US20240018485A1
2024-01-18
18/182,258
2023-03-10
Smart Summary: Induced pluripotent stem cells from older donors have more problems than those from younger donors, including genetic instability and issues with cell death and energy use. These problems make older stem cells more likely to cause cancer. By blocking a specific activity related to glutathione, researchers can improve the health of these older stem cells and lower their cancer risk. Adding a factor called ZSCAN 10 helps restore the normal function of these cells, making them more stable and better at responding to DNA damage. Overall, using ZSCAN 10 and other methods can make stem cells from older donors safer for medical use. 🚀 TL;DR
Disclosed are findings that: (a) induced pluripotent stem cells derived from aged donors (A-iPSC) show increased genomic instability, a defect in apoptosis, a defect in glucose metabolism, and a blunted DNA damage response are compared to those derived from young donors (Y-iPSC); and (b) inhibition of excessive glutathione-mediated H202 scavenging activity, found to be associated with A-iPSC and in turn inhibiting DNA damage response and apoptosis, substantially rescues these defects and reduces the oncogenic potential of A-iPSC. Supplementation of pluripotency factor ZSCAN 10 (shown to be poorly activated in A-iPSC and to act upstream of glutathione involvement), e.g., by expression as an adjunct to the four Yamanaka iPSC reprogramming factors, led to substantial recovery of genomic stability, DNA damage response, and apoptosis in A-iPSC through enhancing GLUT3 and normalizing homeostasis of glutathione/H202; GLUT3 (a pluripotent stem cell-specific glucose transporter acting upstream of glutathione and also poorly activated in A-iPSC) has similar effects, indicating that inhibition of glutathione/H202 notably through delivery of ZSCAN 10 and/or GLUT3 and/or an exosome subunit will be clinically useful, resulting in A-iPSC of improved properties and reduced oncogenic potential.
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C12N5/0696 » CPC main
Undifferentiated human, animal or plant cells, e.g. cell lines; Tissues; Cultivation or maintenance thereof; Culture media therefor; Animal cells or tissues; Human cells or tissues; Vertebrate cells Artificially induced pluripotent stem cells, e.g. iPS
C07K14/4702 » CPC further
Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from vertebrates from mammals not used Regulators; Modulating activity
C12N2501/50 » CPC further
Active agents used in cell culture processes, e.g. differentation Cell markers; Cell surface determinants
C12N2501/602 » CPC further
Active agents used in cell culture processes, e.g. differentation; Transcription factors Sox-2
C12N2510/00 » CPC further
Genetically modified cells
C12N2501/604 » CPC further
Active agents used in cell culture processes, e.g. differentation; Transcription factors Klf-4
C12N2501/605 » CPC further
Active agents used in cell culture processes, e.g. differentation; Transcription factors Nanog
C12N2501/606 » CPC further
Active agents used in cell culture processes, e.g. differentation; Transcription factors c-Myc
C12N2501/608 » CPC further
Active agents used in cell culture processes, e.g. differentation; Transcription factors Lin28
C12N2501/71 » CPC further
Active agents used in cell culture processes, e.g. differentation; Enzymes Oxidoreductases (EC 1.)
C12N2501/998 » CPC further
Active agents used in cell culture processes, e.g. differentation Proteins not provided for elsewhere
C12N2501/603 » CPC further
Active agents used in cell culture processes, e.g. differentation; Transcription factors Oct-3/4
C07K14/47 IPC
Peptides having more than 20 amino acids; Gastrins; Somatostatins; Melanotropins; Derivatives thereof from animals; from humans from vertebrates from mammals
C12N5/10 » CPC further
Undifferentiated human, animal or plant cells, e.g. cell lines; Tissues; Cultivation or maintenance thereof; Culture media therefor Cells modified by introduction of foreign genetic material
C12N15/85 » CPC further
Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor; Recombinant DNA-technology; Introduction of foreign genetic material using vectors; Vectors; Use of hosts therefor; Regulation of expression; Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts for animal cells
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/517,014, filed Apr. 5, 2017, which is a U.S. National Stage of International Application No. PCT/US2015/054319, filed Oct. 6, 2015, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Nos. 62/060,532, filed Oct. 6, 2014; 62/121,460, filed Feb. 26, 2015; and 62/121,463, filed Feb. 26, 2015. The entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
The work described in this disclosure was funded in part by grants from the National Institutes of Health, 5R00HL093212-04; and P30 CA008748 and R01 5R01AG043531-02. The U.S. government may have certain rights in this disclosure.
The present application includes a sequence listing in electronic form as an XML file in XML format, created on Jun. 1, 2023, titled “115872-2722_SL.xml” and having a size of 91,508 bytes. The contents of this XML file are incorporated by reference herein.
This disclosure relates to improvements in induced pluripotent stem cells and more specifically to induced pluripotent stem cells having reduced oncogenic potential and/or improved apoptosis response, and/or improved DNA damage response and/or improved genomic stability.
Direct reprogramming of somatic cells, for example with the transcription factors Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and c-Myc1 (also known as the Yamanaka protocol), yields induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) with remarkable similarity to embryonic stem cells (Takahashi et al. Cell 126: 663-676, 2006). Other protocols for making iPSC are known, as described for example in González, F. et al. Nature Reviews Genetics 12: 231-242 (Apr. 1, 2011). Analogous to ES cells, iPSC form teratomas, differentiated tumors with tissues from all three embryonic germ layers, and contribute to all tissues when injected into murine blastocysts.
Derivation of patient-specific iPSC for several disorders has been reported (Part et al. Cell 134:877-86, 2008; Dimos et al. Science 321: 1218-21, 2008). Development of iPSC provides opportunities for disease modeling using patient derived iPSC and directed differentiation methods. Additional areas that can greatly benefit from iPSC are drug development and drug screening. Finally, considering that iPSC resemble ESC in the pluripotency potential, but circumvent the histo-incompatibility issues associated with ESC-based therapies, iPSC hold enormous potential for generating histo-compatible transplantable tissue using a patient's own somatic cells.
According to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS), approximately 120,000 Americans are currently waiting to receive organ transplants, but only 24,000 transplants were performed between January and October of 2013. UNOS estimates that 18 patients die each day while waiting for an immune-matched organ from a small number of donors.
iPSC are useful in many different ways: first, as research tools, they enable otherwise inaccessible experiments to link gene function to tissue formation; second, they offer a new approach to drug discovery and development including both screening and toxicity testing as iPCS can be differentiated into human cells of different tissues and organs. But the most important utility of iPCS is in organ and tissue generation for engraftment, to replace missing or nonfunctioning organs and tissues and to treat degenerative diseases, including without limitation those associated with an aging population.
While iPSC offer great opportunities, there are still many unexplored questions and hindrances related to their application in clinical setting. For example, different tissues show variable susceptibility to reprogramming (Maherali et al. Cell Stem Cell 3:340-345, 2008; Aoi et al. Science 321: 699-702, 2009). Additionally, recent studies have shown that iPSC contain a residual epigenetic signature depending on the tissue type of the donor tissue used (Kim et al, Nat Biotechnol 29(12): 1117-1119, 2011) and that iPSC from aged donors (A-iPSC) retain an aging-specific epigenetic memory (Kim et al. Nature 467(7313):285-290, 2010). Furthermore, while Yamanaka and others identified four iPSC reprogramming factors required for generating iPSC using young donor tissue (Y-iPSC), it is not clear whether the same four factors would be sufficient for reprogramming iPSC from aged donor tissue (A-iPSC).
Prigione, A. et al PLoS One. 2011; 6(11):e27352. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0027352 also reported the presence of karyotype aberrations in aged-iPSC from humans although in their experiment they did not find resistance to apoptosis. These investigators measured micro-nuclei formation which is an indicator of a cell under apoptotic process as opposed to the fact of cell death (apoptosis) itself. Also lactate dehydrogenase was used for normalization which would not permit detection of already dead cells. Lastly, the time interval between DNA damage infliction and measurement may have been too long. Nevertheless, these authors also stressed the importance of developing reprogramming protocols that preserve the genomic stability of aged somatic cells.
As older patients are more likely to benefit from the clinical application of iPSC in tissue regeneration and both heterologous and autologous transplantation, and because iPSC are already being studied in clinical trials of a number of aging-related degenerative diseases, such as macular degeneration and Parkinson's disease, there is a significant need to comprehensively evaluate A-iPSC and determine how to reverse the negative effects of aging in these cells in order to improve their quality and consequently their function upon differentiation and transplantation.
One of the recognized drawbacks of iPSC has been their potential oncogenicity. This has been variously putatively ascribed to the use of oncogenes to generate them and possibly to the use of integrating viral-based vectors. As a result, efforts have been devoted to avoiding the use or integration of oncogenes and to avoiding the use of viral vectors. See, for example Nakagawa, M. et al Nat Biotechnol. 2008 January; 26(1):101-6 for reprogramming without MYC. Other researchers have turned to nonintegrative viruses such as Sendai virus to generate iPSC: Chen I P et al (2013) Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Reprogramming by Integration-free Sendai Virus Vectors from Peripheral Blood of Patients with craniometaphyseal dysplasia, Cell Reprogram. 2013 December; 15(6):503-13; and Lieu P T et al (2013) Generation of Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells with CytoTune, a Non-Integrating Sendai Virus, Methods Mol. Biol. 2013; 997:45-56 (from blood cells or fibroblasts). Yet others use RNA-based (vector-free) methods and tools for this purpose (such as B18R protein) are commercially available: see, e.g., Affymetrix eBioscience www.ebioscience.com/knowledge-center/cell-type/induced-pluripotent-stem-cells.htm #benefits %20of %20rna; or Warren, L. et al Feeder-Free Derivation of Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells with Messenger RNA, Nature Scientific reports, 2: #657 (Sep. 14, 2012). Yet others have used protein: Kim, D. et al, Generation of human induced pluripotent stem cells by direct delivery of reprogramming proteins, Cell Stem Cell. 2009 Jun. 5; 4(6):472-6. However, these methods may suffer from low reprogramming efficiency while oncogenicity can persist. Moreover, prior reprogramming efforts did not take into account age of donor cells in considering oncogenicity. Nor have there been proposals to use any additional factor as an adjunct to the reprogramming protocol.
In one aspect, the disclosure provides a method for improving at least one of DNA damage response, apoptosis response, genomic stability and glucose metabolism of A-iPSC, the method comprising supplementing A-iPSC with at least one of (i) pluripotency factor ZSCAN10; (ii) pluripotent stem cell-specific glucose transporter GLUT3; and (iii) an exosome subunit, each as an adjunct to reprogramming of the A-iPSC to substantially restore said at least one of DNA damage response, apoptosis response, glucose metabolism and genomic stability to levels approximating those of Y-iPSC.
In some embodiments, excessive expression of GSS or GPX2 is inhibited by at least one of the following:
In another aspect, the disclosure provides a method for reducing the oncogenic potential of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) said cells having one or more of genomic instability, a defect in apoptosis, a defect in DNA damage response and a defect in glucose metabolism and exhibiting excessive glutathione-mediated H2O2 scavenging activity compared to embryonic stem cells or induced pluripotent stem cells from young donors (Y-iPSC), the method comprising:
In yet another aspect, the disclosure provides a method for reducing the oncogenic potential of induced pluripotent stem cells derived from aged donors (A-iPSC) said A-iPSC exhibiting excessive glutathione-mediated H2O2 scavenging activity compared to induced pluripotent stem cells derived from young donors (Y-iPSC), the method comprising:
In still another aspect, the disclosure provides a method for reducing the oncogenic potential of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) said cells having one or more of genomic instability, a defect in apoptosis, a defect in DNA damage response and a defect in glucose metabolism, and exhibiting excessive glutathione-mediated H2O2 scavenging activity compared to embryonic stem cells or induced pluripotent stem cells from young donors (Y-iPSC), the method comprising supplementing A-iPSC with at least one of (i) pluripotency factor ZSCAN10; (ii) pluripotent stem cell-specific glucose transporter GLUT3; and (iii) an exosome subunit, each as an adjunct to reprogramming to substantially restore said at least one of DNA damage response, apoptosis response, glucose metabolism and genomic stability to levels substantially the same as those of Y-iPSC or ESC.
In some embodiments, the supplementation is carried out by adding ZSCAN 10 and/or GLUT3 and/or an exosome subunit to a culture medium in which said A-iPSC are maintained.
In some embodiments, the supplementation is carried out by increasing the expression of ZSCAN10 and/or GLUT3 and/or an exosome subunit in said cells.
In some embodiments, the supplementation is sufficient to restore ZSCAN 10 and/or GLUT3 and/or exosome subunit levels in said A-iPSC to about 50% or more of the respective levels of embryonic stem cells (ESC).
In some embodiments, the supplementation is sufficient to reduce oxidation capacity of glutathione in said A-iPSC to within the range from about 80% to about 120% of that of ESC.
In some embodiments, the supplementation is sufficient to restore genomic stability of said A-iPSC to approximately that of Y-iPSC.
In some embodiments, genomic stability is measured by incidence of aneuploid clones.
In some embodiments, the apoptosis rate is measured by DNA fragmentation assay in response to a DNA damaging agent.
In some embodiments, DNA damage response is measured by ATM or H2AX phosphorylation in response to a DNA damaging agent.
In some embodiments, the supplementation is sufficient to reduce oxidation capacity of glutathione in said A-iPSC to approximately that of Y-iPSC.
In some embodiments the supplementation is sufficient to reduce GSS or GPX2 levels in said A-iPSC to approximately those of Y-iPSC.
In some embodiments the expression of ZSCAN10 and/or GLUT3 and/or an exosome subunit in said cells is increased by transfecting said cells with a vector harboring nucleic acid for said ZSCAN10 and/or GLUT3 and/or an exosome subunit.
In some embodiments, expression of said vector harbored nucleic acid encoding ZSCAN10 is transient.
In some embodiments, the reprogramming factors are the Yamanaka factors OCT4, SOX2, KLF4 and MYC.
In some embodiments, the reprogramming pluripotency factors are selected from the group of those of Yamanaka wherein one or more of OCT4, SOX2, KLF4 and MYC are replaced as follows:
In some embodiments, the supplementation is with an exosome subunit, the exosome subunit being one or more of the following EXOSC1, EXOSC2, EXOSC3, EXOSC4, EXOSC5, EXOSC6, EXOSC7, EXOSC8, EXOSC9, EXOSC10 and hDis3.
In some embodiments, the supplementation is by DNA gene transfer or by RNA delivery or by delivery of proteins into the A-iPSC.
In another aspect, the present disclosure provides an iPSC derived from a somatic cell of an aged donor where the iPSC has been engineered to express ZSCAN10 at levels comparable to an iPSC derived from a young healthy donor.
In another aspect, the present invention comprises one or more vectors comprising nucleic acid encoding (i) stem cell reprogramming factors and (ii) ZSCAN10.
Thus, as a result of the work described herein, ZSCAN10 has emerged as a major co-regulatory factor of reprogramming protocols to make induced pluripotent stem cells from somatic cells, especially but not exclusively from somatic cells of aged donors, which upon reprogramming using the existing protocols would be deficient in ZSCAN 10, GLUT3 or an exosome subunit.
Accordingly, in another aspect, the present disclosure provides an iPSC derived from a somatic cell where the iPSC in the absence of ZSCAN10 supplementation would be deficient in ZSCAN10 expression, expressing either no ZSCAN10 or a level of ZSCAN 10 substantially lower than that of a control iPSC derived from a healthy young donor, wherein the iPSC has been engineered to express ZSCAN10 levels comparable to those of an iPSC derived from a healthy young donor.
In a related aspect, the present disclosure is directed to an iPSC derived from a somatic cell said iPSC originally displaying one or more of (i) reduced ZSCAN10 expression level, (ii) increased oncogenic potential (as measured for example by reduced DNA damage response, reduced apoptosis response, genomic instability and reduced glucose metabolism), (iii) reduced GLUT3 expression level; (iv) reduced exosome subunit level; and (v) increased GPX2 or increased GSS expression level, compared to a Y-iPSC or ESC control, wherein the iPSC has been supplemented with ZSCAN10 to restore said one or more reduced or increased levels to levels substantially closer to those encountered in said control.
In another aspect the present disclosure is directed to a vector or set of vectors comprising nucleic acid encoding (i) reprogramming pluripotency factors and (ii) ZSCAN10. In a more specific embodiment, the disclosure relates to a set of vectors according to claim 38 wherein the vector comprising ZSCAN10 nucleic acid is a separate vector from the vector or vectors comprising the reprogramming factors nucleic acid.
In some embodiments, the present disclosure is directed to a method for assessing the quality of an iPSC comprising measuring or testing the expression level of one or more proteins selected from the group of ZSCAN10, GLUT3, an exosome subunit (such as a core exosome subunit), GPX2 and GSS and comparing it to a control expression level of the same protein in Y-iPSC or ESC; and determining said quality on the basis of whether the measured or tested expression level is substantially similar to the control expression level. In more specific embodiments the quality assessed is one or more of oncogenic potential or glutathione/hydrogen peroxide homeostasis.
FIGS. 1A-1G show karyograms of ESC (FIG. 1A), Y-iPSC (FIG. 1B), A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 (FIG. 1C), and A-iPSC (FIGS. 1D and 1E). FIG. 1F is a bar graph showing a higher frequency of polyploidy in multiple independent clones of A-iPSC, and rescue of polyploidy defect with ZSCAN10 expression. DNA content was estimated by Propidium Iodide (PI) staining followed by flow cytometry analysis of multiple independent clones. The number of clones analyzed is indicated in each group. Statistical significance was determined by chi-squared test. FIG. 1G is a dot plot of a number of chromosomal structural abnormalities observed by cytogenetic analysis in each A-iPSC clone, and rescue with ZSCAN10 expression. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean of four independent clones analyzed per group. The total number of metaphases analyzed is indicated in each group. Statistical significance was determined by t-test.
FIG. 2 is a dot plot showing image-quantification of lower apoptotic response by DNA fragmentation assay after phleomycin treatment (30 μg/ml for 2 hours) in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and recovery with ZSCAN10 expression (A-iPSC-ZSCAN10). Error bars indicate standard error of the mean of technical and biological replicates. The exact number of biological replicates is indicated below each group.
FIG. 3 is a schematic representation of a method used to identify ZSCAN10. Initially, 59 core pluripotency genes derived from the pluripotency network analysis were filtered against genes that are known to be associated with DNA damage response, such as p53, SIRT1, PLK1, and genes upstream of p53 (ATM, PARP, and DNAPK). The gene list was then filtered based on differential expression in A-iPSC vs. Y-iPSC/ESC, which narrowed down the candidates to a single gene, ZSCAN10.
FIG. 4 is a bar graph showing poor activation of ZSCAN10 expression in A-iPSC and complete reactivation with transient expression of ZSCAN10. Endogenous ZSCAN10 mRNA levels were determined by Q-PCR in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10. Endogenous ZSCAN10 levels were normalized to β-ACTIN. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean. Statistical significance was determined by t-test.
FIG. 5A is a bar graph showing increased mutagenic frequency in A-iPSC compared to ESC and Y-iPSC. The mutation frequency was estimated by the inactivation of HPRT promoter activity in the presence of 6-thioguanine-mediated negative selection, and confirmed by Q-PCR. Higher mutation frequency observed in A-iPSC was decreased to normal levels following ZSCAN expression. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean of three replicates. Statistical significance was determined by t-test. FIG. 5B-5E show hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining of teratomas indicating higher in vivo oncogenicity of A-iPSC compared to ESC and Y-iPSC. Teratoma analysis was carried out by injecting 106 undifferentiated cells into the subcutaneous tissue above the rear haunch of Rag2/γC immunodeficient mice (Taconic), and teratoma formation was monitored for 3 months post-injection. Collected tumors were fixed in 10% formalin solution and processed for hematoxylin and eosin (H/E) staining. ESC (FIG. 5B) and Y-iPSC (FIG. 5C) form Y-iPSC form benign teratoma containing various tissue types that develop into cystic structures, with no signs of carcinoma. In contrast, 48% (n=28) (FIG. 5D) of individual A-iPSC clones generated a mixture of malignant carcinoma and benign teratoma tissues, and 52% (n=30) (FIG. 5E) of A-iPSC clones contained only teratocarcinoma.
FIGS. 6A-6B are immunoblots showing impaired DNA damage response in A-iPSC compared with Y-iPSC and ESC, and permanent restoration following transient expression of ZSCAN10. Reduced ATM phosphorylation was observed in A-iPSC after phleomycin treatment (2 h, 30 μg/ml), and recovery of ATM activation upon ZSCAN10 expression (FIG. 6A). FIG. 6B shows impaired p53 DNA damage response in A-iPSC and recovery with transient expression of ZSCAN10 in three independent clones after phleomycin treatment (2 h, 30 μg/ml). The red line indicates the same ESC sample loaded in both immunoblots as an internal control. FIG. 6C indicates low H2AX phosphorylation in A-iPSC after phleomycin treatment (2 h, 30 μg/ml) and recovery of H2AX signal with ZSCAN10 expression. FIG. 6D are scanned images of immunoblots showing phosphorylated levels of ATM and H2AX proteins, and levels of p53 in ATM−/−H2AX−/−ESC, A-iPSC, Y-iPSC, and in Y-iPSC transduced with shRNA against ZSCAN10 (Y-iPSC-shZSCAN10). Beta-actin was used as a loading control. FIG. 6E is a bar graph of mRNA ZSCAN10 levels in fibroblasts, ESC, Y-iPSC and Y-iPSC-shZSCAN10. FIG. 6F is a scanned image of an immunoblot indicating phospho-ATM, pH2AX, and p53 levels in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 following radiation treatment. FIG. 6G is a scanned image of an immunoblot of pATM and beta-actin in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 following the treatment with H2O2.
FIG. 7A is a scatter plot showing higher DNA methylation of ZSCAN promoter in A-iPSC compared to ESC and Y-iPSC. FIG. 7A is a plot of pyrosequencing data of ZSCAN10 promoter, indicating relatively higher DNA methylation in A-iPSC. Transient expression of ZSCAN10 led to lower DNA methylation of ZSCAN promoter (A-iPSC-ZSCAN10). Error bars indicate standard error of the mean of four independent clones analyzed per group. Statistical significance was determined by t-test. FIG. 7B is a bar graph showing mRNA levels of DNMT3b normalized to beta-actin in fibroblasts, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, Y-iPSC, and ESC.
FIG. 8A is a bar graph showing excessive oxidation capacity of glutathione in A-iPSC, and recovery by ZSCAN10. Quantification of reduced glutathione (GSH) and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) was used to determine the total glutathione level (maximum oxidation capacity) in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10. Mean±standard deviation is plotted for three replicates from each condition. FIG. 8B is a bar graph indicating H2O2 scavenging activity of ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and A-iPSC expressed as reactive oxygen species ROS activity. A cellular reactive oxygen species assay kit (Abcam, ab113851) was used to measure the H2O2 scavenging activity after the treatment with TBHP (tert-butyl hydrogen peroxide; stable chemical form of H2O2) for 3 hours at 50 μM. Mean±standard deviation is plotted for four replicates from each condition.
