate both cell potency and differentiation, through the activation of specific mechanosensing-related pathways. An overview of small molecule ability to modulate cell plasticity and define cell fate is here presented and results, showing the possibility to erase the epigenetic signature of adult dermal fibroblasts and convert them into insulin-producing cells (EpiCC) are described. The beneficial effects exerted on such processes, when cells are homed on an adequate substrate, that shows “in vivo“ tissue-like stiffness are also discussed and the contribution of the Hippo signalling mechano-transduction pathway as one of the mechanisms involved is examined. In addition, results obtained using a genetically modified fibroblast cell line, expressing the enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) under the control of the porcine insulin gene (INS) promoter (INS-eGFP transgenic pigs), are reported. This model offers the advantage to monitor the progression of cell conversion in real time mode. All these observations have a main role in order to allow a swift scale-up culture procedure, essential for cell therapy and tissue engineering applied to human regenerative medicine, and fundamental to ensure an efficient translation process from the results obtained at the laboratory bench to the patient bedside. Moreover, the creation of reliable in vitro model represents a key point to ensure the development of more physiological models that, in turn, may reduce the number of animals used, implementing non-invasive investigations and animal welfare and protection.
No
English
3D culture; mechano-sensing; epigenetic conversion
Settore VET/01 - Anatomia degli Animali Domestici
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2018
Colegio Brasileiro de Reproducao Animal
16
1
18
23
6
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
International Symposium on Animal Biology of Reproduction
Aracaju
2018
7
scopus
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Adding a dimension to cell fate / T. Brevini, E.F.M. Manzoni, S. Arcuri, F. Gandolfi. - In: ANIMAL REPRODUCTION. - ISSN 1806-9614. - 16:1(2018), pp. 18-23. ((Intervento presentato al 7. convegno International Symposium on Animal Biology of Reproduction tenutosi a Aracaju nel 2018 [10.21451/1984-3143-AR2018-0096].
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
4
262
Article (author)
no
T. Brevini, E.F.M. Manzoni, S. Arcuri, F. Gandolfi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/715877
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