Chickarmane2008 - Stem cell lineage determination

In this work, a dynamical model of lineage determination based upon a minimal circuit, as discussed in PMID: 17215298 , which contains the Oct4/Sox2/Nanog core as well its interaction with a few other key genes is discussed.

This model is described in the article:

Chickarmane V, Peterson C
PloS one. 2008, 3(10):e3478

Abstract:

BACKGROUND: Recent studies have associated the transcription factors, Oct4, Sox2 and Nanog as parts of a self-regulating network which is responsible for maintaining embryonic stem cell properties: self renewal and pluripotency. In addition, mutual antagonism between two of these and other master regulators have been shown to regulate lineage determination. In particular, an excess of Cdx2 over Oct4 determines the trophectoderm lineage whereas an excess of Gata-6 over Nanog determines differentiation into the endoderm lineage. Also, under/over-expression studies of the master regulator Oct4 have revealed that some self-renewal/pluripotency as well as differentiation genes are expressed in a biphasic manner with respect to the concentration of Oct4. METHODOLOGY/

PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We construct a dynamical model of a minimalistic network, extracted from ChIP-on-chip and microarray data as well as literature studies. The model is based upon differential equations and makes two plausible assumptions; activation of Gata-6 by Oct4 and repression of Nanog by an Oct4-Gata-6 heterodimer. With these assumptions, the results of simulations successfully describe the biphasic behavior as well as lineage commitment. The model also predicts that reprogramming the network from a differentiated state, in particular the endoderm state, into a stem cell state, is best achieved by over-expressing Nanog, rather than by suppression of differentiation genes such as Gata-6.

CONCLUSIONS: The computational model provides a mechanistic understanding of how different lineages arise from the dynamics of the underlying regulatory network. It provides a framework to explore strategies of reprogramming a cell from a differentiated state to a stem cell state through directed perturbations. Such an approach is highly relevant to regenerative medicine since it allows for a rapid search over the host of possibilities for reprogramming to a stem cell state.

To the extent possible under law, all copyright and related or neighbouring rights to this encoded model have been dedicated to the public domain worldwide. Please refer to CC0 Public Domain Dedication for more information.

Chelliah Vijayalakshmi viji@ebi.ac.uk EMBL-EBI Peterson Carsten carsten@thep.lu.se Lund Strategic Research Centre for Stem Cell Biology and Cell Therapy, Lund University, Sweden. Chickarmane Vijay vchickar@caltech.edu Keck Graduate Institute, California 2008-12-05T14:17:42Z 2013-06-05T16:45:56Z a0 a1 A a2 OCT4 SOX2 a3 OCT4 SOX2 NANOG 1 b0 A b1 OCT4 b2 OCT4 SOX2 b3 OCT4 SOX2 NANOG b4 CDX2 OCT4 b5 GCNF gamma1 OCT4 c0 c1 OCT4 SOX2 c2 OCT4 SOX2 NANOG 1 d0 OCT4 d1 OCT4 SOX2 d2 OCT4 SOX2 NANOG gamma2 SOX2 e0 e1 OCT4 SOX2 e2 OCT4 SOX2 NANOG e3 SN 1 f0 OCT4 f1 OCT4 SOX2 f2 OCT4 SOX2 NANOG f3 OCT4 GATA6 f4 SN gamma3 NANOG g0 g1 CDX2 1 h0 CDX2 h1 CDX2 OCT4 gamma4 CDX2 i0 i1 CDX2 i2 GATA6 1 j0 CDX2 j1 GATA6 gamma5 GCNF p0 p1 OCT4 p2 GATA6 1 q0 OCT4 q1 GATA6 q2 NANOG q3 SG gammag GATA6