FIG. 9A is a bar graph showing mRNA levels (determined by Q-PCR) of GPX2 in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, A-iPSC-GLUT3, and A-iPSC. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean. FIG. 9B is a bar graph of oxidation capacity of glutathione in ESC, Y-iPSC, Y-iPSC-GPX2, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and A-iPSC-shRNA-GPX2. Quantification of reduced glutathione (GSH) and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) was measured to determine the total glutathione level (maximum oxidation capacity). Mean±standard deviation is plotted for three replicates from each condition. Glutathione analysis was conducted using Glutathione Fluorometric Assay (Biovision, K264-100). FIG. 9C is a bar graph showing H2O2 scavenging activity in ESC, Y-iPSC, Y-iPSC-GPX2, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and A-iPSC-shRNA-GPX2 after the treatment with TBHP (tert-butyl hydrogen peroxide; stable chemical form of H2O2) for 3 hours at 50 μM. Mean±standard deviation is plotted for four replicates from each condition. FIG. 9D is bar graph showing TUNEL-positive apoptotic cells (TMR-dUTO) in ESC, Y-iPSC, Y-iPSC-GPX2, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and A-iPSC-shRNA 15 hours after the end of phleomycin treatment (2 hours, 30 μg/ml). FIG. 9E is an immunoblot of pATM/pH2AX/p53 showing recovery of the DNA damage response (p-ATM, pH2AX and p53) after phleomycin treatment in three independent clones of A-iPSC with GPX2 shRNA and in controls (ATM and H2AX knockdown ESC as well as Y-iPSC and A-iPSC with and without phleomycin).
FIG. 10A is a bar graph showing real time qPCR for mRNA of GLUT3 in somatic cells (fibroblast samples from young and aged donors), ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10. FIG. 10B is a bar graph showing intracellular glucose uptake rate in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and A-iPSC-GLUT3. Glucose uptake rate was measured by a glucose uptake analysis kit (cat #K606-100, Biovision Inc., Milpitas, CA, USA). FIG. 10C is a bar graph of activation of the oxidative phosphorylation by glutamine A-ntESC (ES cells generated using nuclear transfer method), ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and A-iPSC-GLUT3. Oxygen consumption rate was determined after adding glutamine to a final concentration of 4 mM. FIG. 10D is an immunoblot of ATM showing recovery of the DNA damage response after phleomycin treatment in three independent clones of A-iPSC with increased GLUT3 expression compared to controls (ESC, ATM knockdown in ESC, Y-iPSC and A-iPSC). FIG. 10E a graph showing Chromatin IP analysis of ZSCAN10 binding to the GLUT3 promoter. ESC, Y-iPSC, or A-iPSC were incubated with Igg control or ZSCAN10 antibody, followed by the qPCR using primers specific for GLUT3 promoter. FIG. 10F is a bar graph of ROS levels in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, Y-iPSC expressing shRNA against GLUT3 (Y-iPSC-shGLUT3), and A-iPSC expressing shRNA against GLUT3 (A-iPSC-shGLUT3). FIG. 10G is a bar graph showing total glutathione relative to ESC in Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-Glut3.
FIG. 11A is a histogram showing statistical probability to find 14 genes with ARE-sequences by random resampling as disclosed in Kim, K. et al Nature. 2010 Sep. 16; 467(7313):285-90. doi: 10.1038/nature09342. Epigenetic memory in induced pluripotent stem cells.
FIG. 11B is a series of bar graphs showing relative mRNA levels (normalized to β-actin) of exosome subunits EXOSC1, EXOSC2, and EXOSC5 in FESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 (A-iPSC supplemented with ZSCAN10, and A-iPSC. The histogram indicates that the likelihood of any given transcript to have the UUAUUUA(A/U)(A/U) ARE sequence is 7, so the odds of finding 14 in a sample based on just random chance are very low (p=0.01224).
FIG. 12A is a bar graph of relative GPX2 mRNA expression (normalized to β-actin) in ESC, ESCshEXOSC2, ESCshEXOSC8, ESCshEXOSC2&8, and A-iPSC. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean. FIG. 12B is a quantification of apoptotic response by DNA fragmentation assay after phleomycin treatment of ESC, ESCshEXOSC2, ESCshEXOSC8, and ESCshEXOSC2&8. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean of technical and biological replicates.
FIG. 13A is a schematic representation of reprogramming in different individuals. FIG. 13B is a scanned image of an immunoblot showing the levels of pATM and beta-actin proteins. ESC, Y-iPSC and A-iPSC were generated from different individuals (A-iPSC AG8-76 years old, A-iPSC AG4-71 years old, A-iPSCB, and A-iPSCS) and treated with phleomycin. FIG. 13C is karyogram of A-iPSC generated from AG4 individual. FIG. 13D is a scanned image of an immunoblot of p53−/−iPSC (negative control), A-iPSC generated from B6129 mouse genetic background, and A-iPSC generated from B6CBA mouse genetic background and treated with phleomycin. Levels of p53 and R-actin are shown. FIGS. 13E-13H show scanned images of immunoblots showing the levels of pATM and beta-actin proteins in six different clones of human A-iPSC (FIG. 13E), one clone of human A-iPSC-outlier (FIG. 13F), five different clones of Y-iPSC (FIG. 13G), and six clones of A-iPSC overexpressing ZSCAN10. FIG. 13I is a bar graph of relative mRNA levels of ZSCAN10 normalized to beta-actin in human ESC, human A-iPSC that exhibit no DNA damage response, and in A-iPSC that exhibit normal DNA damage response.
FIG. 14A is a schematic diagram showing ZSCAN10 binding to the glutathione synthetase (GSS) promoter. FIG. 14B is a bar graph of ChIP-quantitative PCR analysis of ZSCAN10 binding to the GSS promoter in Y-iPSC and A-iPSC. Values are given as percent enrichment compared with the input. FIG. 14C is a bar graph showing mRNA levels (determined by Q-PCR) of GSS in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and A-iPSC. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean. FIG. 14D is a quantification of apoptotic response by DNA fragmentation assay (obtained by image quantification) after phleomycin treatment of ESC, Y-iPSC, Y-iPSCGSS, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and A-iPSCshGSS. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean of technical and biological replicates. FIGS. 14E and 14D are immunoblots of phospho-ATM showing recovery of the DNA damage response (p-ATM) after phleomycin treatment in three independent clones of A-iPSC with GSS shRNA expression (FIG. 14E), or in three independent clones of Y-iPSC after lentiviral expression of GSS (FIG. 14F). β-actin levels are used as a loading control. FIG. 14G is a bar graph showing mRNA levels of GSS normalized to beta-actin in human ESC, A-iPSC (no DNA damage response) and A-iPSC (with normal DNA damage response).
FIG. 15A is a plot of data from Principal Component Analysis (PCA) using whole gene expression profiles of fibroblast cells (A-SC, Y-SC), iPS cells (A-iPSC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10) and ES cells (ESC). FIG. 15B is a heat map of unsupervised clustering analysis of whole gene expression profiles. The heat maps shows pairwise gene expression similarities measured by Pearson Correlation Coefficient. FIG. 15C is a microarray heat map of relative expression levels of ES cell specific genes in fibroblast (A-SC, Y-SC), iPS cells (A-iPSC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10) and ES cells (ESC). ES cell specific genes were defined as those with 3 fold or higher expression levels in ES cells than average expression in adult and young fibroblast cells. The heat map shows relative expression fold differences over ES cells.
As used herein, the following terms shall have the meanings ascribed to them below unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
The term “DNA damage response” refers to any process that results in a change in state or activity of a cell (in terms of movement, secretion, enzyme production, gene expression, etc.) as a result of a stimulus, indicating damage to its DNA from environmental insults or errors during metabolism.
The term “apoptosis response” refers to a process that results in apoptosis of a cell, for example in response to DNA damage. A lower apoptotic rate or a failure of a cell to apoptose at all (collectively referred to a reduced apoptosis response) is associated with uncontrolled cell proliferation and more specifically with malignancy.
The term “polyploidy” refers to the condition in which a normally diploid cell or organism exhibits more than two sets of chromosomes; the term “aneuploidy” means any ploidy (more or less than the normal two sets of chromosomes).
The term “chromosomal structural abnormalities” refers to any change in the normal structure of a chromosome. Chromosomal structural abnormalities include, but are not limited to: duplications, deletions, translocations, inversions, and insertions.
The term “genomic instability” (also “genome instability or “genetic instability) refers to an increase in structural chromosomal alterations (deletions, amplifications, and translocations), numerical chromosomal aneuploidy, or mutations on DNA sequence within the genome of a cellular lineage.
The term “oncogenic potential” means the likelihood that a cell after its transplantation into a host will generate malignant tumors in the host. The term is applied for example to induced pluripotent stem cells, and to their propensity to generate malignant tumors upon differentiation and transplantation to an animal or human. Phenotypic traits such as genomic instability, impaired DNA damage response, reduced apoptosis response and reduced glucose metabolism indicate elevated oncogenic potential whether the iPSC has been derived from an aged donor or not.
The term “effective amount” of a factor or other active molecule means an amount effective to bring about a particular result. For example, in the case of ZSCAN10 or GLUT3 or exosome subunit supplementation (or GPX2 or GSS inhibition), an effective amount is that which brings about substantial restoration of apoptosis response, and/or DNA damage response and/or glucose metabolism defect or preserves genomic stability.
The term “reprogramming factors” refers to transcription factors i.e., proteins that alone, or in combination with other reprogramming factors, have the ability to reprogram differentiated somatic cells to cells to a pluripotent state.
The term “transcriptional pluripotency network” refers to a network of transcription factors involved in the transcriptional control of pluripotency in embryonic stem cells (ESC). The present inventors have shown that ZSCAN10 is part of the “transcriptional pluripotency network” and should be supplemented in stem cells deficient in ZSCAN10 by comparison to Y-IPSC or ESC.
The term “mutagenic potential” refers to the potential or capacity of a substance to induce a change in the regulatory, protein-coding or other portions of a DNA sequence, increasing the frequency of mutations above a normal (background) level.
The term “young” used in connection with iPSC means iPSC derived from young donors, in case of mice up to 5 days old, in case of humans up to 16 years old and more generally to iPSC derived from donors that exhibit a “young” signature, e.g., slowing active growth stage to initiate the entry into fully grown adult stage.
The term “old” used in connection with iPSC means iPSC derived from aged donors, in case of mice older than 1.4 years old, in case of humans later than 50 years old, which begin to show age related degenerative diseases or states.
The term “substantial” used in the context of restoration, preservation recovery or rescue of glucose metabolism or DNA damage response, or apoptosis response, or genomic stability of A-iPSC denotes achievement of a state approximately or exactly the same as that of Y-iPSC and ESC. See for example FIGS. 1F-G, where A-iPSC with ZSCAN10 supplement have about the same ploidy and structural chromosomal abnormalities as Y-iPSC. See also FIGS. 2, 5A and 6A-6G. Additionally, levels of ZSCAN 10 and/or GLUT3 and/or exosome subunit in A-iPSC of about 50% or more of the respective levels of embryonic stem cells are considered substantially restored. Finally, if the oxidation capacity of glutathione in A-iPSC is reduced (for example by supplementation of ZSCAN10 or by inhibition of GSS or GPX2) to be within the range from about 80% to about 120% of that of ESC or Y-iPSC, it is considered substantially restored.
The term “exosome” refers to the multi-protein exosome complex (or PM/Scl complex, often just called the exosome) capable of degrading various types of RNA (ribonucleic acid) molecules. Substrates of the exosome include messenger RNA, ribosomal RNA, and many species of small RNAs. Exosome comprises nine core subunits and two exonuclease co-factors listed in Table 3.
The term “exosome subunit” refers to eleven components (listed in Table 3) of the exosome, comprising nine core subunits and two co-factors: EXOS1, EXOS2, EXOS3, EXOS4, EXOS5, EXOS6 EXOS7, EXOS8, EXOS9, EXOS10, and DIS3.
Unless otherwise required by context, singular terms shall include the plural. For example, “an exosome subunit” shall mean one or more exosome subunits.
General Description of this Disclosure
The present disclosure is based on the following discoveries:
1. Induced pluripotent stem cells derived from aged donors (A-iPSC), which have been previously shown to have a higher oncogenic potential, show increased genomic instability, a defect in apoptosis, and a blunted DNA damage response compared to those derived from young donors (Y-iPSC).
2. A-iPSC are also shown to exhibit excessive glutathione-mediated H2O2 scavenging activity (glutathione/H2O2), which in turn inhibits DNA damage response and apoptosis.
3. Inhibition of this pathway substantially rescues these defects and consequently reduces the oncogenic potential of A-iPSC.
4. A-iPSC are shown to be deficient in a pluripotency factor ZSCAN10 which is poorly activated in A-iPSC. ZSCAN10 acts to inhibit GPX2, a glutathione-mediated H2O2 scavenger protein. ZSCAN10 expression shows a strong relationship with induction of the glucose transporter GLUT3 such that GLUT3 endogenous expression is increased when ZSCAN10 expression is increased. ZSCAN10 regulates GLUT3 directly by binding to its promoter.
5. It was further found that supplementation of ZSCAN10, e.g., by expression (even transient expression) in A-iPSC as an adjunct to reprogramming, leads to substantial or even complete recovery of genomic stability, DNA damage response, apoptosis response and glucose metabolism in A-iPSC, to render them similar to those of Y-iPSC. This is shown to be accomplished through normalizing homeostasis of glutathione/H2O2. Significantly, adequate or even complete recovery of these Y-iPSC attributes has been shown not to require supplementation of ZSCAN10 to exactly the levels present in ESC or even in Y-iPSC. Moreover, because ZSCAN10 is not expressed in A-iPSC, it is anticipated that this finding transcends induction protocols. In other words, ZSCAN10 supplementation can be added to any stem cell induction protocol to be used in the event of deficiency in this factor. This a vector comprising nucleic acid encoding ZSCAN10 can be added to a set of vectors comprising nucleic acid for other reprogramming factors. Alternatively, a single vector comprising nucleic acid for reprogramming factors and ZSCAN10 can be utilized for example in the event of reprogramming of cells that would otherwise yield iPSC deficient in ZSCAN10.
6. GLUT3 (a pluripotent stem cell-specific glucose transporter) is also poorly activated in A-iPSC. Poor activation of GLUT3 in A-iPSC inhibits the pluripotent stem cell specific transition from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis in glucose metabolism due to lack of sufficient intracellular glucose. Thus, A-iPSC use energy efficient oxidative phosphorylation (FIG. 10) to generate enough energy source with less glucose. However, oxidative phosphorylation generates higher H2O2, and consequently increases GPX2/glutathione mediated H2O2 scavenging activity (FIG. 8). Excessive GPX2/glutathione mediated H2O2 scavenging activity blocks H2O2— and ATM-mediated DNA damage response (FIGS. 6A-6G). Direct or indirect supplementation of GLUT3, e.g., through increased expression in A-iPSC or addition to culture media or ZSCAN10-mediated increase in GLUT3, has similar effects in that it also normalizes DNA damage response and apoptosis in A-iPSC (FIG. 10D) as well as glucose metabolism.
7. These results indicate that inhibition of glutathione/H2O2 notably through delivery of ZSCAN 10 and/or GLUT3, will be clinically useful, resulting in A-iPSC of reduced oncogenic potential. Thus, the present results indicate that supplementation (including without limitation any upregulation) of ZSCAN10 and by extension modulation of any factor, such as GSS or GPX2 that contributes to inhibition of excessive glutathione/H2O2 activity (or its effects) in A-iPSC, will be clinically useful in substantially restoring DNA damage response, apoptosis response, glucose metabolism and genomic stability (integrity) in A-iPSC and consequently reduce their oncogenic potential. Assessment of one or more such factors would be useful in ascertaining the quality of iPSC.
8. Intervention in reducing excessive glutathione/H2O2 activity is preferably practiced simultaneously with reprogramming somatic cells from aged donors into iPSC. Thus ZSCAN10 can be introduced into somatic cells at the same time or shortly following reprogramming whether through use of the Yamanaka factors OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, and c-MYC or through any other induction protocol, such as those discussed and/or cited in the Background section. ZSCAN10 supplementation can take place during or shortly following reprogramming and in any event prior to inducing differentiation. Increased GLUT3 expression can be introduced at the same times as ZSCAN10. Alternatively, GSS and/or GPX2 can be inhibited either by curbing their expression or by introducing effective amounts of inhibitors of the corresponding proteins.
The present inventors discovered genes associated with A-iPSC by comparing expression of genes in Y-iPSC, A-iPSC and ESC. Very few genes were differentially expressed and even fewer affected the oncogenicity potential as assessed by DNA damage response, apoptosis response and genomic stability. To arrive at the significant genes, the inventors first generated Y-iPSC (using mouse skin fibroblasts from E15.5 embryos to 5-day-old neonates) and A-iPSC (using mouse skin fibroblast from donors 1.4 years old) using standard Yamanaka iPSC reprogramming methods as described in Kim, K. et al, 2010 supra (as discussed elsewhere herein, alternative iPSC induction protocols could have been used instead). A large number of clones were selected based on morphology and groups of at least 12 clones of each type. Each Y-iPSC and A-iPSC clone was put through a series of pluripotency tests and compared to ESC as the gold standard, e.g., multi-lineage contribution to three germ layers in teratoma analysis and pluripotent gene expression analysis (AP/OCT4/SSEA1/NANOG)(data not shown). Silencing of the four reprogramming factors (OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, MYC) in each clone was confirmed by quantitative PCR (Q-PCR) (data not shown). DNA ploidy was tested in multiple iPSC clones, and Y-iPSC and A-iPSC clones with normal ploidy (data not shown) were identified. However. a higher frequency of polyploidy was observed in A-iPSC compared to Y-iPSC (FIG. 1F). A-iPSC also displayed more chromosomal structural abnormalities than Y-iPSC (FIG. 1G).
The inventors hypothesized that the poor genomic stability of A-iPSC was due to poor induction of apoptosis response as in iPSC it is direct apoptosis that eliminates severely damaged cells from the population. They found that both Y-iPSC and ESC controls showed a significant level of apoptosis after treatment with phleomycin (a drug inducing DNA breakage which would normally mobilize DNA damage response such as apoptosis). In contrast, A-iPSC showed a poorer apoptotic response to phleomycin. They then set about to develop methods to correct the apoptotic response and therefor improve genomic stability in A-iPSC. They reasoned that additional pluripotency factors would be necessary to yield iPSC with the genomic stability of ESC or Y-iPSC. Screening of a number of previously identified pluripotency network genes yielded ZSCAN10 a transcription factor specifically expressed in ESC (and not expressed in somatic cells) and forming part of the transcriptional pluripotency regulatory network including SOX2, OCT4, and NANOG. ZSCAN10 also binds to the promoters of DNA damage response genes, such as ATM, PLK1 and JNK2.
The inventors further found that the ZSCAN10 promoter is hypomethylated/activated in Y-iPSC and ESC, and hypermethylated/inactive in A-iPSC. When added to the pluripotency induction protocol, ZSCAN 10, when transiently expressed during reprogramming of A-iPSC, led to hypomethylation/activation of the endogenous ZSCAN10 promoter to levels closer to that seen in Y-iPSC. A-iPSC with the foregoing ZSCAN10 supplementation exhibited reduced abnormalities in chromosomal ploidy and structure to levels comparable to Y-iPSC and ESC. ZSCAN10 also reduce the mutagenicity of A-iPSC to levels comparable to Y-iPSC and ESC. ZSCAN10 also recovered responsiveness of A-iPSC to DNA damaging agents (ATM phosphorylation, H2AX phosphorylation and p53 expression) confirming that ZSCAN10 recovers the DNA damage response of A-iPSC bringing it closer to that of Y-iPSC.
They inventors also investigated the mechanism by which the oxidative capacity of glutathione is elevated in A-iPSC and found that in mice it is driven by glutathione peroxidase 2 (GPX2) elevated expression in A-iPSC but not in Y-iPSC or ESC. Reduction of GPX2 expression in A-iPSC recovered glutathione/H2O2 homeostasis to levels comparable to Y-iPSC and ESC. Conversely overexpression of GPX2 in Y-iPSC induced an imbalance in glutathione/H2O2 homeostasis. In humans however, the elevation of the oxidative capacity of glutathione in A-iPCS is driven by elevated levels of glutathione synthetase (GSS). Downregulation of GSS results in recovery of glutathione/H2O2 homeostasis.
Oncogenic Potential
It is known that aging and oncogenicity are known to be strongly correlated. See, e.g., Stoll E A, Horner P J, Rostomily R C. The impact of age on oncogenic potential: tumor-initiating cells and the brain microenvironment. Aging Cell. 2013; 12(5):733-41. PMID: 23711239. Furthermore, it is also known that oncogenicity in general is increased by events such as DNA hypermethylation, defective apoptosis mechanisms (whereby apoptosis occurs less frequently) and blunting of DNA damage response. Liu, J. C. et al. High mitochondrial priming sensitizes hESCs to DNA-damage-induced apoptosis. Cell stem cell 13, 483-491, doi:10.1016/j.stem.2013.07.018 (2013). In addition, excessive glutathione and/or excessive glutathione activity is associated with certain cancers such as pancreatic cancer and colorectal cancer. Furthermore, the inventors found that excessive glutathione activity is triggered by excessive expression of GPX2 in A-iPSC in mice and excessive expression of GSS in humans. Accordingly, one or more of such phenotypic defects have been used in the present disclosure to assess oncogenic potential and can be used for this purpose as well as more generally to assess the quality of iPCS in methods of the present disclosure. Furthermore, amelioration in these phenotypic defects is considered to reduce oncogenic potential. Donnerstag, B. et al Cancer Lett. 1996 Dec. 20; 110(1-2):63-70.
Both DNA damage response and apoptosis play a critical role in tumorigenesis. Certain DNA damage response proteins such as ATM. H2AX, and p53 link DNA damage pathway to apoptosis. Thus, apoptosis is a secondary response to DNA damage. However, induction of DNA damage response can occur without the trigger of programmed cell death. For example, activation of the tumor suppressor p53 by DNA damage induces either cell cycle arrest or apoptosis, and the outcome of this is highly contextual. Thus, a defect in the activation of any of the proteins that mediate DNA damage response, and/or apoptosis, such as H2AX, ATM, and p53, may indicate a defect in A-iPSC and can be used to assess quality of such stem cells.
ZSCAN10 is an embryonic stem (ES) cell-specific transcription factor required to maintain ES cell pluripotency. See www.genecards.org/cgi-bin/carddisp.pl?gene=ZSCAN10_(last visited Feb. 24, 2015). It and nucleic acid encoding it (see, e.g., NCBI Genbank Reference Sequence: NC_000016.10) are publicly available. Human, mouse and rat ZSCAN10 cDNA is available from GE Dharmacon Life Sciences (dharmacon.gelifesciences.com/mammalian-cdna/mgc-cdnas/?term=ZSCAN10&sourceId=EG/84891&productId=416CB003-5022-4263-B1C6-293625B70CE1) (last visited Feb. 24, 2015). Human cDNA is also available as plasmid pENTR223.1 e.g., from DNASU plasmid Repository at Tempe Arizona (dnasu.org/DNASU/GetCloneDetail.do?cloneid=295134; last visited Feb. 24, 2015) The human cDNA insert for ZSCAN10 has SEQ ID NO:1.
