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    Cell Stem Cell. 2008 Jun 5;2(6):595-601.

    Caspase activity mediates the differentiation of embryonic stem cells.

    Fujita J, Crane AM, Souza MK, Dejosez M, Kyba M, Flavell RA, Thomson JA, Zwaka TP.

    Center for Cell and Gene Therapy, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030, USA.

    Comment in:

    Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) are capable of indefinite self-renewal while retaining the ability to differentiate to any of the three germ layers that give rise to all somatic cell types. An emerging view is that a core set of transcription factors, including Oct4, Sox2, and Nanog, form a robust autoregulatory circuit that maintains ESCs in a self-renewing state. To accommodate the capacity of such cells to undergo germ layer-specific differentiation, we predicted a posttranslational mechanism that could negatively regulate these core self-renewal factors. Here we report caspase-induced cleavage of Nanog in differentiating ESCs. Stem cells lacking the Casp3 gene showed marked defects in differentiation, while forced expression of a caspase cleavage-resistant Nanog mutant in ESCs strongly promoted self-renewal. These results link a major component of the programmed cell-death pathway to the regulation of ESC development.

    PMID: 18522852 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 2494585

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