The methods of this disclosure relate to the exposure of iPSC to ZSCAN10 to accomplish improved reprogramming of iPSC. In some embodiments, the present disclosure relates to iPSC cells generated from aged donors (A-iPSC). In some embodiments, the iPSC cells are characterized by genomic instability, reflected by polyploidy or increased chromosomal structural abnormalities. In some embodiments, iPSC cells exhibit poor DNA damage response. In some embodiments, iPSC cells exhibit a defect in induction of apoptosis. In some embodiments, iPSC cells exhibit a defect in glucose metabolism. iPSC exhibiting one or more of these defects (genomic instability, poor DNA damage response, decreased apoptotic response and lower glucose metabolism) can be improved to levels comparable to those of Y-iPSC or ESC by increasing the levels of ZSCAN10. (As disclosed elsewhere herein, the levels of ZSCAN 10 may but need not reach levels of Y-iPSC as long as the phenotypic defect is adequately restored.) This process can be achieved by introduction of an mRNA encoding ZSCAN10 into the iPSC-derived somatic cell and subsequent translation into a functional ZSCAN protein. Additional methods for increasing the levels of ZSCAN10 include, but are not limited to transfection with numerous vectors, such as adeno-associated virus, lentivirus, retrovirus, Sendai virus, DNA plasmids such that ZSCAN10 expression is effected at the DNA, RNA, and/or protein level in either a transient or long-term manner. Additionally, ZSCAN10 protein levels can be increased by contacting the cell with an agent that leads to increased ZSCAN10 protein levels (expressed in a transient or long-term manner), or by contacting the cell directly with recombinant ZSCAN10 protein. As disclosed herein, the present method provides increasing the levels of ZSCAN10 in iPSC at a dosage sufficient to substantially: (a) restore genomic instability, (b) improve poor DNA damage response, or (c) restore apoptotic response in human or animal (e.g., mouse) iPSC.
When used as an adjunct to reprogramming, ZSCAN10 supplementation can be added to one or more vectors harboring nucleic acid encoding reprogramming factors or can be included in a separate vector (such that it will be used only if needed) in a set of such vectors. Vectors useful for reprogramming are commercially available. Any of these can be modified to include nucleic acid encoding ZSCAN10 (and optionally any other elements useful for its expression as one of ordinary skill in this field would appreciate).
ZSCAN10 supplementation in amounts effective to substantially restore one or more of DNA damage response, apoptosis response, glucose metabolism and genomic stability should be in an amount related to the deficiency in ZSCAN10 exhibited by the particular A-iPSC (reprogrammed in the absence of such intervention) compared to ZSCAN10 levels of Y-iPSC. In this regard, FIG. 4 is informative because it shows that increased expression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC to a level about 5 times that of the untreated cells to a level of about 50% of the ESC level (and about 60% of the Y-iPSC level) was effective to restore the assessed phenotypic responses. In general, the more meaningful comparison of appropriate ZSCAN10 is to be closer or even identical to the level of ESC and Y-iPSC (although identical level is not required for restoration of defects). Supplementation of ZSCAN10 to reach a level from about 40% up to about 90 or 95% of ESC ZSCAN10 level or from about 50% to 100% of Y-iPSC ZSCAN10 level is an effective range. In some embodiments, supplementation sufficient to substantially restore the assessed phenotypic parameters (DNA damage response, apoptosis response, genomic stability or glucose metabolism) is sufficient even though higher levels are possible and indeed encountered in Y-iPSC and ESC.
In the event sufficient endogenous amounts ZSCAN10 are expressed but ZSCAN10 is not effective, the amount of supplementation should be adjusted upwards as appropriate and in such instances can reach amounts higher than 100% of the amount of Y-iPSC.
Methods of supplementation of ZSCAN10 or any other factor proposed to be supplemented herein include addition to the culture medium or transfection with a delivery vector or any other system that facilitates expression of these factors or in any event exposure of a cell to these factors. For methods of vector-free delivery, see, e.g., Zhou H, et al. (2009), Generation of induced pluripotent stem cells using recombinant proteins. Cell Stem Cell 4: 381-384. Any type of DNA gene transfer (retroviral, lentiviral, adenoviral, Talen, CrispR etc.) can be used to effect supplementation. Alternatively, RNA delivery or delivery into the cells in form of proteins can also be used. These techniques are well-known in the art. The time of delivery can be before, during or after adding the reprogramming factors and before differentiation and transplantation. Accordingly combinations of reagents (vector or vector-free) for reprogramming cells including reagents for supplementation of ZSCAN10 are envisioned for producing induced pluripotent stem cells of higher quality and phenotypic traits resembling those of Y-iPSC and ESC. These are commercially available or can be readily constructed given that both nucleic acid and amino acid sequences for ZSCAN10 are known. For example, vectors and viral particles that can be used to introduce Yamanaka reprogramming pluripotency factors into the cells can be obtained from such sources as Applied Biological Materials, Richmond BC, Canada; Clontech Laboratories, Mountain View, CA; and Addgene, Cambridge, MA.
While the present examples provide for transient expression of ZSCAN10, the methods of the present invention are not limited by whether ZSCAN10 expression is inducible or not. Nor are they limited to supplementation of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC induced by a particular protocol. Indeed, there are many known protocols for iPSC induction and any one of them can be used with the present methods. See, Singh, V K et al, Front. In Dev. Biol. 3(2):1-18, February 2015; Yu, J., Vodyanik, M. A., Smuga-Otto, K., Antosiewicz-Bourget, J., Frane, J. L., Tian, S., et al., (2007). Induced pluripotent stem cell lines derived from human somatic cells. Science 318, 1917-1920. doi:10.126/science.151526. Dimos, J. T., Rodolfa, K. T., Niakan, K. K., Weisenthal, L. M., Mitsumoto, H., Chung, W., et al. (2008). Induced pluripotent stem cells generated from patients with ALS can be differentiated into motor neurons. Science 321, 1218-1221. doi:10.1126/science.1158799. Hanna, J., Markoulaki, S., Schorderet, P., Carey, B. W., Beard, C., Wernig, M., et al. (2008) Direct reprogramming of terminally differentiated mature B Lymphocytes to pluripotency. Cell 133, 250-264. doi: 10.1016/J.cell2008.03.028. Huangfu, D., Macht, R., Guo, W., Eijkelenboom, A., Snitow, M., Chen, A. E., et al. (2008a). Induction of pluripotent stem cells by defined factors is greatly improved by small-molecule compounds. Nat. Biotechnol. 26, 795-1797. doi:10.1038/nbt1418 Mali, P., Ye, Z., Hommond, H. H., Yu, X., Lin, J., Chen, G., et al. (2008) Improved efficiency and pace of generating induced pluripotent stem cells from human adult and fetal fibroblasts. Stem Cells 26, 1998-2005. doi:10.11634/stemcells.2008-0346; Marson, A., Foreman, R., Chevalier, B., Bilodeau, S., Kahn, M., Young, R. A., et al. (2008). Wnt signaling promotes reprogramming of somatic cells to pluripotency. Cell Stem Cell 3, 132-135. doi:10.1016/j.stem.2008.06.019; Mikkelsen, T. S., Hanna, J., Zhang, X., Ku, M., Wernig, M., Schorderet, P., et al. (2008). Dissecting direct reprogramming through integrative genomic analysis. Nature 454, 49-55. doi:10.1038/nature 07056; Park, I. H. Zhao, R., West, J. A., Yabuchi, A., Huo, H., Ince, T. A., et al. (2008a). Reprogramming of human somatic cells to pluripotency with defined factors. Nature 451, 141-146. doi:10.1038/nature 06534; Shi, Y., Desponts, C., Do, J. T. Hahm, H. S., Scholer, H. R., and Ding, S. (2008a). Induction of pluripotent stem cells from mouse embryonic fibroblasts by Oct4 and Klf4 with small-molecule compounds. Cell Stem Cell 3, 568-574. doi:10.1016/J.stem.2008.10.004; Shi, Y., Do, J. T. Desponts, C., Hahm, H. S., Scholer, H. R., and Ding, S. (2008b). A combined chemical and genetic approach for the generation of induced pluripotent stem cells. Cell Stem Cell 2, 525-528. doi:10.1016j.stem.2008.05.011.
Vectors for Increasing ZSCAN10 Expression
Suitable vectors include without limitation viral gene delivery vectors (lentivirus-based vectors such as those derived from HIV1, HIV2, FIC and EIAV, which may be pseudotyped, AAV-based vectors etc.), plasmids, etc. In the experiments described herein delivery of ZSCAN10 and GLUT3 was made by using a commercially available lenti-viral vector harboring OCT4 gene (Plasmid 19778: FU-tet-o-hOct4 from Addgene), excising the same and replacing it by ZSCAN10 or GLUT3. See www.addgene.org/19778/(last visited Feb. 25, 2015).
Examples of additional vectors that can be used include excisable vectors such as STEMCCA available from EMD Millipore. However, ZSCAN10 supplementation is not limited to any particular expression vector and any method suitable for induction of pluripotent stem cell (whether using a vector or not) can be readily adapted for supplementing ZSCAN10. The same holds true for GLUT3, GPX2 and any other nucleotide inserted into stem cells in accordance with the present disclosure.
Vector free methods can also be used following and adapting known protocols as exemplified herein.
Provenance of iPSC
In principle, any somatic cell can be reprogrammed into iPSC. The basic Yamanaka protocol (Takahasji, K. et al, Cell. 2006 Aug. 25; 126(4):663-76; Takahashi, K. et al Cell. 2007 Nov. 30; 131(5):861-72) can be used with such modifications as described for example in the references cited in the Background section for alternative protocols of iPSC induction. Additionally, there are other protocols for reprogramming known in the art. See for example WO2013177228 Generation of Integration/Transgene-Free Stem Cells.
The cells most often used for reprogramming include fibroblasts, such as embryonic, neonatal, young and adult fibroblasts as needed.
It should be noted that according to Kim, K. et al, Nature, 2010, supra, and Kim, K. et al, Nature Biotechnology 2011, supra, there is some tissue specificity in the properties of iPSC depending on the tissue from which the somatic cells were chosen from prior to reprogramming. The present disclosure is directed to A-iPSC (and more broadly to any iPSC) exhibiting defects in genomic stability and/or apoptosis response and/or DNA damage response and to an increase in oncogenic potential associated with dysregulation of the glutathione/H2O2 pathway and in more specific embodiments with deficiency in ZSCAN10 and/or in glucose metabolism, for example those associated with insufficient endogenous expression of GLUT3. Accordingly, when it is not known whether iPSC exhibit such defects, testing should be performed following for example the procedure of Example 1. If determination of ZSCAN10 deficiency is needed, the procedure of assessing ZSCAN10 levels in Example 2 can for example be followed. If GLUT3 levels need to be assessed, the procedure of Example 8 for assessing GLUT3 levels of expression can for example be used.
GLUT3
Cellular uptake of glucose occurs through facilitated diffusion mediated by a family of glucose transporter proteins, where GLUT3 (also known as SLC2A3) is one of the major isoforms. With the exception of neurons and a few hematopoietic cell types, GLUT3 is generally not expressed in adult tissues. However, GLUT3 expression has been detected in various cancer types. While the expression of GLUT3 in different cancer types has been observed, its functional role remains unknown.
Within the context of brain tumor initiating cells (also often referred to as brain cancer stem cells), GLUT3 expression has been found to correlate with the induced pluripotency and to predict poor survival in multiple tumor types (Flavahan, W A, Nature Neuroscience 16: 1373-1382 (2013).
The inventors discovered that GLUT3 levels are significantly lower in iPSC cells that exhibit defect in chromosome number and/or structure, induction of DNA damage response, or in apoptosis compared to cells characterized by normal chromosome number and/or structure, induction of DNA damage response, or apoptosis. In one instance, cells expressing lower or non-detectable levels of GLUT3 are A-iPSC cells. As illustrated in Example 8, increased expression of GLUT3 in A-iPSC led to substantial restoration of DNA damage response, similarly to the effects of ZSCAN10 expression in A-iPSC (FIG. 10D). Moreover, data presented in this disclosure show that ZSCAN10 leads to the induction of GLUT3, implying that ZSCAN10 and GLUT3 are interlinked in iPSC. ChIP-seq and immunoprecipitation analysis revealed that ZSCAN10 binds to the GLUT3 promoter, indicating direct regulation of GLUT3 by ZCAN10. The following materials are commercially available and can be procured online using websites such as those exemplified below (all last visited on Feb. 25, 2015).
cDNA sequence encoding human, murine, and rat GLUT3 can be found here (SEQ ID NO:2): www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/6515. (Kayano T. J. Biol. Chem., 263 (30): 15245-15248 (1988))
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/20527 (Nagamatsu S. J Biol Chem., 267 (1): 467-72 (1992)).
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/25551_(Krishnan S N. Life Sci. 56 (14): 1193-7 (1995). Plasmids carrying human GLUT3 are commercially available from Genecopoeia, and can be found here:
Additionally, recombinant GLUT3 protein is commercially available from mybiosource.com and can be found here:
GLUT3 supplementation in the amounts effective to substantially restore one or more of glucose metabolism, genomic stability, DNA damage, and/or apoptotic defects in iPSC, or more specifically, in A-iPSC, should be in an amount related to GLUT3 levels in iPSC cells that do not exhibit the above-mentioned defects. Alternatively, GLUT3 supplementation in A-iPSC can be related to the amount of GLUT3 detected in Y-iPSC and ESC. It is expected that the supplementation amounts effective in restoring the defects observed in iPSC due to reduced levels of GLUT3, will be in the range qualitatively similar to the range determined for ZSCAN10. Methods of supplementation of GLUT3 are diverse and the protocols described for the supplementation of ZSCAN10 apply to the supplementation of GLUT3.
The supplementation of GLUT3 can be achieved by introduction of an mRNA encoding GLUT3 into the iPSC-derived somatic cell and subsequent translation into a functional GLUT3 protein. Additional methods for increasing the levels of GLUT3 include, but are not limited to transfection with numerous vectors, such as adeno-associated virus, lentivirus, retrovirus, Sendai virus, DNA plasmids such that GLUT3 expression is effected at the DNA, RNA, and/or protein level in either a transient or long-term manner.
Alternatively, protein levels of GLUT3 can be increased by contacting the cell with an agent that leads to increased GLUT3 protein levels (in a transient or long-term manner). As shown in Example 8, ZSCAN10 expression leads to increased levels of GLUT3. Thus, it is expected that increasing the cellular levels of ZSCAN10 will result in the upregulation of GLUT3. Additionally, GLUT3 levels can be increased by contacting the cell with recombinant GLUT3 protein. As disclosed herein, the present method provides increasing the levels of ZSCAN10 in iPSC at a dosage sufficient to substantially or completely: (a) restore genomic stability, (b) improve poor DNA damage response, or (c) restore apoptotic response in human or animal (e.g., mouse) iPSC, or )d) restore glucose metabolism to levels similar to ESC or Y-iPSC.
GPX2
Glutathione peroxidases catalyze the reduction of H2O2 using reduced glutathione. GPX2 is a member of the glutathione peroxidase family encoding one of two isoenzymes responsible for the majority of the glutathione-dependent hydrogen peroxide-reducing activity in the epithelium of the gastrointestinal tract. Published literature suggests that stem cells reside in redox niches with low ROS levels, where the balance of redox homeostasis governs stem cell self-renewal by an intricate network. In the work described herein, it was found that A-iPSC show perturbed glutathione-H2O2 homeostasis, with the oxidation capacity of glutathione elevated compared to ESC and Y-iPSC (FIG. 8A).
Prior analysis of GPX2 expression in the intestine suggested a role for GPX2 in the stem cell compartment of the gut, however, a role for GPX2 in ESC or iPSC has not been described so far. As shown in Example 7, in mouse A-iPSC, excessive glutathione activity scavenges hydrogen peroxide generated by genotoxic insult (abnormal glutathione-hydrogen peroxide homeostasis), thus blocking the normal apoptosis and DNA damage response. As a result, cells that are damaged are not eliminated. The enhanced glutathione activity is due to excessive elevation of GPX2. As indicated in FIGS. 9B and 9C, knockdown of GPX2 in A-iPSC resulted in the normalization of gluthathione-H2O2 homeostasis. Moreover, downregulation of GPX2 restored the defects in DNA damage and apoptosis in mouse A-iPSC (FIGS. 9E and 9D). Mechanistically, the inventors discovered that GPX2 expression in the mouse is regulated by ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC, as overexpression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC led to a decrease of GPX2 mRNA.
As further proof that high levels of GPX2 are indeed responsible for the abnormal reprogramming of A-iPSC, the inventors overexpressed GPX2 in mouse Y-iPSC. High levels of GPX2 in Y-iPSC shifted the behavior of Y-iPSC towards that of A-iPSC. Overexpression of GPX2 in Y-iPSC decreased apoptosis, reduced the DNA damage response, decreased glucose metabolism and induced an imbalance in glutathione-H2O2 homeostasis (increased oxidative metabolism).
Thus, in one aspect of the present disclosure, reduction of GPX2 levels in cells exhibiting abnormal chromosome number and/or structure, induction of DNA damage, or apoptosis can lead to substantial restoration of the mentioned defects to substantially those of ESC and Y-iPSC. In one aspect, the iPSC cell can be A-iPSC. Reduction of GPX2 levels in A-iPSC can cause the molecular and phenotypic changes within the iPSC in a way that will make it closely resemble ESC or Y-iPSC. Levels of GPX2 in A-iPSC or more generally in iPSC and their proximity or difference to those of Y-iPSC from healthy young donors or ESC can also be used as a surrogate marker for assessing quality of iPSC.
Reduction in levels of GPX2 can be achieved through numerous methods. For example, a small molecule inhibitor known to directly or indirectly reduce protein levels of GPX2 can be used. Additionally, various RNA interference (such as siRNA, shRNA) technologies can be used to inhibit GPX2 at the RNA level. Thus, any agent that leads to reduction of protein, RNA, or DNA levels of GPX2 can be used to restore the chromosomal stability, DNA damage, and/or apoptotic defects observed in A-iPSC, or any iPSC that are characterized by one or more of those defects. Human GPX2 ORF cDNA is available commercially for example from GeneCopoeia, Rockville MD (www.genecopoeia.com); mouse GPX2 ORF cDNA is also available commercially for example from Origene, Rockville MD www.origene.com/cdna.
DNA Methylation
Although somatic cells within an organism share the same genomic sequence, they can differ significantly in gene expression patterns due to chromatin modifications as well as DNA methylation. The conversion of somatic cells into pluripotent stem cells via overexpression of reprogramming factors involves epigenetic remodelling. However, recent studies have revealed that the process of reversal is not fully completed at all times. For example, although mice have been successfully generated from iPSC, not all pluripotent stem cell-derived mice are epigenetically stable, and instability has been linked to overweight and sudden-death syndrome in mice. Furthermore, iPSC contain a residual epigenetic signature depending on the tissue type of the donor tissue used (Kim et al, Nat Biotechnol 29(12): 1117-1119, 2011). Finally, iPSC from aged donors (A-iPSC) have been shown to preserve an aging-specific epigenetic memory (Kim et al. Nature 467(7313):285-290, 2010).
In normal cells, DNA methylation assures accurate regulation of gene expression and stable gene silencing. DNA methylation is linked to histone modifications and the interplay between these modifications is critical for the functioning of the genome by changing chromatin architecture. The covalent addition of a methyl group occurs generally in cytosine within CpG dinucleotides which are concentrated in large clusters known as CpG islands. The aberrant DNA methylation landscape is a characteristic feature of cancer. It has been established that inactivation of specific tumor-suppressor genes arises as a consequence of hypermethylation (inactivation) within the promoter regions and numerous studies have shown a broad range of genes silenced by DNA methylation in various types of cancer. Furthermore, hypomethylation (activation), which can induce genomic instability, also contributes to cell transformation.
In the present disclosure, the ZSCAN10 promoter is activated in Y-iPSC and ESC, and inactive in A-iPSC. This modification resulted in poor levels of ZSCAN10, but was restored with the transient expression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC which led to hypomethylation (activation) of the endogenous ZSCAN10 promoter to levels similar to those detected in Y-iPSC (FIG. 7). Furthermore, DNA methylation analysis of mouse Y-iPSC and A-iPSC compared with mouse ESC showed that A-iPSC contain a higher number of differentially methylated regions (DMRs) than Y-iPSC. In addition, the number of hypermethylated DMRs is higher in mouse A-iPSC than in Y-iPSC. Moreover, depending on the genetic background of the donor, human A-iPSC show greater DNA methylation, similar to that observed in mouse A-iPSC. Moreover, recent studies have revealed that poor DNA demethylation in human cells is associated with inefficient reprogramming (Bagci, H. et al, Cell Stem Cell 3:265-269 (2013)), further establishing comparable patterns of DNA methylation between mouse and human cells. Thus, in one aspect, the present disclosure provides a method where distinct epigenetic differences such as the number of hypermethylated DMRs or the methylation status of ZSCAN10 in iPSC can serve as a marker or indicator of the specific iPSC properties. In another aspect, the present disclosure provides a method for substantially or completely restoring DNA methylation patterns in A-iPSC to be similar to those observed in Y-iPSC.
Genes affecting oncogenic potential of A-iPSC were identified by performing microarray analysis on ESC/Y-iPSC/A-iPSC/ZSCAN10/A-iPSC to detect differential expression of genes in A-iPSC. Both GPX2 and GLUT3 were identified thus.
ZSCAN Regulates Exosome, which in Turn Regulates GPX2
In the present disclosure, ChIP-Seq analysis revealed that ZSCAN10 binds to and upregulates subunits of the exosome complex. A-iPSC displayed lower mRNA levels of exosome subunits compared to FESC and Y-iPSC (FIG. 11A). Furthermore, overexpression of ZCAN10 led to restoration of exosome subunit mRNA, demonstrating a direct interaction between ZSCAN10 and exosome.
The multisubunit exosome complex is a major ribonuclease of eukaryotic cells that participates in the processing, quality control and degradation of nearly all classes of RNA (Schmid et al. Trends Biochem Sci. (10):501-10, (2008)). Previous studies have demonstrated that the interaction between the exosome and AU-rich elements (ARE) plays a key role in regulating the efficiency of ARE-containing mRNA turnover. The GPX2 gene contains highly conserved ARE sequences (Singh et al. Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol. 35(6):639-50 (2006)), making the ZSCAN10→EXOSOME→GPX2 axis a potential mechanism of GPX2 regulation. To test this hypothesis, different exosome subunits were knocked-down in ESC and the levels of GPX2 mRNA determined (FIG. 12A). Knock-down of EXOSC2 or EXOSC8 led to dramatic increase in GPX2 expression in ESC, which was accompanied by lower apoptotic response (FIG. 12B). Thus, these findings indicate that ZSCAN10 regulates GPX2 via mechanism that involves exosome complex including various subunits. Consequently, supplementing A-iPSC in the mouse with an exosome subunit would lead to amelioration of phenotypic defects and oncogenic potential associated with aging iPSC.
A-iPSC cells generated from aged human donors confirm the findings observed in A-iPSC generated from aged animals regarding low reprogramming efficiency (FIG. 13A). Interestingly, a significant difference in reprogramming efficiency is observed between two different donors of similar age, which was also reflected in their DNA damage response (FIG. 13B). A-iPSC generated from the donor that exhibited significant defect in DNA damage response also displayed structural chromosome abnormality (FIG. 13C). These results suggest that genetic background of an individual plays a significant role in reprogramming efficiency and DNA damage response of A-iPSC. It is anticipated that this defect can be rescued by supplementation as described herein.
Multiple laboratory mouse strains of various genetic backgrounds are available. To test the hypothesis that genetic background is crucial for A-iPSC, A-iPSC were generated from distinct mouse strains, B6129 and B6CBA. As shown in FIG. 13D, A-iPSC derived from the B6129 background mice exhibit normal DNA damage response (indicated by activation of p53), while A-iPSC from the B6CBA background mice showed blunted DNA damage response. Collectively, these findings indicate that reprogramming efficiency, chromosomal stability, as well as a DNA damage response associated with A-iPSC are all highly dependent on genetic background of the individual or animal from which they are derived as well as on epigenetic factors and aging.
GSS
De novo synthesis of glutathione (GSH) is catalyzed by two enzymes, γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase (γ-GCS) and glutathione synthetase (GSS). The rate-limiting step of GSH synthesis is the formation of the amide linkage between the gamma-carboxyl moiety of glutamic acid and the amino moiety of cysteine. The rate at which GSH is synthesized is based on both the activity of the enzyme (GCS) and the availability of cysteine. GSS completes the GSH synthesis by catalyzing the conversion of the γ-GluCys dipeptide to GSH via the addition of glycine (Johnson et al. Nutrients.4(10):1399-440 (2012)).
The enzymes involved in GSH synthesis are controlled by multiple mechanisms both pre and post transcriptionally. Previous studies focused on genome-wide mapping of ZSCAN10-binding sites in ESC identified ˜3500 target genes, including GSS (Yu et al. J Biol Chem. 284(45): 31327-31335 (2009)). In the present disclosure, the inventors have shown that in humans ZSCAN10 binds directly to the GSS promoter (Example 12, FIG. 14B). Additionally, they have shown that the levels of GSS mRNA are significantly upregulated in A-iPSC compared with Y-iPSC and ESC and that this upregulation is diminished upon ZSCAN10 overexpression in A-iPSC (Example 12, FIG. 14C).
Additional experiments disclosed herein provide further proof that GSS is indeed involved in regulating oncogenic potential of A-iPSC in humans. As described in Example 13 and FIGS. 14D-F, GSS plays a role in both apoptosis, as well as in the regulation of the DNA damage response. Down-regulation of GSS in A-iPSC using shRNA led to increased apoptotic response (Example 13, FIG. 14D) as well as in the rescue of the DNA damage response (Example 13, FIGS. 14E-14F). On the contrary, overexpression of GSS in Y-iPSC caused lower apoptotic response compared to control Y-iPSC cells (FIG. 14D) and loss of DNA damage response (FIGS. 14E and 14F).
Thus, in one aspect of the present disclosure, reduction of GSS levels in cells exhibiting abnormal chromosome number and/or structure, induction of DNA damage, or apoptosis can lead to substantial restoration of the aforementioned defects in these phenotypic traits and their restoration to substantially those of ESC and Y-iPSC. In one aspect, the iPSC cell can be A-iPSC. Reduction of GSS levels in A-iPSC can cause the molecular and phenotypic changes within the iPSC in a way that will make it closely resemble ESC or Y-iPSC.
Reduction in levels of GSS can be achieved through numerous methods. For example, various RNA interference (such as siRNA, shRNA) technologies can be used to inhibit GSS at the RNA level. Thus, any agent that leads to reduction of protein, RNA, or DNA levels of GSS can be used to restore the chromosomal stability, DNA damage, and/or apoptotic defects observed in A-iPSC, or any iPSC that are characterized by one or more of those defects. Both human and mouse GSS ORF cDNA is available commercially for example from OriGene Technologies, Rockville, MD (www.origene.com/cdna). To target GSS at the DNA level, clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)-Cas genome editing tool can be used (Sander and Joung, Nature Biotechnology 32, 347-355 (2014). Additionally, GSS levels or activity can be reduced using inhibitors known to directly or indirectly reduce protein levels and/or activity of GSS. For example, buthionine sulfoximine (Drew and Miners, Biochem Pharmacol. 33(19):2989-94 (1984)), 6-Diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine (Vanoni M A and Curti B, IUBMB Life. 60(5):287-300 (2008)), and azaserine (Hensley et al. J Clin Invest. 123(9):3678-84 (2013)) have been shown to inhibit GSS. Thus, in one embodiment of the present disclosure, GSS levels are reduced or activity inhibited using buthionine sulfoximine, 6-Diazo-5-oxo-L-norleucine (Vanoni M A and Curti B, IUBMB and/or azaserine, or any inhibitor shown to reduce the activity and/or levels of GSS. In addition to using each inhibitor individually, the reduction of GSS activity and/or levels can be achieved by combination of two or more known inhibitors. In inhibiting GSS it is important that the inhibition not be complete. Some amount of glutathione is important to the cell.
Alternatively, ZSCAN10 can be upregulated as described herein to suppress upregulation of GSS since the present inventors have shown that GSS is directly regulated by ZSCAN10 through binding to the promoter of GSS. Through the work described herein ZSCAN 10 has emerged as an important coregulatory of somatic cell reprogramming to produce iPSC especially iPSC from aged donors.
GSS can also be used as a surrogate marker for assessing oncogenic potential and glutathione/H2O2 homeostasis and more generally quality of iPSC especially A-iPSC by measuring levels of GSS in A-iPSC and more generally iPSC and comparing them to those of Y-iPSC or ESC from healthy donors. If the levels of GSS are low, i.e., comparable to those of Y-iPSC and ESC then the stem cells have low oncogenic potential, have robust glutathione homeostasis and are generally of good quality.
Cell Culture
ESC and iPSC were cultured in ESC media containing 10% FBS and 1,000 U/ml of LIF (ESGRO® Leukemia Inhibitory Factor [LIF], 1 million units/1 mL). For generation of ESC, established methods previously reported were used (Kim et al. Nature 467: 285-290, 2010). For iPSC reprogramming of somatic cells, retrovirus expressing OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, and MYC were introduced. For the somatic cells containing inducible reprogramming factors, the media was supplemented with 2 μg/ml doxycycline (MP Biomedicals, doxycycline hyclate). For DNA and RNA isolation, ESC or iPSC were trypsinized and re-plated onto new tissue culture dishes for 30 min to remove feeder cells, and nucleic acids were extracted from the non-adherent cell suspension.
Generation of Mouse Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, A-iPSC-shGPX2, A-iPSC-shGSS, A-iPSC-GLUT, ESC-shEXOSC2, ESC-shEXOSC8, ESC shEXOSC2&8, human Y-iPSC, and human A-iPSC
106 skin fibroblast cells were collected from B6CBAF1 mouse E15.5 embryonic skin, 5-day-old tail tip skin, and 1.4-year-old tail tip skin; infected with retrovirus generated from pMX-mOCT4, pMX-mSOX2, pMX-mKLF4,2 and pEYK-mMYC3 in 6-well dishes with 0.5 ml of each viral supernatant (total 2 ml per well); and spun at 2500 rpm at RT for 90 min (BenchTop Centrifuge, BeckmanCoulter, Allegra-6R). For the generation of A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, the procedure was identical but in addition to the four reprogramming factors, a doxycycline inducible system was added to overexpress ZSCAN10. This system consisted of two lentiviruses generated from a plentiRZ-ZSCAN10 and a plenti-RTTA vector (Kim et al. Nat Biotechnol 29: 1117-1119, 2011). The vector was generated by replacing the insert of a commercially available vector with ZSCAN10 (or GLUT3 or other insert described herein). All cells infected with the reprogramming factors and those with additional ZSCAN10, shGPX2, shGSS and GLUT3 were plated on irradiated CF-1 mouse embryonic feeder cells in a 10-cm tissue culture dish in ESC media containing 20% FBS and 1,000 U/ml of LIF. Media were changed on day 2 and doxycycline addition started on day 3 for ZSCAN10 overexpression. Floating cells were collected by media centrifugation and returned to culture during media changes. On day 4, cultured cells were trypsinized and replated onto four 10-cm dishes pre-coated with gelatin (0.1%) and irradiated mouse embryonic fibroblasts in ESC maintenance media. Media were changed daily until ESC-like colonies were observed. The reprogrammed colonies were tested for pluripotency by teratoma assay formation, alkaline phosphatase staining, SSEA-1 and NANOG staining, and OCT4 expression levels.
For the generation of A-iPSC-shGPX2, A-iPSC were infected post-reprogramming with a set of shRNA viral vectors for GPX2 (6 GIPZ Lentiviral shRNA vectors from Thermo Scientific: RMM4532-EG14776). Clones were selected with puromycin, and the levels of down-regulation were measured by Q-PCR. For the generation of A-iPSC-shGSS, A-iPSC were infected post-reprogramming with a set of shRNA viral vectors for GSS (GE DHARMACON, RMM4532-EG14854).
For the generation of A-iPSC-shZSCAN10, mouse A-iPSC were infected post-reprogramming with a set of shRNA lentiviral vectors designed to target NM_001033425.3. A set of ZSCAN10 set shRNAs is commercially available from Abmgood.com (last visited on Oct. 6, 2015).
For the generation of Y-iPSC-GPX2, mouse Y-iPSC were infected with a lentivirus carrying the GPX2 cDNA post-reprogramming (Harvard Plasmid Core (plasmid.med.harvard.edu/PLASMID/Home.jsp). The infected clones were assessed for GPX2 expression levels by Q-PCR. For the generation of Y-iPSC-GSS, mouse Y-iPSC were infected with a lentivirus carrying the GSS cDNA (Harvard Plasmid Core (plasmid.med.harvard.edu/PLASMID/) post-reprogramming. The infected clones were sorted for a red fluorescent marker and the GSS expression levels were assed by Q-PCR.
For the generation of human A-iPSC, 105 skin fibroblasts from 84 years old, 76 years old, and 81 years old subjects were infected with retrovirus generated from the tetracistronic SFG-SV2A vector encoding for hOCT4, hSOX2, hKLF4 and hMYC in 6-well dishes with 0.5 ml of each viral supernatant (total 2 ml per well); and spun at 2500 rpm at RT for 90 min (BenchTop Centrifuge, BeckmanCoulter, Allegra-6R).
For the generation of ESC-shEXOSC2, ESC-shEXOSC8 and ESC shEXOSC2&8, ESC were infected with a set of shRNA viruses for EXOSC2 and/or EXOSC8 (2 GIPZ Lentiviral shRNA vectors for EXOSC2 from GE DHARMACON: RMM4431-200370629, RMM4431-200332733 and 3 GIPZ Lentiviral shRNA vectors for EXOSC8 from GE DHARMACON: RMM4532-EG69639). Clones were selected with puromycin treatment.
Retrovirus Generation
293T cells were seeded overnight at 5×106 cells per 150-mm dish with DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS and penicillin/streptomycin. Retrovirus was generated using pMX-mOCT4, pMX-mSOX2, pMX-mKLF4, and pEYK-mMYC constructs as described previously (Koh et al. Nucleic Acids Res. 30: e142, 200; Takahashi et al. Cell 126: 663-676, 2006). The cells were transfected with standard calcium phosphate method as previously described. Media were replaced with fresh DMEM two times, 18 hours after transfection. Approximately 48 hours after transfection, medium containing the lentivirus was collected and the cellular debris was removed with centrifugation. The supernatant was filtered through a 0.45-μm filter, and the retrovirus was pelleted with ultracentrifugation at 33,000 rpm in 45 Ti rotors (Beckman) for 90 min at 4° C. The retroviral particles were resuspended in the ESC medium and stored at −80° C.
Lentivirus Production
293T cells were seeded overnight at 5×106 cells per 150-mm dish with DMEM supplemented with 10% FBS and penicillin/streptomycin. The cells were transfected with plentiRZ-ZSCAN10 and plenti-RTTA using calcium phosphate cell transfection, as previously described (Kim et al. Nat Biotechnol 29: 1117-1119, 2011). The ZSCAN10 cDNA was clone MmCD00295052 in the pENTR223.1 backbone. The cDNA for mZSCAN10 was subcloned into a plentiRZ vector and the cDNA for GPX2 into a plenti-puro vector using the Gateway® system. See tools.lifetechnologies.com/content/sfs/manuals/gatewayman.pdf. At 48 hours after transfection, the medium containing the lentivirus was collected and the cellular debris was removed with centrifugation. The supernatant was filtered through a 0.45-μm filter, and the lentivirus was pelleted with ultracentrifugation at 33,000 rpm in 45Ti rotors (Beckman) for 90 min at 4° C. The lentivirus particles were resuspended in DMEM medium and stored at −80° C.
Teratoma analysis was carried out for ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 cells. The results revealed decreased incidence of malignant tumors for A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 cells compared to A-iPSC without insert. Teratoma analysis for A-iPSC-GLUT3 will be performed in analogous manner and it is anticipated that the results will be qualitatively the same.
Quantitative Real Time-PCR (Q-PCR) Analysis
The expression levels of genes (ZSCAN10, OCT4, GPX2, GLUT3, and β-ACTIN) were quantified by Q-PCR with Power SYBR Green PCR mastermix (Applied Biosystems). Total RNAs (1 μg) were reverse-transcribed in a volume of 20 μl using the M-MuLV Reverse Transcriptase system (New England Biolabs), and the resulting cDNA was diluted into a total volume of 200 μl. 10 μl of this synthesized cDNA solution was used for analysis. For pluripotent genes, each reaction was performed in a 25-μl volume using the Power SYBR Green PCR mastermix (Applied Biosystems). The conditions were programmed as follows: initial denaturation at 95° C. for 10 min followed by 40 cycles of 30 sec at 95° C., 1 min at 55° C., and 1 min at 72° C.; then 1 min at 95° C., 30 s at 55° C., and 30 sec at 95° C. All of the samples were duplicated, and the PCR reaction was performed using an Mx3005P reader (Stratagene), which can detect the amount of synthesized signals during each PCR cycle. The relative amounts of the mRNAs were determined using the MxPro program (Stratagene). The amount of PCR product was normalized to a percentage of the expression level of β-ACTIN. The PCR products of OCT4, ZSCAN10, GPX2 and 3-ACTIN were also evaluated on 1.2% agarose gels after staining with ethidium bromide. The primers used to amplify the cDNA were the following: OCT4—For 5′-GGCTCTCCCATGCATTCAA-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 17) and OCT4-Rev 5′-TTTAACCCCAAAGCTCCAGG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 18), ZSCAN10—For 5′-GGCTCAGAGGAATGCGTTAG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 19) and ZSCAN10-Rev 5′-CATCTACAGGCCCACCAGTT-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 20), GPX2—For 5′-GTGCTGATTGAGAATGTGGC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 21) and GPX2-Rev 5′-AGGATGCTCGTTCTGCCCA-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 22), 3-ACTIN—For 5′-TCGTGGGTGACATCAAAGAGA-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 23) and 3-ACTIN-Rev 5′-GAACCGCTCGTTGCCAATAGT-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 24), and HPRT—For 5′-CTCCTCAGACCGCTTTTTGC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 25) and HPRT-Rev 5′-TCGAGAGCTTCAGACTCGT-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 26), EXOSC2—For CCCCAAGGAGCATCTGACAA (SEQ ID NO: 27) and EXOSC2-Rev CCAACCCACCATTACCTCCC (SEQ ID NO: 28), EXOSC1—For ATGGGTTGGTGATGGGCATAG (SEQ ID NO: 29) and EXOSC1-Rev CCCATGCTGTCACTATTGGGT (SEQ ID NO: 30), EXOSC5—For CCGATTCTACCGGGAATCACT (SEQ ID NO: 31) and EXOSC5-Rev CTACATGGGCACAGACAGAGG (SEQ ID NO: 32). Transgene silencing (OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, and MYC) was confirmed using the following primers, which span the 5′ region of the viral vector and the 5′ end of the structural genes. Uninfected fibroblasts were used as a negative control and day 3 fibroblasts transfected with Yamanaka factors were used as a positive control. The primer sequences to detect the transgene flanked the pMX vector and the transgene: pMX-S1811—For 5′-GACGGCATCGCAGCTTGGATACAC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 33), and OCT4-Rev 5′-CAGTCCAACCTGAGGTCCAC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 34), KLF4 Rev 5′-GACAACGGTGGGGGACAC-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 35), SOX2 Rev 5′-CTGGAGTGGGAGGAAGAGGT-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 36), and MYC Rev 5′-CCAGATATCCTCACTGGGCG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 37). the primers for GLUT3 were mGlut3-xba-F atttctagaATGGGGACAACGAAGGTGACC (SEQ ID NO: 38) and mGlut3-xba-R atggatccTCAGGCGTTGCCAGGGGTC (SEQ ID NO: 39).
Drug Treatments and Irradiation
Phleomycin (Sigma) was added at 30 μg/ml for 2 hours. Cells were processed for analysis 30 min after phleomycin treatment unless indicated otherwise. After the 30-min recovery in ESC media, the cells were collected and processed for following experiments. For the detection of the DNA damage response in the extended period, the cells were given 6 hours to recover after phleomycin treatment and were processed for H2AX immunostaining. In the DNA fragmentation assay, the cells were given 15 hours to recover. To check the mutagenesis potential, the cells were treated with phleomycin 30 μg/ml for 2 hours and cultured for one passage after each treatment. This process was repeated three times and then the cells were processed for 6TG selection. Cells were irradiated at 10 Gy, allowed to recover for 2 hours, and then lysates were collected for immunoblot analysis.
Teratoma Analysis
iPSC were collected by trypsin collagenase treatment, resuspended in Matrigel mix (DMEM:Matrigel:collagen at 2:1:1 ratio), and 106 undifferentiated cells were injected into the subcutaneous tissue above the rear haunch of Rag2/γC immunodeficient mice (Taconic). Teratoma formation was monitored for 3 months post-injection. Collected tumors were fixed in 10% formalin solution and processed for hematoxylin and eosin (H/E) staining by the Molecular Cytology facility of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and by Histowiz, Inc. Protocols for H/E staining are provided at protocolsonline.com/histology/dyes-and-stains/haematoxylin-eosin-he-staining/and www.nsh.org/sites/default/files/Guidelines_For_Hematoxylin_and_Eosin_Staining.pdf.
Immunoblot Analysis
Treated and untreated cells (1×105 cells) were collected 30 min after the 2-hour phleomycin treatment (30 μg/ml). To harvest protein, 100-200 mL RIPA buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 150 mM NaCl, 1% NP40, 0.25% Na-deoxycholate, 1 mM PMSF, protease inhibitor cocktail, and phosphatase inhibitor cocktail) was added to floating cell pellets and the remaining adherent cells. The samples were incubated on ice (10 min) and centrifuged (14,000 g, 10 min, 4° C.). Protein concentrations were determined using a BCA protein assay kit (Pierce). Samples were adjusted to the same concentration with RIPA buffer (3000 μg/ml) and were combined with Laemmli Sample Buffer (Biorad) and β-Mercaptoethanol (Sigma) then heated at 95° C. for 5 min and loaded onto a 4-15% Mini Protean TGX SDS-PAGE gel (BioRad). Samples on the SDS-PAGE gel were transferred to a 0.2-mm PVDF membrane at 100 V for 1 h, using a wet electro-transfer method (0.2 M glycine, 25 mM Tris, and 20% methanol). The membrane was blocked with 5% BSA in PBS-T (1 h at 4° C.), followed by incubation with primary antibodies anti-H2AX (Millipore, 05-636) (1:1000), anti-p53 (Leica Biosystems, P53-CM5P) (1:1000), anti phospho-ATM (Pierce, MA1-2020), or anti-beta actin (Cell Signaling, #4967) (1:5000) in blocking solution (5% BSA in phosphate-buffered saline containing Tween-20 [1:1000] PBS-T, overnight at 4° C.). After primary antibody incubation, membranes were washed three times in PBS-T) prior to addition of secondary antibody labelled with peroxidase. Secondary antibodies were from Cell Signaling (1:10,000).
Bisulfite Pyrosequencing Analysis
500 ng of genomic DNA was bisulfite-treated using the EZ DNA Methylation-Gold Kit (Zymo Research) according to the manufacturer's specifications. Bisulfite-treated genomic DNA was PCR-amplified using ZSCAN10 specific primers. The position of interest of ZSCAN10 promoter was based on Ensembl Genome assembly: GRCm38 (GCA000001635.4) on Chr17:23599958-23600647. The assay (PCR and Pyrosequencing) covered three CpG sites immediately upstream of the transcription start site on 23600600 (CpG 3), 23600645 (CpG 2), and 23600647 (CpG 1). The pyrosequencing was designed and performed by Epigendx (Hopkinton, MA, USA).
Cytogenetic Analysis
Cytogenetic analysis was performed by metaphase chromosome preparation, G-band karyotyping, and flow cytometry analysis with PI staining. Metaphase chromosome preparation and the G-band karyotyping were performed by the Molecular Cytogenetics Core Facility of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. For PI staining, the cells were harvested and washed in PBS and then fixed in cold 70% ethanol (added drop-wise to the pellet while vortexing to minimize clumping) for 30 min at 4° C. The cells were washed in PBS twice, treated with ribonuclease, and stained with PI (Propidium Iodide Staining Solution: 3.8 mM sodium citrate, 40 μg/ml PI [Sigma, P 4170] in PBS).
Immunohistochemistry Staining
Cells were fixed in 3.7% formaldehyde for 20 min at room temperature and washed with PBS. Samples were then permeabilized with 0.1 Triton X-100 in PBS for 20 min and blocked for 1 h with 3% BSA in PBS-T, and primary antibodies were incubated for 2 h at room temperature or overnight at 4° C. Anti-H2AX was purchased from Millipore (05-636), anti-SSEA-1 phycoerythrin conjugated was purchased from R&D systems (FAB2155P), and anti-NANOG from BETHYL Laboratories (A300-397A). Primary antibodies were used at 1:500 dilution. Alexa 568-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgM (A-21124) and Alexa 633-conjugated goat anti rabbit IgG (A-21072) were from Molecular Probes. Secondary antibodies were used at 1:1000 dilution. The nuclei were stained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI, Sigma). Alkaline phosphatase (AP) staining was performed using the Alkaline Phosphatase Detection Kit (Millipore) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Fluorescence images were obtained using an AxioImager Z1 microscopy system (Zeiss).
DNA Fragmentation Analysis
DNA fragmentation was measured using an in situ cell death assay kit (Roche) for visualization of DNA strand breaks by labelling the free 3′-OH termini with modified nucleotides (e.g., biotin-dUTP, DIG-dUTP, fluorescein-dUTP) in an enzymatic reaction. iPSC cells (1×105 cells) were treated with phleomycin (30 g/ml) for 2 hours. Samples were collected as control or treated for analysis 15 hours after phleomycin treatment. Additionally, cells were treated with DNAase I recombinant (Roche) (10 min, 3 U/ml, at 15° C. to 25° C.) to induce DNA strand breaks, as a positive control for apoptosis. Medium containing floating cells and attached cells was centrifuged (1000 g, 5 min) and collected. Cells were processed for flow cytometry analysis.
H2O2 Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) Assay
H2O2 scavenging activity was measured using a cellular reactive oxygen species assay kit (Abcam, ab113851). ESC/iPSC were labelled with 20 μM DCFDA (2′,7′-dichlorofluorescein diacetate; a fluorogenic dye that measures hydroxyl, peroxyl, and other ROS activity within the cell), and cultured for 3 h with 50 μM TBHP (tert-butyl hydrogen peroxide; stable chemical form of H2O2). Cells were then analyzed on a fluorescent plate reader. Mean±standard deviation is plotted for four replicates from each condition.
TBHP Treatment
Cells were treated with 350 μM TBHP solution (Luperox® TBH70X, tert-Butyl hydroperoxide solution 70 wt. % in H2O, 458139) for 30 min in PBS. Lysates were collected for immunoblot analysis. The control untreated cell lines were cultured in either ESC media or PBS, and DNA damage response was not induced in both media without TBHP treatment (data not shown).
HPRT Assay
HPRT assay was performed according to the previously published protocol (Tsuda et al., AATEX 11 (2), 118-128, 2005). After ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 were cultured with three rounds of phleomycin treatment, 106 ESC and iPSC were plated onto 10-cm tissue culture dishes containing feeder cells (CF-1 MEF) and added 5 μg/ml of 6-TG (2-amino-6-mercaptopurine; Sigma) for negative selection. The mutation frequency was estimated by the inactivation of HPRT promoter activity. Individual colonies were counted/picked at day 12, and the number of colonies was normalized to the percentage of colonies that did not express HPRT in each group by Q-PCR analysis.
Glutathione Detection Assay
Feeder-free cells were cultured on Matrigel-coated tissue culture plates in MEF-conditioned ESC-media. On day 3, the cells were washed in PBS and scraped and pelleted by centrifugation. Subsequent steps were performed using a Glutathione Fluorometric Assay Kit (cat #K264-100, Biovision Inc., Milpitas, CA, USA) according to the manufacturer's manual. Briefly, cell pellets were homogenized in ice cold glutathione assay buffer, preserved in perchloric acid, and centrifuged. Supernatants were neutralized with potassium hydroxide. After centrifugation, the supernatant was either used to detect reduced glutathione (GSH), or total glutathione was measured by reducing oxidized glutathione (GSSG) to GSH before measurement. For measuring GSSG concentrations specifically, existing GSH was quenched before reducing agent was applied. OPA (o-phthalaldehyde) probe, which reacts with GSH and emits fluorescence, was added to samples, and signal was acquired at Ex/Em=340 nm/420 nm on a Varioscan Flash by Thermo Scientific. Oxidation capacity of glutathione was determined by the quantity of total glutathione (GSH+GSSG).
iPS Cells Derived from Aged Mice Exhibit Higher Genomic Instability and Lower Apoptotic Activity
Yamanaka and others (Takahashi et al., Cell, 126, 663-676, 2006) identified the four epigenetic reprogramming factors for generating iPSC using young donor tissue, but never tested whether or not the same four factors were sufficient for iPSC reprogramming of aged donor tissue.
Here, iPSC cells were generated using mouse skin fibroblasts from E15.5 embryos to 5-day-old neonates (Y-iPSC) or using mouse skin fibroblast from donors 1.4 years of age (A-iPSC) according to the standard Yamanaka iPSC reprogramming protocol.
12 clones of each cell type were randomly picked based on the morphology, and analyzed for pluripotency compared to ECS as the gold standard. Multi-lineage contribution to three germ layers in teratoma analysis and pluripotent gene expression analysis (AP/OCT4/SSEA1/NANOG) showed successful reprogramming of mouse skin fibroblasts isolated from both young and aged donors. Silencing of the four reprogramming factors (OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, MYC) in each clone was confirmed by quantitative PCR (Q-PCR). Initially, when DNA ploidy was tested in multiple iPSC clones, both Y-iPSC and A-iPSC clones with normal ploidy were observed (FIGS. 1A, 1B, and 1D); however, a higher frequency of polyploidy was observed in A-iPSC compared to Y-iPSC (FIGS. 1B, 1E, and 1F). Additionally, A-iPSC displayed more chromosomal structural abnormalities than Y-iPSC (FIG. 1G).
Pluripotent stem cells are known to have a unique DNA damage response that is different from the canonical DNA damage response of somatic cells and cancer cells. The maintenance of genomic stability in pluripotent stem cells is achieved by directly inducing apoptosis to eliminate severely damaged cells from the population (Liu, J, Trends in Cell Biology, 24, 268-274, 2014; Liu, J, Cell Stem Cell, 13, 483-491, 2013). Thus, it was postulated that the poor genetic stability observed in A-iPSC was due to defects in apoptosis. In order to test this hypothesis, activation of apoptosis in response to DNA damage was evaluated in all independent clones.
In situ cell death assays of ESC, Y-iPSC, and A-iPSC were performed 15 hours after the end of treatment with a DNA damage inducing agent, phleomycin (2 hours, 30 μg/ml). A-iPSC show fewer cells staining for cell death compared to ESC and Y-iPSC. Y-iPSC group treated with dye in the absence of enzymatic reaction was used as a negative control. Nuclei were stained with DAPI. As shown in FIG. 2, lower apoptotic response was observed by DNA fragmentation assay after phleomycin treatment of A-iPSC, while ESC and Y-iPSC displayed comparable DNA fragmentation under same conditions. Collectively, the data presented here suggest that A-iPSC are characterized by higher genomic instability and lower apoptotic activity compared to ESC and Y-iPSC.
ZSCAN10 is a Pluripotency Factor Poorly Activated in A-iPSC Compared to ESC and Y-iPSC
In order to identify ESC-specific pluripotency factors that are poorly activated in A-iPSC compared to ESC and Y-iPSC, and are most likely responsible for the defects observed in A-iPSC, a strategy was developed starting from a known network of 59 pluripotency genes. Kim et al. (Kim, J., Cell 132, 1049-1061) previously reported 59 core pluripotency genes derived from the pluripotency network analysis (FIG. 3). Initially, these 59 core genes were filtered against the genes known to be associated with DNA damage response, such as p53, SIRT1, PLK1, and genes upstream of p53 (ATM, PARP, and DNAPK). From there, the gene list was further filtered based on differential expression in A-iPSC vs. Y-iPS and A-iPSC vs. ESC, which narrowed down the candidates to a single gene, ZSCAN10. ZSCAN10 is a known zinc finger transcription factor specifically expressed in ESC, and is an integrated part of the transcriptional regulatory network with SOX2, OCT4, NANOG, and ZSCAN4.
To further evaluate the role of ZSCAN in reprogramming, the levels of ZSCAN were determined in ESC, Y-iPSC, and A-iPSC by quantitative real-time-PCR (Q-PCR). As expected, ZSCAN10 mRNA levels were significantly lower in A-iPSC compared to ESC and Y-iPSC (FIG. 4). Thus, it was concluded that ZSCAN10 expression is low in somatic cells, higher in Y-iPSC and ESC, but restricted in A-iPSC.
The data presented here suggests that ZSCAN10 is a potential factor responsible for the genomic instability observed in A-iPSC cells.
ZSCAN10 Expression Restores Genetic Stability and Apoptosis in A-iPSC
To explore the function of ZSCAN10 in reprogramming, iPSC were generated from aged donor fibroblasts using the four Yamanaka factors (OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, and MYC) plus ZSCAN10 within a doxycycline (Dox)-inducible lentiviral expression vector. A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 cells were grown in media supplemented with 2 μg/ml of doxycycline for two days. Following doxycycline withdrawal, reprogrammed colonies were tested for pluripotency by teratoma assay formation, alkaline phosphatase staining, SSEA-1 and NANOG staining, and OCT4 expression levels, which confirmed that A-iPS-ZSCAN10 have undergone successful reprogramming. Next, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 were tested for their ability to rescue genomic stability and apoptotic defects observed in A-iPSC containing low levels of ZSCAN10.
Using a doxycycline system, transient expression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC permanently increased endogenous ZSCAN10 expression to levels similar to those in Y-iPSC and ESC (FIG. 4). Moreover, transient expression of ZSCAN10 during reprogramming in A-iPSC reduced the abnormal chromosomal ploidy and structural abnormalities to levels comparable to Y-iPSC and ESC (FIGS. 1C, 1F, and 1G). In order to test the effect of ZSCAN10 on apoptosis in A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 were treated with DNA damage inducing agent, phleomycin (2 hours, 30 μg/ml), and the apoptotic response was evaluated by DNA fragmentation assay. ZSCAN10 expression in A-iPSC restored the defect in induction of apoptosis following DNA damage induction (FIG. 2).
These results indicate that ZSCAN expression in A-iPSC rescues the genomic stability and apoptosis defects detected in iPS cells generated from aged donors.
A-iPSC Display Higher Mutagenic Potential Compared to ESC and Y-iPSC, which is Restored by ZSCAN10 Expression
As discussed in Example 3, transient expression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC during reprogramming restored genomic stability and apoptosis to levels comparable to ESC and Y-iPSC. To define the mechanism by which ZSCAN10 expression restores genomic stability and apoptosis in A-iPSC, a comprehensive molecular analysis of a minimum of three independent clones (each of ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and A-iPSC) was performed. Since A-iPSC showed a defect in induction of apoptosis, it was hypothesized that A-iPSC failed to eliminate damaged cells and would accumulate more genomic mutations than Y-iPSC or ESC.
The mutagenic potential in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 was determined using the mutagenic destruction of HPRT promoter activity (Tsuda et al., AATEX 11 (2), 118-128, 2005. The hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT), gene located on the X chromosome of mammalian cells, is widely used as a model gene to investigate gene mutations in mammalian cell lines. The HPRT methodology detects mutations that destroy the functionality of the HPRT gene and or/protein, where the detection of mutations is achieved by selection using a toxic analogue 6-thioguanine (6-TG). Various types of mutations in the HPRT gene lead to cells resistant against lethal 6-TG incorporated into their DNA. Thus, only cells with HPRT mutations can grow in 6-TG containing media. This method detects a broad range of mutagens, since any mutation resulting in the ablation of proper gene function produces an HPRT mutant.
Following three rounds of phleomycin treatment (2 hours each, at 30 g/ml), ESC, Y-iPSC, and A-iPSC were cultured in media containing 6-TG (5 μg/ml). The mutation frequency was estimated by the inactivation of HPRT promoter activity. Individual colonies were counted/picked at day 12, and the number of colonies was normalized to the percentage of colonies that did not express HPRT in each group by Q-PCR analysis.
A-iPSC displayed significantly higher mutation rate compared to ESC and Y-iPSC (FIG. 5A). Consistent with the findings that ZSCAN10 can restore genomic stability and apoptosis defects in A-iPSC, transient expression of ZSCAN10 reduced the mutagenic potential in these cells (FIG. 5A).
Mutagenic potential of ESC, Y-iPSC, and A-iPSC was further tested in vivo. Teratoma formation is an established assay that determines the capacity of differentiation in vivo and is considered to be the essential method for evaluating human ES and iPS cell lines. Teratoma analysis revealed that while ESC and Y-iPSC form benign teratoma, significant percentage of A-iPSC clones (48%) form a mixture of malignant carcinoma and benign teratoma (FIGS. 5B-5E).
Taken together, these results show that A-iPSC exhibit higher mutagenic potential, both in vitro and in vivo, than ESC and Y-iPSC.
ZSCAN10 Corrects the Blunted DNA Damage Response in A-iPSC Via ATM, p53, and H2AX
The aging process gradually alters DNA repair mechanisms through a chronic activation of the DNA damage response. To evaluate the DNA damage response in more detail in A-iPSC and the role of ZSCAN10 in this process, activation of known DNA damage effector proteins was assessed.
The cellular response to DNA damage involves a series of events that lead to apoptosis. One of the early events is the phosphorylation of Ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM), a serine/threonine kinase that plays a central role in the repair of DNA double-strand breaks. ATM further phosphorylates several key proteins that initiate activation of the DNA damage checkpoint, leading to cell cycle arrest and apoptosis. ATM activation leads to phosphorylation of tumor suppressors p53 and histone 2AX (H2AX). With the goal of gaining a better understanding of the events affected by ZSCAN10, phosphorylation of ATM, H2AX, and p53 was examined in A-iPSC following the induction of DNA damage.
ESC, Y-iPSC, and A-iPSC were treated with 30 μg/ml of DNA damage inducing agent phleomycin for 2 hours. Protein levels of ATM, H2AX, and p53 were determined by immunoblot analysis. As shown in FIGS. 6A, 6B, and 6C, A-iPSC exhibit either low, or undetectable levels of phosphorylated ATM, p53, and H2AX following the treatment with phleomycin compared to ESC and Y-iPSC. These defects are, in part, mediated by ZSCAN10 since expression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC restores the phosphorylation of DNA damage pathway proteins to levels comparable to those detected in ESC and Y-iPSC (FIGS. 6A, 6B, and 6C). In order to confirm that the defect in DNA damage response was universal and not dependent on phleomycin, experiments were conducted using the same experimental design, but changing the DNA damage inducing agent. Similarly to data observed with phleomycin, ESC and Y-iPSC, but not A-iPSC, show an increase in ATM/H2AX/p53 levels after irradiation and hydrogen peroxide H2O2 treatment. For radiation experiments, cells were irradiated with 10 Gy, allowed to recover for 2 hours, and the lysates were collected for immunoblot analysis. Both radiation and H2O2 are known inducers of DNA damage response. Importantly, the ATM/H2AX/p53 response to irradiation and H2O2 in A-iPSC was recovered by transient expression of ZSCAN10 (FIGS. 6F and 6G).
In addition to overexpression experiments, the inventors reduced ZSCAN10 levels using shRNA targeting ZSACN10 in Y-iPSC (FIGS. 6D and 6E). Further providing support for the role of ZSCAN10 in the regulation of DNA damage response, Y-iPSC with reduced ZSCAN10 expression exhibited lower apoptotic response compared to those that had normal ZSCAN10 levels (FIG. 6D).
Collectively, these results indicate that impaired DNA damage response in A-iPSC is recovered with the transient expression of ZSCAN10.
Endogenous ZSCAN10 is Hypermethylated in A-iPSC and Hypomethylated in ESC and Y-iPSC
Induction of pluripotency in somatic cells is considered an epigenetic process that among other things entails changes in DNA methylation patterns. With the aim of further elucidating the changes that occur in A-iPSC compared to ESC and Y-iPSC, and the role of ZSCAN10, DNA methylation analysis was performed. Bisulfite pyrosequencing analysis of the ZSCAN10 promoter regions showed that the ZSCAN10 promoter is hypomethylated/activated in Y-iPSC and ESC, and hypermethylated/inactive in A-iPSC (FIG. 7A). To test whether transient ZSCAN10 expression can restore the methylation pattern of A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 cells generated using a Dox-inducible expression system were analyzed. Similar to the ability of ZSCAN10 to restore other defects in A-iPSC, transient expression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC led to hypomethylation/activation of the endogenous ZSCAN10 promoter to levels closer in Y-iPSC.
Microarray analysis of mouse ESC versus aged and young mouse fibroblasts (Y-SC and A-SC wherein “SC” here stands for “somatic cells”) as well as Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, revealed differential regulation of DNA (cytosine-5−)-methyltransferase 3 beta (DNMT3b) gene (a gene reviewed in (Kim et al. Cell Mol Life Sci. 66(4): 596-612 (2009)). Contrary to DNMT3b, the levels of DNMT3a were similar among various cell types. This finding was further corroborated by q-PCR (FIG. 7B), where DNMT3b mRNA levels were lowest in fibroblasts, and highest in ESC. Given the role of DNMT3b in DNA methylation, the inventors postulate that poor activation of DNMT3b may be responsible for differential methylation of ZSCAN promoter in A-iPSC. In addition DNMT3b can be overexpressed in A-iPSC cells and achieve the same result as ZSCAN10 overexpression. Thus, the exogenous introduction of DNMT3b into the A-iPS cells may result in diminished oncogenic potential of these cells or any stem/iPS cells associated with reduced ZSCAN10 expression.
Imbalance of H2O2 Glutathione Homeostasis in A-iPSC, and Recovery by ZSCAN10 Via Reduction of Excessively Activated GPX2 in A-iPSC
As described in Example 5, the defective DNA damage response of A-iPSC and its restoration by ZSCAN10 were also confirmed in response to various DNA damaging agents such as radiation and H2O2. DNA damaging agents can induce H2O2 and result in genomic damage. A normal cellular response against H2O2 involves two distinct mechanisms: (1) H2O2 can be scavenged by glutathione to maintain genomic stability, and (2) H2O2 itself acts as a signal transducer to activate DNA damage response pathways, such as ATM. An imbalance in glutathione-H2O2 homeostasis, with lower glutathione and higher H2O2 activity, induces genomic damage to trigger the DNA damage response. Conversely, higher glutathione activity that favors H2O2 scavenging and lowers H2O2 activity blunts the DNA damage response and damaged cells fail to be eliminated, leading to genomic instability. Therefore, homeostasis of glutathione-H2O2 regulation plays a critical role in maintaining overall genomic stability.
To determine the status of glutathione-H2O2, oxidation capacity of glutathione as well as H2O2 scavenging activity (maximum oxidation capacity) were evaluated in various iPSC lines. The ratio of intracellular reduced and oxidized forms of glutathione
(GSH/GSSG) is often used as an indicator of cellular redox state, the degree of oxidative stress and the antioxidant capacity of cells. Glutathione analysis was conducted using Glutathione Fluorometric Assay (Biovision, K264-100). As shown in FIG. 8A, A-iPSC exhibit excessive oxidation capacity, which was normalized to the level of ESC and Y-iPSC by transient expression of ZSCAN10. H2O2 scavenging activity was measured using reactive oxygen species (ROS) assay kit (Abcam, ab113851). A-iPSC show strong H2O2 scavenging activity (FIG. 8B), with a reduced response against the treatment of TBHP (tert-butyl hydrogen peroxide; stable chemical form of H2O2, 3 h). Upon ZSCAN10 expression, the elevated glutathione activity was reduced to levels equivalent to those seen in Y-iPSC/ESC (FIGS. 8A and 8B).
The mechanism by which the oxidation capacity of glutathione to scavenge H2O2 is elevated in A-iPSC compared to Y-iPSC and ESC was further evaluated. A comparative gene expression analysis among the different cell lines led to the identification of candidate genes that were up- or down-regulated in A-iPSC compared to A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, and that were expressed at similar levels in A-iPSC-ZSCAN10, ESC, and Y-iPSC. Glutathione peroxidase 2 (GPX2) gene was excessively expressed in A-iPSC and its expression was normalized by ZSCAN10 expression (FIG. 9A).
GPX2 is a H2O2 scavenger protein that regulates glutathione-mediated scavenging activity. In order to test whether excess levels of GPX2 are responsible for imbalance in glutathione-H2O2 homeostasis in A-iPSC, GPX2 was inhibited in A-iPSC using shRNA. Knockdown of GPX2 in A-iPSC normalized glutathione-H2O2 homeostasis (FIGS. 9B and 9C), increased apoptosis (FIG. 9D), and recovered the DNA damage response (FIG. 9E).
GLUT3 Gene Expression is Significantly Increased in Y-iPSC, but not in A-iPSC
In order to gain a deeper understanding of biological processes that occur during cellular reprogramming, an innovative approach was taken to reveal additional factors important for the reprogramming of aged somatic cells. Comparative genomic analysis of ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 in the presence or absence of phleomycin treatment (30 μg/ml for 2 hours) led to identification of GLUT3, a pluripotent stem cell-specific glucose transporter. FIG. 10A shows poorly activated GLUT3 in A-iPSC compared to ESC and Y-iPSC.
Glucose metabolism is essential to maintain cell homeostasis within the microenvironment of various tissues. Most somatic cells generate 36 ATP from each glucose molecule through oxidative phosphorylation in the presence of oxygen; by contrast, ESC use glycolysis to generate 2 ATP from each glucose in the absence of oxygen. During iPSC reprogramming, glucose metabolism shifts from somatic cell-specific oxidative phosphorylation to ESC-specific glycolysis. Although ESC-specific glycolysis consumes 18-fold more glucose than oxidative phosphorylation to generate the same amount of ATP, the benefit of glycolysis is that it generates ATP while producing fewer H2O2 which can cause genomic mutation.
To investigate a role of GLUT3 in glucose metabolism within the context of mouse A-iPSC, intracellular glucose uptake was monitored in mouse ES and iPS cell lines. A-iPSC take up 18-fold less glucose than Y-iPSC and ESC (FIG. 10B) and have a higher oxygen consumption rate as measured by oxidative phosphorylation (FIG. 10C). These results suggest that A-iPSC continue to generate ATP via somatic cell-specific oxidative phosphorylation, rather than switching to ESC-specific glycolysis.
During the transition from somatic cells to iPSC, GLUT3 gene expression is significantly increased in Y-iPSC, but not in A-iPSC (FIG. 10A). Interestingly, GLUT3 expression is induced by ZSCAN10 (FIG. 10A), suggesting that the loss of ZSCAN10 and GLUT3 activity are mechanistically connected in A-iPSC. Indeed, increased expression of GLUT3 also shows the recovery of DNA damage response (FIG. 10D) as increased expression of ZSCAN10 had, confirming the hypothesis of mechanistic connection. To test the ability of ZSCAN10 to target GLUT3, the inventors tested the ability of ZSCAN10 to bind to the promoter of GLUT3 using Chromatin IP analysis. As demonstrated in FIG. 10E, ZSCAN10 binds to the GLUT3 promoter in ESC, Y-iPSC, and A-iPSC.
Given that GLUT3 expression is induced by ZSCAN10, and that oxidative phosphorylation induces production of H2O2, which is known to trigger the DNA damage response, it is likely that the loss of this response in A-iPSC contributes to increased oncogenicity. Indeed, overexpression of GLUT3 in A-iPSC recovered the normal ROS levels, wherein the downregulation of GLUT3 in Y-iPSC decreased the ROS levels (FIG. 10F). Furthermore, glutathione levels were reduced to normal (similar to those observed for ESC and Y-iPSC) in A-iPSC upon overexpression of GLUT3 (FIG. 10G).
Collectively, the data presented here suggest a model where poor GLUT3 activation in A-iPSC, as a consequence of low ZSCAN10 expression (or even independently), leads to hyperactivation of oxidative phosphorylation and an increase in H2O2 production, which induces glutathione.
As a part of preliminary analysis, the inventors sought to determine what are the major differences between the various types of iPSC (Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10) and ESC. Microarray analysis of ESC versus Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 reveled sets of the differentially expressed genes. Table 1. indicates the number of differentially regulated genes among the specific groups. Using the mean Z-score analysis, it was determined the genes were grouped based on the fold change of differential expression. A higher score in the table means a more pronounced difference in expression from ESC.
The data summarized in Table 1. show that a smaller number of genes are differentially expressed in A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 compared to ESC, than the number of genes differentially expressed between Y-iPSC and ESC. These results suggest that at least on the level of overall gene expression, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 share more similarities with ESC not only compared to A-iPSC, but also compared to Y-iPSC. In order to confirm that this observation is also reflected in the analysis of the core pluripotency network genes, expression of core pluripotency network genes among different iPSC lines and ESC was performed. As shown in Table 2. Similarly to what was observed in Table 1, number of genes differentially expressed between A-iPSC-ZSCAN1 and ESC was fewer than the number of genes differentially expressed between the Y-iPSC and ESC. Collectively, this data suggests unique features
Future experiments will include further investigation into why ZSCAN10-supplemented A-iPSC are closer to ESC than to Y-iPSC when it comes to gene expression. This will be part of a deeper level analysis of epigenetic alterations that affect aged somatic cells and also A-iPSC in a negative manner (e.g., block differentiation of A-iPSC, favor oncogenicity upon transplantation of cells derived from A-IPSC). For example, the ability of ZSCAN10 to recover poor tissue differentiation potential of A-iPSC will be assessed. It is anticipated that after ZSCAN10 supplementation, A-iPSC will display substantially improved tissue differentiation compared to untreated A-iPSC. Thus, tissue differentiation potential will be another aspect of the quality of A-iPSC that will be improved by ZSCAN10 supplementation (and can be assessed by measuring ZSCAN10 levels or measuring levels of another surrogate marker described herein and comparing the level to that of a Y-iPSC or ESC control).
| TABLE 1 | |
| Differentially expressed gene between ESC vs. |
| Y-iPSC | A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 | A-iPSC | |
| 1.2 fold change | 3304 | 2115 | 4212 |
| 1.5 fold change | 2036 | 1195 | 3361 |
| 2.0 fold change | 775 | 507 | 2010 |
| 3.0 fold cahnge | 256 | 196 | 770 |
| 4.0 fold change | 141 | 127 | 386 |
| TABLE 2 | ||
| 2.0 Fold Change | Herentially expressed gene between ESC vs. |
| Number of common | Genes | Y-iPSC | A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 | A-iPSC |
| 7 Core factor | 47 | 6 | 6 | 12 |
| 6 Core factor | 100 | 24 | 18 | 35 |
| 5 Core factor | 124 | 36 | 30 | 57 |
| 4 Core factor | 227 | 53 | 49 | 94 |
| 3 Core factor | 427 | 76 | 68 | 148 |
| 2 Core factor | 901 | 129 | 106 | 251 |
| 1 Core factor | 2350 | 252 | 186 | 543 |
| 0 Core factor | 292 | 168 | 770 | |
| Total Target Genes | 13862 | 868 | 629 | 1910 |
| indicates data missing or illegible when filed |
Furthermore, DNA methylation status of the genes most prominently differentially expressed between ESC and Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, or A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 will be assessed. One of the aims of this analysis is to test whether already observed difference in DNA methylation (comparing ESC to A-iPSC and Y-iPSC in the absence of ZSCAN10 supplementation) follows the same pattern as the gene expression pattern outlined in Table 1 and Table 2. It is anticipated that the methylation pattern of ZSCAN10-supplemented A-iPSC, similarly to gene expression pattern, will be closer to that of ESC than that of Y-iPSC.
The same experiment may be repeated with GLUT3 supplementation instead of ZSCAN10 supplementation in A-iPSC. The results are anticipated to be qualitatively the same.
| TABLE 3 |
| Exosome components and co-factors |
| Domains | Humanc | Locd | |
| Exosome core | RNasePH | hRrp41 (hSki6; EXOS4) | n + c |
| hRrp42 (EXOS7) | n + c | ||
| hRrp46 (EXOS5) | n + c | ||
| hRrp43 (OIP2; EXOS8) | n + c | ||
| hMtr3 (EXOS6) | n + c | ||
| hRrp45 (Pm/Scl-75; EXOS9) | n + c | ||
| S1 and KH | hRrp4 (EXOS2) | n + c | |
| domains | hRrp40 (EXOS3) | n + c | |
| hCs14 (EXOS1) | n + c | ||
| Exonuclease | RNase II | hRrp44 (hDis3) | n + c |
| RNase D | hRrp6 (PM/Scl-100; EXOS10) | n + c | |
ZSCAN10 Binds and Up-Regulates Exosomes
In further study, the inventors sought to gain a better understanding of the mechanism by which ZSCAN10 inhibits the expression of GPX2 in A-iPSC. Analysis of GPX2 sequence revealed that GPX2 gene contains highly conserved ARE sequences (Singh et al. Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol. 35(6):639-50 (2006)). Interestingly, it is known that exosome, which mediates the degradation of mRNA, targets ARE sequences to induce mRNA decay. (Mukherjee et al. EMBO J. 21(1-2):165-174 (2002); Schmid et al. Trends Biochem Sci. 2008 October; 33(10):501-10.). mRNA turnover is a highly regulated process that plays a role in regulating the levels of transcripts that encode an array of proteins (Schoenberg et al. Nat Rev Genet. 13 (4): 246-259 (2012)). Given the presence of ARE sequences in GPX2, the inventors performed enrichment analysis of ARE sequences in 60 upregulated genes in A-iPSC (upregulated compared to Y-iPSC/ESC and A-iPSC-zscan10)”. Gene enrichment analysis (FIG. 11A histogram) showed that the likelihood of any given transcript to have the UUAUUUA(A/U)(A/U) ARE sequence is 7, so the odds of finding 14 genes containing ARE sequences in a sample of 60 genes based on just random chance is very low (p=0.01224).” The control group was 18,299 non-duplicated longest ensemble transcripts based on the microarray ILLUMINA platform Mouseref-8 v2.0. Thus, the enrichment analysis of A-iPSC demonstrates a significant up-regulation of genes with ARE sequences, which is highly likely a result of non-functional exosomes.
In order to gain a deeper understating of the type of interactions that relate to ZSCAN10, Chromatin Immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-Seq), which combines chromatin IP with DNA sequencing, was performed. ChIP-Seq detects DNA-protein interactions and as such could provide knowledge regarding the network of proteins regulated by ZSCAN10, The exosome constitutes a complex of 11 exonucleases. In order to test the hypothesis that ZSCAN10 regulates GPX2 via exosomes in A-iPSC, ChIP-Seq was performed, and the results showed that indeed, ZSCAN binds to exosome subunits. ESC and Y-iPSC were used as the comparison in the study. Furthermore, as shown in FIG. 11B, ZCSAN10 up-regulates exosomes. A-iPSC contained lower mRNA levels of exosome core subunits EXOSC1, EXOSC2, and EXOSC5 than ESC and Y-iPSC. Importantly, overexpression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSCs resulted in the restoration of EXOSC1, EXOSC2, and EXOSC5 levels comparable to those observed in ESC and Y-iPSC, confirming that ZSCAN10 regulates the expression of various exosome subunits. Endogenous mRNA levels were normalized to β-ACTIN. Error bars indicate standard error of the mean.
Regulation of GPX2 by ZSCAN10 Via ARE Sequences is Mediated by Exosomes
To expand on functional relevance of findings described in Example 9, ESC containing high level of exosomes (FIG. 11B) were depleted of EXOSC2, EXOSC8, or both. Following knockdown of exosomes using shRNA, GPX2 mRNA was determined by Q-PCR. While ESC contain low expression levels of GPX2, depletion of exosomes resulted in dramatic increase of GPX2 mRNA (FIG. 12A). This increase was similar to the levels observed in A-iPSCs. DNA fragmentation assay demonstrated that cells deficient in exosomes contained lower apoptotic response after phleomycin treatment (2 h, 30 μg/ml) of A-iPSC (FIG. 12B), further confirming the functional significance of exosomes in the maintenance of DNA damage response, apoptosis response, glucose metabolism and genomic stability to levels approximating those of Y-iPSC or ESC (FIG. 12B).
Depending on the Donor, iPS Cells Derived from Aged Human Donors Exhibit Different Reprogramming Efficiencies, DNA Damage Response, and Structural Chromosomal Abnormality
Findings disclosed in Example 1 showed that iPS cells derived from aged mice exhibit higher genomic instability and lower apoptotic activity than iPSC generated from young mice. To determine whether results observed in animal cells are comparable to human cells, i-PSC derived from young and aged individuals were generated and their reprogramming efficiency evaluated. As shown in FIG. 13A, aging phenotype observed in mice was also present in human A-iPSC. However, there was a significant difference in programming efficiency among individuals of similar age. In order to analyze DNA damage response in human iPSC and test whether it parallels the findings regarding reprogramming efficiency, cells were treated with double-strand break inducing drug phleomycin for 4 h (30 μg/ml).
Immunoblot analysis revealed blunted DNA damage response in A-iPSC from certain donors (See FIG. 13B, donors AG4, AG8, “B” and “S”). Furthermore, karyotype examination of A-iPSC from the donor AG4 showed structural chromosome abnormality (FIG. 13C). In respect to A-iPSC derived from donor AG8, the results are not final and are subject to further confirmation regarding whether or not A-iPSC derived from this patient display normal or defected DNA damage response. Finally, similar results were obtained for A-iPSC generated from different mouse strains. To determine whether genetic background affects DNA damage response, A-iPSC were generated from two distinct mouse strains and treated with phleomycin for 4 h (30 μg/ml). p53 protein levels were used as an indicator of DNA damage response. As demonstrated in FIG. 13D, A-iPSC derived from the mice of B6129 background exhibit normal DNA damage response (indicated by activation of p53) in higher frequency, while A-iPSC from the mice of B6CBA background contained blunted DNA damage response. These findings indicate that reprogramming efficiency, chromosomal stability, as well as a DNA damage response associated with A-iPSC are in substantial part dependent on genetic background of the individual or animal from which they are derived. Nevertheless, use of the materials and reagents of the present disclosure would ameliorate the quality of A-iPSC regardless of whether they work on genetic or epigenetic traits or both.
Analysis of 6 additional human A-iPSC clones revealed poor DNA damage response (FIG. 13E), whereas one A-iPSC clone referred to as “A-iPSC-outlier” displayed proper activation of DNA damage response as indicated by the phosphorylation of ATM. Overexpression of ZSCAN10 in human A-iPSC that exhibited poor DNA damage response rescued that defect (FIG. 13H). Comparison of FIGS. 13G and 13H illustrates that overexpression of ZSCAN10 in human A-iPSC leads to the restoration of the DNA damage response similar to the one observed in human Y-iPSC (FIG. 13G).
It was postulated that the “A-iPSC outlier” maintains a proper DNA damage response due to the normal expression levels of ZSCAN10. Indeed the inventors observed that ZSCAN10 mRNA expression in the “A-iPSC outlier” is similar to the levels observed in the ESC, while the ZSCAN10 expression in a clone that exhibited poor DNA damage response was low (FIG. 13I). Since ZSCAN10 mRNA levels correlate with the ability of A-iPSC to elicit a proper DNA damage response, ZSCAN10 can serve as a suitable biomarker of genomic integrity, where higher ZSCAN10 levels correlate with improved genomic integrity.
ZSCAN10 Binds to GSS and Downregulates its Expression
As discussed in Example 8, glucose metabolism is essential for both tissue homeostasis as well as in reprogramming. Glutathione synthetase (GSS) is an enzyme that catalyzes the second and final step in the synthesis of GSH from gamma-glutamylcysteine (c-GC) and glycine. Genome-wide mapping of ZSCAN10-binding sites in ESC identified more than 3500 target genes, including GSS (Yu et al. J Biol Chem. 284(45): 31327-31335 (2009)). Thus, given the importance of glutathione activity in apoptosis and DNA damage response, it was postulated that ZSCAN10 might exert its function, at least in part, through GSS especially in humans.
To test this hypothesis, the ability of ZSCAN10 to bind directly to the GSS promoter was initially tested in mouse cells. Chromatin IP (ChIP) qPCR was performed using general steps of the ChIP, which include: (1) crosslinking the protein to the DNA; (2) isolating the chromatin; (3) chromatin fragmentation; (4) immunoprecipitation with antibodies against the protein of interest; (5) DNA recovery; and (6) PCR identification of factor associated DNA sequences. In the present example, IgG isotype was used as a negative control, while ZSCAN10-specific antibody was used to pull down the ZSCAN10-DNA complexes. Following the recovery of DNA, GSS specific primers were used for the detection of GSS promoter sequences. The experiment was performed both in Y-iPSC and A-iPSC. As shown in FIG. 14B, ZSCAN10 binding to the GSS promoter was detected in both mouse Y-iPS and A-iPS cells, while IgG control did not result in the detection of GSS promoter by qPCR.
To further confirm the role for ZSCAN10 in the regulation of GSS expression, mRNA levels of GSS were evaluated in ESC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, and A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 cells. As illustrated in FIG. 14C, human A-iPSC express significantly higher levels of GSS compared to Y-iPSC and ESC. Importantly, overexpression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC lead to downregulation of GSS to the levels comparable to or below those observed in ESC and Y-iPSC.
Taken together, the results described in FIGS. 14B-14D demonstrate that ZSCAN10 regulates GSS expression via direct binding to the GSS promoter (FIG. 14A). These findings imply that inhibition of GSS in A-iPSC would lead to the reduction in oncogenic potential of iPS cells with decreased ZSCAN10 expression, such as A-iPSC. This was confirmed in the experiment described below.
Considering the findings described in Example 12, the inventors further postulated that GSS may play a role in processes associated with oncogenic potential of human cells, including, but not limited to apoptosis and DNA damage response. To evaluate the role of GSS in apoptosis, a DNA fragmentation assay was performed. Briefly, a DNA fragmentation assay was carried out in mouse ESC, Y-iPSC, Y-iPSC-GSS, A-iPSC, A-iPSCZSCAN10, and A-iPSC with GSS shRNA expression (FIG. 14D). Briefly, cells were treated with phleomycin for 2 hours at g/ml, and samples were collected for analysis 15 hours after phleomycin treatment. Fluorescence was determined by image quantification analysis. Similar to the observation seen in Example 1 (FIG. 2), lower apoptotic response was detected in A-iPSC, which was recovered by ZSCAN10 overexpression (A-iPSC-ZSCAN10) (FIG. 14D). Additionally, knock-down of GSS in A-iPSC using shRNA (A-iPSC-shGSS) rescued the apoptotic defect in these cells (FIG. 14D). Further demonstrating a role for GSS in mediating oncogenic potential, such as apoptotic response, overexpression of GSS in Y-iPSC resulted in lower apoptotic response compared with Y-iPSC (FIG. 14D). Together, these observations indicate that GSS inhibition restores the lower apoptotic response associated with A-iPSC.
Example 5 demonstrated that impaired DNA damage response in A-iPSC is recovered with the transient expression of ZSCAN10. In order to further delineate the role for GSS in A-iPSC, phleomycin treatment (2 hours, 30 μg/ml) was performed in Y-iPSC, A-iPSC, A-iPSC-shGSS (FIG. 14E), and Y-iPSC-GSS (FIG. 14F). Cells were collected and Western blot performed using p-ATM antibody. β-actin was used as a loading control. As shown in FIG. 14E, inhibition of GSS in A-iPSC using shRNA restored the ATM phosphorylation. Furthermore, overexpression of GSS in Y-iPSC resulted in no ATM phosphorylation (FIG. 14F). Thus, GSS expression leads to a defect in DNA damage response, whereas GSS inhibition rescues the defect.
The inventors next sought to evaluate GSS levels in human cells. In accordance with mouse data, GSS levels were significantly higher in A-iPSC that exhibited poor DNA damage response compared with the levels observed in human ESC (FIG. 14G). Furthermore, A-iPSC cells that exhibited normal DNA damage response displayed low levels of GSS (FIG. 14G), supporting the notion that similar to ZSCAN10, GSS can also serve as a good biomarker of genomic integrity.
Collectively, these results indicate that excessively activated GSS mediates both impaired apoptosis and impaired DNA damage response observed in A-iPSC, while the inhibition of GSS leads to the restoration of those deficiencies.
Next, the inventors sought to determine the significant differences between distinct types of mouse cells: fibroblast cells (A-SC, Y-SC), iPSC (A-iPSC, Y-iPSC, A-iPSC-ZSCAN10) and ES cells (ESC). FIG. 15A shows Principal Component Analysis (PCA) using whole gene expression profiles of each cell type. FIG. 15B illustrates unsupervised clustering analysis of whole gene expression profiles. The heat map in FIG. 15B shows pairwise gene expression similarities measured by Pearson Correlation Coefficient. Finally, FIG. 15C presents a heat map of relative expression levels of ES cell specific genes in fibroblast and various iPS cells. ES cell specific genes were defined as those with 3 fold or higher expression levels in ES cells than average expression in adult and young fibroblast cells. The heat map shows fold differences in relative expression over ES cells. The results are summarized in Table 4, where reprogramming and pluripotency network genes are defined by core factor co-occupancy. Correlation between seven core factor co-occupancy (Kim et al. Cell 132(6) 1049-61(2008)) and number of ESC specific genes (2 fold or higher in ESC over indicated sample) were tested to define the functional link between pluripotency networks and reprogramming. Core factors tested in this analysis are Nanog, Sox2, Oct4, Klf4, Dax1, Nac1, and Zfp281. The number of ESC enriched genes and their core factor co-occupancies (by 7 TFs to 0 TF) are shown.
| TABLE 4 |
| 2 fold or more higher in ES cells |
| Number of | ESC | ESC over | ESC | ESC | ||
| common | over | AiPSC- | over | over | ||
| Genes | targets | ESC | ZSCAN10 | Y-iPSC | A-iPSC | |
| 40 | 7 | 0 | 5 | 5 | 10 | |
| 89 | 6 | 0 | 12 | 13 | 16 | |
| 103 | 5 | 0 | 13 | 9 | 16 | |
| 198 | 4 | 0 | 18 | 13 | 29 | |
| 376 | 3 | 0 | 21 | 17 | 33 | |
| 767 | 2 | 0 | 39 | 41 | 68 | |
| 2045 | 1 | 0 | 79 | 87 | 178 | |
| 8252 | 0 | 0 | 179 | 207 | 470 | |
The results shown in Table 4 indicate that a greater number of genes is differentially expressed in A-iPSC compared to ESC, than the number of genes differentially expressed between Y-iPSC and ESC. However, overexpression of ZSCAN10 in A-iPSC cells resulted in a decreased number of differentially expressed genes. Furthermore, ZCSAN10 overexpression lead to differences in gene expression (between A-iPSC-ZSCAN10 and ESC) similar to those observed between Y-iPSC and ESC. Therefore, ZSCAN10 expression in A-iPSC influences the global gene expression of reprogramming and pluripotency network, by making A-iPSC resemble Y-iPSC in reprogramming and pluripotency properties.
From the work described in this disclosure, ZSCAN10 emerges as an important co-regulatory factor in induced pluripotent stem cells.
The breadth of the present disclosure is not limited to specific embodiments described herein.
All references cited herein, whether patents, patent applications or nonpatent literature are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Key to the Sequence Listing (SEQ ID NO's):
| Human Zscan10 |
| FEATURES | Location/Qualifiers | |
| source | 1 . . . 2239 | |
| /organism = “synthetic construct” | ||
| /mol type = “other DNA” | ||
| /db xref = “taxon: 32630” | ||
| /clone = “MGC: 195844 IMAGE: 100068227” | ||
| /clone lib = “NIH MGC 435” | ||
| /lab host = “DH10B” | ||
| /focus | ||
| /note = “Vector: pENTR223.1 with stop codon” | ||
| source | 35 . . . 2212 | |
| /organism = “Homo sapiens” | ||
| / | ||
| ORIGIN |
| (SEQ ID NO: 2) |
| 1 | gtacaaaaaa gcagaagggc cgtcaaggcc caccatgggg ccacgggcgt | |
| ccctgagccg | ||
| 61 | gctccgggag ctctgcggcc actggctgcg gccggctctg cacaccaaga | |
| aacagatcct | ||
| 121 | ggagctgctg gtgctggagc agttcctgag tgtgctgcct ccgcacctcc | |
| tgggccgcct | ||
| 181 | gcaggggcag ccgctcaggg atggggagga ggtggtgctg ctgctcgagg | |
| gcatccaccg | ||
| 241 | ggagcccagc cacgcggggc cgctggattt tagttgtaat gctggcaaga | |
| gttgtccccg | ||
| 301 | tgcagacgtc accttggagg aaaaggggtg tgcttcccag gtccccagcc | |
| acagccccaa | ||
| 361 | gaaggaattg cctgcggaag agccttcagt gctgggccca tcggatgagc | |
| ctccccgacc | ||
| 421 | ccagccaagg gctgcccagc ctgctgagcc gggacagtgg aggcttcccc | |
| caagttcaaa | ||
| 481 | gcagccgctg agcccggggc cccagaagac attccaggcc ctgcaagaaa | |
| gcagtcccca | ||
| 541 | gggcccctca ccatggccag aggagagttc ccgagatcag gagctggcgg | |
| ctgtgctgga | ||
| 601 | gtgcctgacc tttgaggatg tgccagagaa taaggcgtgg cctgcacacc | |
| ccctgggatt | ||
| 661 | cggaagcaga accccagaca aggaggaatt taaacaagaa gagcccaaag | |
| gggctgcctg | ||
| 721 | gcccactccc atcttagcag agtcccaggc agatagtcct ggggtgccgg | |
| gagagccttg | ||
| 781 | cgcccagtcg ctcggacggg gcgctgcggc tagcggccct ggcgaagatg | |
| ggtcccttct | ||
| 841 | tggcagcagt gaaattttgg aggtcaaagt ggctgagggc gtccccgagc | |
| ccaatccgga | ||
| 901 | gttgcagttc atctgcgcgg actgcggggt gagcttcccg cagctgtctc | |
| gcctgaaggc | ||
| 961 | gcaccagctg cgctcgcacc cggctgggcg ctccttcctg tgcctttgct | |
| gcgggaagag | ||
| 1021 | cttcggccgc agctccattc tcaagctgca catgcgcact cacacggacg | |
| agcggccgca | ||
| 1081 | cgcctgccac ctgtgcggcc accgcttccg ccagagctcg cacctgagca | |
| agcacctgct | ||
| 1141 | gacccactcc tccgaacccg ccttcctgtg cgcagagtgc ggccgcggct | |
| tccagcgccg | ||
| 1201 | cgccagcctt gtgcagcacc tgctggcgca cgcccaggac cagaagccgc | |
| cctgcgctcc | ||
| 1261 | tgagagtaag gccgaagcgc cgccactgac cgatgtcctg tgctcccact | |
| gcggccagag | ||
| 1321 | cttccagcgc cgctccagcc tcaagcgcca cctgcggatc cacgccaggg | |
| acaaggaccg | ||
| 1381 | ccggtcctcc gaaggctccg gcagccgccg ccgggactcc gaccggaggc | |
| ccttcgtgtg | ||
| 1441 | cagcgactgc ggcaaggcct tccggcgcag cgagcacctg gtggcccacc | |
| ggagggtgca | ||
| 1501 | cacgggcgag cggcccttct cctgccaggc ttgcggccgc agcttcacgc | |
| agagctcgca | ||
| 1561 | gctggtcagc caccaacggg tgcacacggg cgagaagccc tacgcctgtc | |
| cgcagtgcgg | ||
| 1621 | gaagcgcttt gtgcgccggg ccagccttgc ccgccacctg ctgacccacg | |
| gtggccctcg | ||
| 1681 | gccccaccac tgcacccagt gcgggaagag tttcggccag acccaggatc | |
| tggcccgcca | ||
| 1741 | ccagcgcagc cacacgggcg agaagccctg ccgctgcage gagtgcggtg | |
| agggcttcag | ||
| 1801 | ccagagcgcc cacctggcgc gccaccagcg catccacaca ggggagaagc | |
| cccacgcctg | ||
| 1861 | cgacacctgc ggccaccgtt tccgcaatag ctccaacctg gcccgccatc | |
| gccgcagcca | ||
| 1921 | cacgggcgag cggccctaca gctgtcagac gtgcggtcgc agcttccggc | |
| gcaacgcgca | ||
| 1981 | tctgcggcgg cacctggcta cccatgcgga gcccgggcag gagcaggccg | |
| agcccccgca | ||
| 2041 | ggagtgcgtg gagtgcggga agagcttcag ccgcagctgc aatctgctgc | |
| gacacctgct | ||
| 2101 | ggtgcacacg ggcgccaggc cctactcctg cacgcagtgt ggccgcagct | |
| tcagccgcaa | ||
| 2161 | ctcccacctg ctgcgccacc tgcgcaccca cgcccgcgag acgctgtact | |
| agggcctcat | ||
| 2221 | gggcccagct ttcttgtac | |
| (SEQ ID NO: 3) |
| 1 | atggggccacgggcgtccctgagccggctccgggagctctgcggc | |
| M G P R A S L S R L R E L C G | ||
| 46 | cactggctgcggccggctctgcacaccaagaaacagatcctggag | |
| H W L R P A L H T K K Q I L E | ||
| 91 | ctgctggtgctggagcagttcctgagtgtgctgcctccgcacctc | |
| L L V L E Q F L S V L P P H L | ||
| 136 | ctgggccgcctgcaggggcagccgctcagggatggggaggaggtg | |
| L G R L Q G Q P L R D G E E V | ||
| 181 | gtgctgctgctcgagggcatccaccgggagcccagccacgcgggg | |
| V L L L E G I H R E P S H A G | ||
| 226 | ccgctggattttagttgtaatgctggcaagagttgtccccgtgca | |
| P L D F S C N A G K S C P R A | ||
| 271 | gacgtcaccttggaggaaaaggggtgtgcttcccaggtccccagc | |
| D V T L E E K G C A S Q V P S | ||
| 316 | cacagccccaagaaggaattgcctgcggaagagccttcagtgctg | |
| H S P K K E L P A E E P S V L | ||
| 361 | ggcccatcggatgagcctccccgaccccagccaagggctgcccag | |
| G P S D E P P R P Q P R A A Q | ||
| 406 | cctgctgagccgggacagtggaggcttcccccaagttcaaagcag | |
| P A E P G Q W R L P P S S K Q | ||
| 451 | ccgctgagcccggggccccagaagacattccaggccctgcaagaa | |
| P L S P G P Q K T F Q A L Q E | ||
| 496 | agcagtccccagggcccctcaccatggccagaggagagttcccga | |
| S S P Q G P S P W P E E S S R | ||
| 541 | gatcaggagctggcggctgtgctggagtgcctgacctttgaggat | |
| D Q E L A A V L E C L T F E D | ||
| 586 | gtgccagagaataaggcgtggcctgcacaccccctgggattcgga | |
| V P E N K A W P A H P L G F G | ||
| 631 | agcagaaccccagacaaggaggaatttaaacaagaagagcccaaa | |
| S R T P D K E E F K Q E E P K | ||
| 676 | ggggctgcctggcccactcccatcttagcagagtcccaggcagat | |
| G A A W P T P I L A E S Q A D | ||
| 721 | agtcctggggtgccgggagagccttgcgcccagtcgctcggacgg | |
| S P G V P G E P C A Q S L G R | ||
| 766 | ggcgctgcggctagcggccctggcgaagatgggtcccttcttggc | |
| G A A A S G P G E D G S L L G | ||
| 811 | agcagtgaaattttggaggtcaaagtggctgagggcgtccccgag | |
| S S E I L E V K V A E G V P E | ||
| 856 | cccaatccggagttgcagttcatctgcgcggactgcggggtgagc | |
| P N P E L Q F I C A D C G V S | ||
| 901 | ttcccgcagctgtctcgcctgaaggcgcaccagctgcgctcgcac | |
| F P Q L S R L K A H Q L R S H | ||
| 946 | ccggctgggcgctccttcctgtgcctttgctgcgggaagagcttc | |
| P A G R S F L C L C C G K S F | ||
| 991 | ggccgcagctccattctcaagctgcacatgcgcactcacacggac | |
| G R S S I L K L H M R T H T D | ||
| 1036 | gagcggccgcacgcctgccacctgtgcggccaccgcttccgccag | |
| E R P H A C H L C G H R F R Q | ||
| 1081 | agctcgcacctgagcaagcacctgctgacccactcctccgaaccc | |
| S S H L S K H L L T H S S E P | ||
| 1126 | gccttcctgtgcgcagagtgcggccgcggcttccagcgccgcgcc | |
| A F L C A E C G R G F Q R R A | ||
| 1171 | agccttgtgcagcacctgctggcgcacgcccaggaccagaagccg | |
| S L V Q H L L A H A Q D Q K P | ||
| 1216 | ccctgcgctcctgagagtaaggccgaagcgccgccactgaccgat | |
| P C A P E S K A E A P P L T D | ||
| 1261 | gtcctgtgctcccactgcggccagagcttccagcgccgctccagc | |
| V L C S H C G Q S F Q R R S S | ||
| 1306 | ctcaagcgccacctgcggatccacgccagggacaaggaccgccgg | |
| L K R H L R I H A R D K D R R | ||
| 1351 | tcctccgaaggctccggcagccgccgccgggactccgaccggagg | |
| S S E G S G S R R R D S D R R | ||
| 1396 | cccttcgtgtgcagcgactgcggcaaggccttccggcgcagcgag | |
| P F V C S D C G K A F R R S E | ||
| 1441 | cacctggtggcccaccggagggtgcacacgggcgagcggcccttc | |
| H L V A H R R V H T G E R P F | ||
| 1486 | tcctgccaggcttgcggccgcagcttcacgcagagctcgcagctg | |
| S C Q A C G R S F T Q S S Q L | ||
| 1531 | gtcagccaccaacgggtgcacacgggcgagaagccctacgcctgt | |
| V S H Q R V H T G E K P Y A C | ||
| 1576 | ccgcagtgcgggaagcgctttgtgcgccgggccagccttgcccgc | |
| P Q C G K R F V R R A S L A R | ||
| 1621 | cacctgctgacccacggtggccctcggccccaccactgcacccag | |
| H L L T H G G P R P H H C T Q | ||
| 1666 | tgcgggaagagtttcggccagacccaggatctggcccgccaccag | |
| C G K S F G Q T Q D L A R H Q | ||
| 1711 | cgcagccacacgggcgagaagccctgccgctgcagcgagtgcggt | |
| R S H T G E K P C R C S E C G | ||
| 1756 | gagggcttcagccagagcgcccacctggcgcgccaccagcgcatc | |
| E G F S Q S A H L A R H Q R I | ||
| 1801 | cacacaggggagaagccccacgcctgcgacacctgcggccaccgt | |
| H T G E K P H A C D T C G H R | ||
| 1846 | ttccgcaatagctccaacctggcccgccatcgccgcagccacacg | |
| F R N S S N L A R H R R S H T | ||
| 1891 | ggcgagcggccctacagctgtcagacgtgcggtcgcagcttccgg | |
| G E R P Y S C Q T C G R S F R | ||
| 1936 | cgcaacgcgcatctgcggcggcacctggctacccatgcggagccc | |
| R N A H L R R H L A T H A E P | ||
| 1981 | gggcaggagcaggccgagcccccgcaggagtgcgtggagtgcggg | |
| G Q E Q A E P P Q E C V E C G | ||
| 2026 | aagagcttcagccgcagctgcaatctgctgcgacacctgctggtg | |
| K S F S R S C N L L R H L L V | ||
| 2071 | cacacgggcgccaggccctactcctgcacgcagtgtggccgcagc | |
| H T G A R P Y S C T Q C G R S | ||
| 2116 | ttcagccgcaactcccacctgctgcgccacctgcgcacccacgcc | |
| F S R N S H L L R H L R T H A | ||
| 2161 | cgcgagacgctgtactag 2178 | |
| R E T L Y * (SEQ ID NO: 1) | ||
| Mouse Zscan10 |
| FEATURES | Location/Qualifiers | |
| source | 1 . . . 2410 | |
| /organism = “synthetic construct” | ||
| /mol type = “other DNA” | ||
| /db xref = “taxon: 32630” | ||
| /clone = “MGC: 195458 IMAGE: 100066321” | ||
| /clone lib = “NIH MGC 436” | ||
| /lab host = “DH10B” | ||
| /focus | ||
| /note = “Vector: pENTR223.1 with stop codon” | ||
| source | 35 . . . 2383 | |
| /organism = “Mus musculus” | ||
| /mol type = “other DNA” | ||
| /db xref = “taxon: 10090” | ||
| ORIGIN |
| (SEQ ID NO: 6) |
| 1 | gtacaaaaaa gcagaagggc cgtcaaggcc caccatgctg gcggaaccag | |
| tccctgatgc | ||
| 61 | cctggaacaa gagcatcccg gagcagtgaa gttggaggag gatgaagttg | |
| gcgaggagga | ||
| 121 | tcccaggctc gcagagtcca ggcctaggcc tgaggtggcc caccagcttt | |
| tcagatgctt | ||
| 181 | ccagtatcag gaagatatgg ggccacgggc atccctgggc cggctccggg | |
| aactctgcaa | ||
| 241 | ccactggctg cgaccggctc tgcacaccaa gaagcagatc ctggagctgc | |
| tggtactgga | ||
| 301 | gcagttcctg agtgtcctgc ccccgcatgt gctgagccgg ctgcacggcc | |
| aaccgctccg | ||
| 361 | ggacggagag gaggtggtac agctattgga gggcgtgccc agagacatca | |
| gccacatggg | ||
| 421 | gccactggat tttagcttca gtgctggcaa gaatgcccct gcagacatca | |
| tctcagagga | ||
| 481 | acaaaatagc ccttcccagg tccccagcca cagcccccag acggagttgc | |
| cctcagaaga | ||
| 541 | gattccagcc ctacatccac tgaatgagtt acctccacct cagccagcac | |
| ccataaggcc | ||
| 601 | tgctgagcct gaggagtgga gactggcccc cagttcaaat tggccaatga | |
| gcccagagcc | ||
| 661 | ccaggagata ctccaggacc cacgagaaag caacccttcc cagggccctt | |
| catggcttga | ||
| 721 | ggaaaattcc agagaccaag agctggcggc tgtgttggag tccctcacct | |
| ttgaggatac | ||
| 781 | ctcagagaag agagcttggc ctgcaaaccc tottggattt ggaagcagaa | |
| tgcctgacaa | ||
| 841 | tgaggaactt aaagttgaag agcctaaagt gactacttgg cctgtcgtca | |
| ttggagcaga | ||
| 901 | gtcccagaca gagaaacctg aagttgcagg agagcctctt acgcaaactg | |
| tagggcagga | ||
| 961 | gaccagcagc actggttggg gaggtactcc tgctgacggc agtgaagttg | |
| tgaaggttag | ||
| 1021 | aggagcttcc gatgccccag agccccaggg ggagatgcag ttcatatgta | |
| catattgtgg | ||
| 1081 | ggtaaacttc ccagagatgt ctcatctaca ggcccaccag ttacaatctc | |
| accccaactt | ||
| 1141 | gcaacctcac ccaagctctc gatccttccg atgtctgtgg tgtgggaaga | |
| cttttggacg | ||
| 1201 | cagctcgatc ctcaagctgc acatgcgcac tcacacagac gagcggccgc | |
| acgcctgtca | ||
| 1261 | tctctgcaac cgccgcttcc gccagagctc acacctgacg aagcacttgc | |
| taacgcattc | ||
| 1321 | ctctgagcct gccttccgat gcgccgagtg taaccagggt tttcagcgtc | |
| gctccagcct | ||
| 1381 | catgcagcac ctgctggcac atgcccaggg aaagaatctc acgccaaatc | |
| cagaaggcaa | ||
| 1441 | gacaaaagtg ccagagatgg cagctgtcct ctgttcccac tgcgggcaga | |
| ccttcaagcg | ||
| 1501 | gcgctctagc ttaaagcgtc acctgcgtaa ccatgccaag gacaaggacc | |
| atctgtcctc | ||
| 1561 | tgaagaccct ggcagcctta gctctagcca ggagagtaac ccctatgtgt | |
| gtagtgactg | ||
| 1621 | tggcaaggcc ttccgacaaa gcgagcaact aatgatccac actaggcgag | |
| tccatacccg | ||
| 1681 | tgaacgaccc ttctcctgcc aggtctgtgg ccgctgcttt acccaaaatt | |
| cccagctgat | ||
| 1741 | cagccaccag cagattcata cgggtgagaa gcctcacgcc tgtcctcagt | |
| gcagcaaacg | ||
| 1801 | ctttgtgaga cgagctggcc ttgctcggca tctgttgacc cacggtagcc | |
| tccggcctta | ||
| 1861 | ccactgtgcc caatgtggca aaagctttcg ccaaatgcga gacctaaccc | |
| gccacgtacg | ||
| 1921 | ctgccacacg ggggagaagc cctgccgatg caacgaatgt ggagaggggt | |
| tcacccagaa | ||
| 1981 | tgcccacctg gcacgccacc aacgcatcca cacgggggag aagccccacg | |
| cctgtgacat | ||
| 2041 | ctgtggtcac cgctttcgta acagctccaa cttggcccgc caccgccgca | |
| gccacactgg | ||
| 2101 | cgaacggccc tatagctgtc caacctgtgg ccgcagtttc cggcgcaatg | |
| cgcacctgca | ||
| 2161 | gcgccacctg atcacacaca cagggtcaaa gcaagaaaag gaagttcctc | |
| aggagtgccc | ||
| 2221 | tgagtgtggc aagagcttca atcgcagctg caacttgctg cgccacctgc | |
| tggttcacac | ||
| 2281 | cggtgcaagg ccttactcct gtgcactgtg tggccgcagc ttcagccgta | |
| attcacacct | ||
| 2341 | gctgcgccac ctgcgaaccc atgcccggga atcgctgtac tagggcctca | |
| tgggcccagc | ||
| 2401 | tttcttgtac | |
| (SEQ ID NO: 7) |
| 1 | atgctggcggaaccagtccctgatgccctggaacaagagcatccc | |
| M L A E P V P D A L E Q E H P | ||
| 46 | ggagcagtgaagttggaggaggatgaagttggcgaggaggatccc | |
| G A V K L E E D E V G E E D P | ||
| 91 | aggctcgcagagtccaggcctaggcctgaggtggcccaccagctt | |
| R L A E S R P R P E V A H Q L | ||
| 136 | ttcagatgcttccagtatcaggaagatatggggccacgggcatcc | |
| F R C F Q Y Q E D M G P R A S | ||
| 181 | ctgggccggctccgggaactctgcaaccactggctgcgaccggct | |
| L G R L R E L C N H W L R P A | ||
| 226 | ctgcacaccaagaagcagatcctggagctgctggtactggagcag | |
| L H T K K Q I L E L L V L E Q | ||
| 271 | ttcctgagtgtcctgcccccgcatgtgctgagccggctgcacggc | |
| F L S V L P P H V L S R L H G | ||
| 316 | caaccgctccgggacggagaggaggtggtacagctattggagggc | |
| Q P L R D G E E V V Q L L E G | ||
| 361 | gtgcccagagacatcagccacatggggccactggattttagcttc | |
| V P R D I S H M G P L D F S F | ||
| 406 | agtgctggcaagaatgcccctgcagacatcatctcagaggaacaa | |
| S A G K N A P A D I I S E E Q | ||
| 451 | aatagcccttcccaggtccccagccacagcccccagacggagttg | |
| N S P S Q V P S H S P Q T E L | ||
| 496 | ccctcagaagagattccagccctacatccactgaatgagttacct | |
| P S E E I P A L H P L N E L P | ||
| 541 | ccacctcagccagcacccataaggcctgctgagcctgaggagtgg | |
| P P Q P A P I R P A E P E E W | ||
| 586 | agactggcccccagttcaaattggccaatgagcccagagccccag | |
| R L A P S S N W P M S P E P Q | ||
| 631 | gagatactccaggacccacgagaaagcaacccttcccagggccct | |
| E I L Q D P R E S N P S Q G P | ||
| 676 | tcatggcttgaggaaaattccagagaccaagagctggcggctgtg | |
| S W L E E N S R D Q E L A A V | ||
| 721 | ttggagtccctcacctttgaggatacctcagagaagagagcttgg | |
| L E S L T F E D T S E K R A W | ||
| 766 | cctgcaaaccctcttggatttggaagcagaatgcctgacaatgag | |
| P A N P L G F G S R M P D N E | ||
| 811 | gaacttaaagttgaagagcctaaagtgactacttggcctgtcgtc | |
| E L K V E E P K V T T W P V V | ||
| 856 | attggagcagagtcccagacagagaaacctgaagttgcaggagag | |
| I G A E S Q T E K P E V A G E | ||
| 901 | cctcttacgcaaactgtagggcaggagaccagcagcactggttgg | |
| P L T Q T V G Q E T S S T G W | ||
| 946 | ggaggtactcctgctgacggcagtgaagttgtgaaggttagagga | |
| G G T P A D G S E V V K V R G | ||
| 991 | gcttccgatgccccagagccccagggggagatgcagttcatatgt | |
| A S D A P E P Q G E M Q F I C | ||
| 1036 | acatattgtggggtaaacttcccagagatgtctcatctacaggcc | |
| T Y C G V N F P E M S H L Q A | ||
| 1081 | caccagttacaatctcaccccaacttgcaacctcacccaagctct | |
| H Q L Q S H P N L Q P H P S S | ||
| 1126 | cgatccttccgatgtctgtggtgtgggaagacttttggacgcagc | |
| R S F R C L W C G K T F G R S | ||
| 1171 | tcgatcctcaagctgcacatgcgcactcacacagacgagcggccg | |
| S I L K L H M R T H T D E R P | ||
| 1216 | cacgcctgtcatctctgcaaccgccgcttccgccagagctcacac | |
| H A C H L C N R R F R Q S S H | ||
| 1261 | ctgacgaagcacttgctaacgcattcctctgagcctgccttccga | |
| L T K H L L T H S S E P A F R | ||
| 1306 | tgcgccgagtgtaaccagggttttcagcgtcgctccagcctcatg | |
| C A E C N Q G F Q R R S S L M | ||
| 1351 | cagcacctgctggcacatgcccagggaaagaatctcacgccaaat | |
| Q H L L A H A Q G K N L T P N | ||
| 1396 | ccagaaggcaagacaaaagtgccagagatggcagctgtcctctgt | |
| P E G K T K V P E M A A V L C | ||
| 1441 | tcccactgcgggcagaccttcaagcggcgctctagcttaaagcgt | |
| S H C G Q T F K R R S S L K R | ||
| 1486 | cacctgcgtaaccatgccaaggacaaggaccatctgtcctctgaa | |
| H L R N H A K D K D H L S S E | ||
| 1531 | gaccctggcagccttagctctagccaggagagtaacccctatgtg | |
| D P G S L S S S Q E S N P Y V | ||
| 1576 | tgtagtgactgtggcaaggccttccgacaaagcgagcaactaatg | |
| C S D C G K A F R Q S E Q L M | ||
| 1621 | atccacactaggcgagtccatacccgtgaacgacccttctcctgc | |
| I H T R R V H T R E R P F S C | ||
| 1666 | caggtctgtggccgctgctttacccaaaattcccagctgatcagc | |
| Q V C G R C F T Q N S Q L I S | ||
| 1711 | caccagcagattcatacgggtgagaagcctcacgcctgtcctcag | |
| H Q Q I H T G E K P H A C P Q | ||
| 1756 | tgcagcaaacgctttgtgagacgagctggccttgctcggcatctg | |
| C S K R F V R R A G L A R H L | ||
| 1801 | ttgacccacggtagcctccggccttaccactgtgcccaatgtggc | |
| L T H G S L R P Y H C A Q C G | ||
| 1846 | aaaagctttcgccaaatgcgagacctaacccgccacgtacgctgc | |
| K S F R Q M R D L T R H V R C | ||
| 1891 | cacacgggggagaagccctgccgatgcaacgaatgtggagagggg | |
| H T G E K P C R C N E C G E G | ||
| 1936 | ttcacccagaatgcccacctggcacgccaccaacgcatccacacg | |
| F T Q N A H L A R H Q R I H T | ||
| 1981 | ggggagaagccccacgcctgtgacatctgtggtcaccgctttcgt | |
| G E K P H A C D I C G H R F R | ||
| 2026 | aacagctccaacttggcccgccaccgccgcagccacactggcgaa | |
| N S S N L A R H R R S H T G E | ||
| 2071 | cggccctatagctgtccaacctgtggccgcagtttccggcgcaat | |
| R P Y S C P T C G R S F R R N | ||
| 2116 | gcgcacctgcagcgccacctgatcacacacacagggtcaaagcaa | |
| A H L Q R H L I T H T G S K Q | ||
| 2161 | gaaaaggaagttcctcaggagtgccctgagtgtggcaagagcttc | |
| E K E V P Q E C P E C G K S F | ||
| 2206 | aatcgcagctgcaacttgctgcgccacctgctggttcacaccggt | |
| N R S C N L L R H L L V H T G | ||
| 2251 | gcaaggccttactcctgtgcactgtgtggccgcagcttcagccgt | |
| A R P Y S C A L C G R S F S R | ||
| 2296 | aattcacacctgctgcgccacctgcgaacccatgcccgggaatcg | |
| N S H L L R H L R T H A R E S | ||
| 2341 | ctgtactag 2349 | |
| L Y * (SEQ ID NO: 5) | ||
| Human GPX2 transcript mRNA |
| FEATURES | Location/Qualifiers | |
| source | 1 . . . 1105 | |
| /organism = “Homo sapiens” | ||
| /mol type = “mRNA” | ||
| /db xref = “taxon: 9606” | ||
| /chromosome = “14” | ||
| /map = “14q24. 1” |
| ORIGIN | |
| (SEQ ID NO: 9) |
| 1 | cttgttcaaa cagcacttac aggtggggac ctgtttttgc taagtcatcc | |
| tggggatgct | ||
| 61 | caaagctcca ttgttagatc ctttctgtcc tccttcctgg ctcctccttc | |
| ctccccaccc | ||
| 121 | ctctaatagg ctcataagtg ggctcaggcc tctctgcggg gctcactctg | |
| cgcttcacca | ||
| 181 | tggctttcat tgccaagtcc ttctatgacc tcagtgccat cagcctggat | |
| ggggagaagg | ||
| 241 | tagatttcaa tacgttccgg ggcagggccg tgctgattga gaatgtggct | |
| tcgctctgag | ||
| 301 | gcacaaccac ccgggacttc acccagctca acgagctgca atgccgcttt | |
| cccaggcgcc | ||
| 361 | tggtggtcct tggcttccct tgcaaccaat ttggacatca ggagaactgt | |
| cagaatgagg | ||
| 421 | agatcctgaa cagtctcaag tatgtccgtc ctgggggtgg ataccagccc | |
| accttcaccc | ||
| 481 | ttgtccaaaa atgtgaggtg aatgggcaga acgagcatcc tgtcttcgcc | |
| tacctgaagg | ||
| 541 | acaagctccc ctacccttat gatgacccat tttccctcat gaccgatccc | |
| aagctcatca | ||
| 601 | tttggagccc tgtgcgccgc tcagatgtgg cctggaactt tgagaagttc | |
| ctcatagggc | ||
| 661 | cggagggaga gcccttccga cgctacagcc gcaccttccc aaccatcaac | |
| attgagcctg | ||
| 721 | acatcaagcg cctccttaaa gttgccatat agatgtgaac tgctcaacac | |
| acagatctcc | ||
| 781 | tactccatcc agtcctgagg agccttagga tgcagcatgc cttcaggaga | |
| cactgctgga | ||
| 841 | cctcagcatt cccttgatat cagtcccctt cactgcagag ccttgccttt | |
| cccctctgcc | ||
| 901 | tgtttccttt tcctctccca accctctggt tggtgattca acttgggctc | |
| caagacttgg | ||
| 961 | gtaagctctg ggccttcaca gaatgatggc accttcctaa accctcatgg | |
| gtggtgtctg | ||
| 1021 | agaggcgtga agggcctgga gccactctgc tagaagagac caataaaggg | |
| caggtgtgga | ||
| 1081 | aacggccaaa aaaaaaaaaa aaaaa | |
| // | |
| Mus musculus glutathione peroxidase 2 (Gpx2), mRNA | |
| NCBI Reference Sequence: NM_030677.2 | |
| GenBank Graphics | |
| >gi|145275167|ref|NM_030677.2|Mus musculus | |
| glutathione peroxidase 2 (Gpx2), mRNA | |
| (SEQ ID NO: 40) | |
| GCTACAGCCTTGTTCAAACAGTTCACAGGTGGGTACCTGTTTTTTGCTAAGTCATCCCGG | |
| GAATGCTCAAAGGCCCTTTGTGAAGTCCTTTCGGTCTTCTCCGGCTCCTCCTTTCTTCCC | |
| ACCGGTCTAAAGGACTTAAGGAGGCTCACAGAGCAGGGCAGGGCTCACTGCTCTTCAGCA | |
| TGGCTTACATTGCCAAGTCGTTCTACGATCTCAGTGCCGTTGGCCTGGATGGGGAGAAGA | |
| TAGACTTCAATACGTTCAGAGGCAGGGCTGTGCTGATTGAGAATGTGGCGTCACTCTGAG | |
| GAACAACTACCCGGGACTACAACCAGCTCAATGAGCTGCAATGTCGCTTTCCCAGGCGCC | |
| TGGTAGTTCTCGGCTTCCCTTGCAACCAGTTCGGACATCAGGAGAACTGTCAGAACGAGG | |
| AGATCCTGAACAGCCTCAAGTATGTCCGACCTGGGGGTGGGTACCAGCCCACCTTTAGTC | |
| TTACCCAAAAGTGTGACGTCAATGGGCAGAACGAGCATCCTGTCTTTGCCTACCTGAAAG | |
| ACAAGCTGCCCTACCCTTATGATGACCCGTTCTCCCTCATGACCGATCCCAAGCTCATCA | |
| TATGGAGTCCCGTGCGCCGCTCAGACGTGTCCTGGAACTTTGAGAAGTTCCTCATAGGGC | |
| CAGAAGGGGAGCCCTTCCGTCGCTACAGCCGCAGCTTCCAGACCATCAACATCGAGCCTG | |
| ACATCAAACGGCTCCTCAAAGTTGCCATCTAGATGAGAGCTGCTCAGCCCAGGAATCTCC | |
| CACTGTTTCCCCTGAGCAGTCTTCCTCAGGGCTCAGTGTACCCTCGGGAGACCCTGGGAG | |
| ACCAAGGCATTCCCTGAATATCGTCCCCTTGCCTTCCCTACCGGCCATTTCCTTTAGCTC | |
| CCTCAAGGCTCTTGGGGAGTTTGCTTGGGGCTCTAAGTCTGGGGTAGGTTCTGGGCCTTC | |
| ACAGAATGATGGCATCTTCCTAAACCCTTCTGGGAGATGTCTGAGAAGTTGTGAAGGGTC | |
| CAGAGCCAGTCTGCTTTAGAGTCCAATAAAGTGTAGGTGTGGCAATGAAAA | |
| Human and Mouse GLUT3 DNA sequence | |
| Human glut3 CDs | |
| (SEQ ID NO: 11) | |
| ATGGGGACACAGAAGGTCACCCCAGCTCTGATATTTGCCATCACAGTTGCTACAATCGGC | |
| TCTTTCCAATTTGGCTACAACACTGGGGTCATCAATGCTCCTGAGAAGATCATAAAGGAA | |
| TTTATCAATAAAACTTTGACGGACAAGGGAAATGCCCCACCCTCTGAGGTGCTGCTCACG | |
| TCTCTCTGGTCCTTGTCTGTGGCCATATTTTCCGTCGGGGGTATGATCGGCTCCTTTTCC | |
| GTCGGACTCTTCGTCAACCGCTTTGGCAGGCGCAATTCAATGCTGATTGTCAACCTGTTG | |
| GCTGTCACTGGTGGCTGCTTTATGGGACTGTGTAAAGTAGCTAAGTCGGTTGAAATGCTG | |
| ATCCTGGGTCGCTTGGTTATTGGCCTCTTCTGCGGACTCTGCACAGGTTTTGTGCCCATG | |
| TACATTGGAGAGATCTCGCCTACTGCCCTGCGGGGTGCCTTTGGCACTCTCAACCAGCTG | |
| GGCATCGTTGTTGGAATTCTGGTGGCCCAGATCTTTGGTCTGGAATTCATCCTTGGGTCT | |
| GAAGAGCTATGGCCGCTGCTACTGGGTTTTACCATCCTTCCTGCTATCCTACAAAGTGCA | |
| GCCCTTCCATTTTGCCCTGAAAGTCCCAGATTTTTGCTCATTAACAGAAAAGAAGAGGAG | |
| AATGCTAAGCAGATCCTCCAGCGGTTGTGGGGCACCCAGGATGTATCCCAAGACATCCAG | |
| GAGATGAAAGATGAGAGTGCAAGGATGTCACAAGAAAAGCAAGTCACCGTGCTAGAGCTC | |
| TTTAGAGTGTCCAGCTACCGACAGCCCATCATCATTTCCATTGTGCTCCAGCTCTCTCAG | |
| CAGCTCTCTGGGATCAATGCTGTGTTCTATTACTCAACAGGAATCTTCAAGGATGCAGGT | |
| GTTCAAGAGCCCATCTATGCCACCATCGGCGCGGGTGTGGTTAATACTATCTTCACTGTA | |
| GTTTCTCTATTTCTGGTGGAAAGGGCAGGAAGAAGGACTCTGCATATGATAGGCCTTGGA | |
| GGGATGGCTTTTTGTTCCACGCTCATGACTGTTTCTTTGTTATTAAAGGATAACTATAAT | |
| GGGATGAGCTTTGTCTGTATTGGGGCTATCTTGGTCTTTGTAGCCTTCTTTGAAATTGGA | |
| CCAGGCCCCATTCCCTGGTTTATTGTGGCCGAACTCTTCAGCCAGGGCCCCCGCCCAGCT | |
| GCGATGGCAGTGGCCGGCTGCTCCAACTGGACCTCCAACTTCCTAGTCGGATTGCTCTTC | |
| CCCTCCGCTGCTCACTATTTAGGAGCCTACGTTTTTATTATCTTCACCGGCTTCCTCATT | |
| ACCTTCTTGGCTTTTACCTTCTTCAAAGTCCCTGAGACCCGTGGCAGGACTTTTGAGGAT | |
| ATCACACGGGCCTTTGAAGGGCAGGCACACGGTGCAGATAGATCTGGAAAGGACGGCGTC | |
| ATGGAGATGAACAGCATCGAGCCTGCTAAGGAGACCACCACCAATGTCTAA | |
| Mouse Glut3 CDs | |
| (SEQ ID NO: 12) | |
| ATGGGGACAACGAAGGTGACCCCATCTCTGGTGTTCGCCGTGACTGTTGCCACGATCGGC | |
| TCTTTCCAGTTTGGCTACAACACTGGAGTCATCAATGCACCTGAGACAATCCTAAAGGAC | |
| TTTCTTAACTACACTTTGGAAGAGCGGTTAGAAGACCTACCAAGTGAGGGACTGCTGACT | |
| GCCCTCTGGTCCTTATGTGTGGCCATCTTCTCTGTTGGTGGCATGATTGGCTCTTTTTCT | |
| GTTGGACTCTTTGTCAACCGCTTTGGCAGACGCAACTCTATGCTTCTAGTCAACTTGCTG | |
| GCCATCATTGCGGGCTGCCTTATGGGATTCGCCAAGATAGCGGAGTCTGTTGAAATGCTG | |
| ATCCTGGGCCGCTTACTCATTGGCATTTTCTGTGGCCTGTGCACGGGCTTTGTGCCTATG | |
| TACATTGGAGAGGTGTCTCCCACTGCCCTTCGGGGTGCATTTGGCACACTAAACCAGCTG | |
| GGCATCGTTGTTGGGATTCTGGTAGCTCAGATCTTTGGTTTGGACTTTATTCTGGGCTCT | |
| GAAGAACTGTGGCCTGGGCTCCTTGGCTTAACCATCATTCCAGCTATCCTGCAAAGCGCA | |
| GCCCTTCCATTTTGCCCTGAGAGTCCAAGATTCTTGCTCATTAACAAAAAGGAGGAAGAC | |
| CAAGCTACAGAGATCCTGCAGCGCTTGTGGGGCACCTCGGACGTGGTCCAGGAGATCCAG | |
| GAGATGAAGGATGAGAGTGTTCGGATGTCACAGGAGAAGCAGGTGACTGTGCTGGAGCTC | |
| TTCAGGTCACCCAACTACGTCCAGCCGCTTCTCATCTCCATTGTCCTCCAGCTGTCTCAG | |
| CAGCTCTCTGGGATCAATGCTGTGTTCTATTACTCAACAGGAATCTTCAAGGACGCGGGT | |
| GTCCAGGAACCGATCTATGCCACGATTGGAGCAGGCGTGGTCAATACTATCTTCACTGTA | |
| GTTTCTCTGTTCCTGGTGGAGAGGGCAGGGAGGAGAACCCTGCATATGATAGGCCTGGGA | |
| GGCATGGCTGTTTGCTCCGTTTTCATGACGATTTCGCTGTTACTAAAGGATGACTATGAA | |
| GCCATGAGCTTTGTCTGTATTGTGGCTATCTTGATCTACGTAGCCTTCTTTGAGATTGGA | |
| CCTGGCCCCATTCCCTGGTTTATTGTGGCTGAGCTCTTCAGCCAGGGCCCCCGCCCAGCT | |
| GCCATTGCGGTGGCTGGCTGTTGTAACTGGACCTCCAACTTTCTGGTCGGAATGCTCTTC | |
| CCCTCAGCTGCAGCCTACTTAGGAGCCTACGTTTTTATCATCTTCGCTGCCTTCCTCATC | |
| TTCTTCCTAATCTTCACCTTCTTCAAAGTCCCGGAGACCAAAGGCAGGACTTTCGAGGAC | |
| ATTGCCCGGGCCTTCGAGGGGCAGGCGCACTCTGGAAAAGGCCCTGCCGGTGTGGAGTTG | |
| AACAGCATGCAGCCGGTCAAGGAGACCCCTGGCAACGCCTGA | |
| Human GSS genomic DNA |
| LOCUS | NG_008848 34366 bp DNA linear PRI 04-MAY-2014 | |
| DEFINITION | Homo sapiens glutathione synthetase (GSS), | |
| RefSeqGene on chromosome 20. | ||
| ACCESSION | NG_008848 | |
| VERSION | NG_008848.1 GI:209977061 | |
| KEYWORDS | RefSeq; RefSeqGene. | |
| SOURCE | Homo sapiens (human) | |
| ORGANISM | Homo sapiens | |
| ORIGIN |
| (SEQ ID NO: 14) |
| 1 | tcctcacttt gattccacag gcatttcctg agcagcaatg ctggcccagg | |
| cctgtgctag | ||
| 61 | gggctggaag acagaggaat tccactctga atggccaaag cagtggcccc | |
| cagccaggtg | ||
| 121 | gggagatggc ctcataaaca acagtatgag gcagggtgat atcactgcta | |
| aaaagagaca | ||
| 181 | gtagccatgt gcacagatgc agaccatgtg tgatgcagac cctggggctg | |
| acagagatgt | ||
| 241 | tccaatcaaa aggcacagtc cagtggctgg gtgcggtggc tcccgcctgt | |
| aatcccagca | ||
| 301 | ctttgggagg ctgaggcggg tggatcacaa ggtcaggaga tcgagaccat | |
| cctggctaac | ||
| 361 | acggtgaaac cccatctcta ctaaaaatag aaaaaattag gcgggcgtgg | |
| tggcaggcgc | ||
| 421 | ctgtagtccc agctactcgg gaggctgagg taggagaatg gcatgaacac | |
| gggaggcgga | ||
| 481 | gcttgcagtg agccaagatg gcgccactgc actctagcct gggctacaaa | |
| gcaagactcc | ||
| 541 | atctcaaaaa aacaaaaaca aaaaaaaccc acagtccaga cttggagaga | |
| ggccctcgca | ||
| 601 | gggagaaagg caagacacaa aattaaggga ttggcctcca ttcacagtga | |
| agtacatccc | ||
| 661 | tgcatacctt ttttcaccta attcagaccc aaatgttccc acaaacccca | |
| agaacagagg | ||
| 721 | atgaaattga ttcaacagtt agctttggga agtctgagcc catggcatgt | |
| cccaaggtac | ||
| 781 | atatgtggga acaccatggc tgacactgct gctgtgatct ttggcaagtc | |
| aggatacctc | ||
| 841 | ttcaagcctt cctttccccg gctgtaaaat ggaggctata aagatactga | |
| tgtgataggg | ||
| 901 | aggtaaggga aagtgagata acgactgtaa agtcattagc caagtacctg | |
| acacttagcg | ||
| 961 | accagatcaa taaagggtag ttattgttag gaaaaaacag atttcacttt | |
| gaaagtgagg | ||
| 1021 | aaagccaggc gcggtggctc acacctgtaa tcccagcact ttgggaggct | |
| gaggcaggca | ||
| 1081 | gatcacgagg tcaggagttc gagaccagcc tggacagcaa ggtgaaaccc | |
| tgtctccact | ||
| 1141 | aaaaatacaa aaaattagct gggcatggtg gcatgtgcct gtaatcccag | |
| ctactcggga | ||
| 1201 | gactgaggca ggagaattgc ctgaacccgg gaggcagagg ttgcagtgag | |
| ccaagatcgt | ||
| 1261 | gccactgcac tccagcctgg gtgacagaga gagactccat ctcaaaaaaa | |
| aaaaaaagaa | ||
| 1321 | agaaagaaaa aaaataaaat gaggaaagtg ggattcggag aggtgagatg | |
| acttctgcac | ||
| 1381 | agtcaggatt caaactcagg tctgagacac cagaggctca gggcaaatca | |
| tctccctctg | ||
| 1441 | ctccggaatc ttcagcaggt tccctacagt ccactacatg gactccatcc | |
| ttgccaggga | ||
| 1501 | gtgaggatcc agcaaaggcc tggggccaaa aagaccctgg gcaagttccc | |
| caatcctatg | ||
| 1561 | tgtcttgatc tgagatcccc aagtgagcct gagaaggtct gtgaattcct | |
| ccacgtagct | ||
| 1621 | gatgcaaaat tttatactaa tggatctcag acgagtctat agcctcaaaa | |
| gtaacaaacc | ||
| 1681 | acagacttga cctgacttag catggtttct tattcaccca atggagatac | |
| gatttctacc | ||
| 1741 | ttgaaaggct gtgaagggat taaatgaggt aatttgtgag aagtacttga | |
| aacatcctca | ||
| 1801 | gctttcatta aatgttggtt tccttctctt tctctctccc caaactattt | |
| ccatcagtta | ||
| 1861 | gcaaatatta ttgagcatct gccacgtggc aggcaccagt caggtcctgg | |
| gggtaaagtg | ||
| 1921 | gtgaacaaga cagacatggc ccattttcat ggggctcaca ttctagcaga | |
| gggaaacagc | ||
| 1981 | aaacaaataa aagcaacaat ttcagatatg aataactgct atgaagaaaa | |
| tacaaggccg | ||
| 2041 | ggcacggtgg ctcacgcctg taatcccagc actttgagag gcagaggcgg | |
| acggatcaca | ||
| 2101 | aggtcaggag tttgagacca gcctgatcaa catggtgaaa ccctgtctct | |
| cctaaaaata | ||
| 2161 | caaaaattag ccgggcatgg tggcacgtgc ctgtaatccc agctactcag | |
| gagactgagg | ||
| 2221 | caggagaatt gtttgaaccc aggagacaga ggttgcagtg agccaagatc | |
| gcaccactgc | ||
| 2281 | actccagcct gggcaacaga gtgagactcc atctcaaaaa aaagaaaagg | |
| ataacgtgat | ||
| 2341 | agacttatag ggtggggcag cctccaggga tgaaacatct gaatgaccaa | |
| aggagccagt | ||
| 2401 | catgccagga ttttggagga aagcacccag gcagagagtg cagaaagggc | |
| aaacgctccc | ||
| 2461 | tggaaagatt cttagtcaag agtccttcac tcccagtcct accacaaact | |
| gggtcacctt | ||
| 2521 | gaacaagtca cgtaacttct gaggctcagc tgccacatct acaaaatggg | |
| aataaagaca | ||
| 2581 | tcttacctgc cacattgtga gaggtttcaa ccaaagggct gttaaggtct | |
| gggatcctcc | ||
| 2641 | ccaaatctca ccatagacac ctgatactca tcacttggca cccgtcttgg | |
| aagaggggaa | ||
| 2701 | cctgcacaga gaaccctggg tcatgctttt gatttttaat ttcatgctgc | |
| actagaaata | ||
| 2761 | gcttcttttg ttcctggttg acccaggagc ctcttcctgc cacctggggc | |
| ctattctagt | ||
| 2821 | taacagctgc ttatcccctc aggtacaaaa gccaacgagg aaaggacatc | |
| aggaaacatt | ||
| 2881 | gttctgggaa taaccagaca cctatctgcc accatctccc cccatcccgt | |
| gaccacacac | ||
| 2941 | gggagactgg aggactcagc ctgtcctgta gtcagataat gtacatggtt | |
| tatttaaaga | ||
| 3001 | gtcaaaaggg gccgggcgca gtggctaacg cctgtaatcc tagcactctg | |
| ggaggctggg | ||
| 3061 | gcgggtggat cacctgagct caagagtttc agaccaatct ggccaacatg | |
| gtgaaaccct | ||
| 3121 | gtctctacca aaaatacaaa aattagccgg gtgtggtggt ggacgcctgt | |
| aatcccagct | ||
| 3181 | acttgggagg ctgaggcagg agaattgctt gaacctggga agtggaggtt | |
| gcagtgagct | ||
| 3241 | gagatcgtgc cactgcactc cagcctgggc aacaacaacg aaaactccgt | |
| ctcaaaaaaa | ||
| 3301 | aaaaaaaaaa aaaagagtca aaaggatctt ggtccctggg ttgggccact | |
| gatttacgat | ||
| 3361 | cactaggagt tctcactcct aaatttcttt gatctgttcg cttcgctcca | |
| tctccacagc | ||
| 3421 | tgctgcactg gctacagcct catgatctca catcttaact ctctctgctt | |
| tctctggccc | ||
| 3481 | atctccccac ttccaaacca tttgtcacgc tgtaaccagt gcctaacaca | |
| caaaactaac | ||
| 3541 | catgtccttc ccctgcttaa agcccttagc tcctgttgct cagtggaact | |
| ggcgtctgag | ||
| 3601 | gctacctctc caagcctaag cgcctaagtc ctgttgcaac cctcaggccc | |
| ttcctcatta | ||
| 3661 | tccacaccaa actcctcagt gtctgtaaaa caagccgagc aaccctcaga | |
| attatatgcc | ||
| 3721 | ttcgctgctc gtttgttttg tttttaggac agggtctcac gctgtcaccc | |
| aggcaggagt | ||
| 3781 | gctgcagcgt gatctcagct cacagcagcc tccgtctccg gggctcaaga | |
| attctcacgc | ||
| 3841 | cgcagcctcc cgagtagctg ggattacagg cacgggccaa cacacccggc | |
| taattcttgt | ||
| 3901 | atttctagta gagacggggt ttcgccatgt tgcccagcct ggtctccaac | |
| tcctgagctc | ||
| 3961 | aagtaatcca cctgcctcgg cctctcaaag tgctgggatt acaggtctga | |
| gccactgcac | ||
| 4021 | ccagccagcc tttgctgctt ttgttcctgc aatttggaac actgtcccca | |
| tcccagcctc | ||
| 4081 | tcacctctac ccctacctcc ttcactacct ataccttcct atccatcctt | |
| caagacccca | ||
| 4141 | aaaaccatcc ctgattcctt cagaaaggca gtttattgcc tatcttatca | |
| gactgaaagc | ||
| 4201 | agtggctgtg tcttatttat ggttaattcc ctagaagctg gactgataca | |
| ttccatttaa | ||
| 4261 | ctaaaattcg tatcaggtgc ttcggactgc agacaagcct atcacaaccc | |
| agaaggaaga | ||
| 4321 | aacagggaag gcacctgggg gctgccaagc aatgaggtgg ggggtaggaa | |
| tcatgaatcc | ||
| 4381 | gcatattttt aaaaactgcc ccagatcctg atgtaaacgg tacaagagag | |
| tctgagaaac | ||
| 4441 | acagggctcc cctcaaacag tcctgacttc agcattcctg gaaaaatgaa | |
| aatcctttcc | ||
| 4501 | ttttgcctct aatgotttcc ctgctggtat cccaggttaa aaaaaaatag | |
| ataaaatcag | ||
| 4561 | ggggattttt ctgggacttg gctgggctgg gaaacaagcc tgggttctaa | |
| tacaggctca | ||
| 4621 | gcccctgacg tactatgggc ccctgcccct ccttggggcc tccattacca | |
| cggccacccc | ||
| 4681 | cacccttatc aattgtgtgc ccctgaggta gtgactgtcc cgctctgagc | |
| attagtttcc | ||
| 4741 | ccatcttcca ctagtcgtcg tcagctctga cgctctatga gctatgcata | |
| cccgtagctc | ||
| 4801 | cccgccgacc ccgatggtcc cctcccctcc ttcccaaggt ccatccgcca | |
| gggtgcagcc | ||
| 4861 | gacgcactcc taatgctaag gccgccctct catcgaccgc cccttcctgg | |
| cctcgactca | ||
| 4921 | gcgccaaagg tatgggtctc tgccccgcct gctctttaag cctagccggg | |
| gcggtcagcg | ||
| 4981 | caagcgcact gggtcgcatc gaggccccgc cccctgagcc tgggtagcgg | |
| cgcgagggcc | ||
| 5041 | gggagaaccg ttcgcggagg aaaggcgaac tagtaggttg gggcggccac | |
| ggcggccggc | ||
| 5101 | atgggtcacg tttcctcggg aggaacgatg tgagggaggg gtctggcaag | |
| agattggaat | ||
| 5161 | tccggaggcc gggagacctt gtggctgaaa cccttcgtag gagcggggca | |
| actagtgtct | ||
| 5221 | agtgaggggg ttgggctggc gcgcactgat cccagacttt ccggatcttc | |
| tgcctttaga | ||
| 5281 | tcgggccggt gtcggggcat gtaggccagt gagactggag ccagttagag | |
| ctacaacggg | ||
| 5341 | gagcgattag ggccaaactt tgtccagggt ggaagcgagc gggcccgtga | |
| agtggggcca | ||
| 5401 | gcctgggcag ccgaccgtgt cgttgcctcg gggcctttcc aggcactggc | |
| ctaagtcctg | ||
| 5461 | gcgataaagt gcgaccgatt tccttgtggg cgttttgagg ctttcggtga | |
| tctgacccgt | ||
| 5521 | ctgtcattca ttcttcattc attcatgtga tgaatgaata cagtactaag | |
| cgcggctaat | ||
| 5581 | tactaggtag agaagtgatc aagacaaaca ctgttcctac ggtacaggga | |
| aaagtgatgg | ||
| 5641 | gctgtagaat gtagaagccc ggggcggaga acagggacag cttccggaac | |
| gaaatcgcga | ||
| 5701 | gcccagatca ggagtggtgg cgagagttcc aaagagaaga cagcacgtgc | |
| caagtcctgg | ||
| 5761 | aagggggaca gaggccaaca tatcctggtc actgaagaca cctgactctg | |
| aatctgtttc | ||
| 5821 | acgcccaggg aagagatgac agtggccggg gctaggctac aaactctgga | |
| aatggagata | ||
| 5881 | aataaaggaa ttcaaagtac tatatactta ggcagcaaaa tccataggat | |
| ttggggagag | ||
| 5941 | tgagatgtag gaaacaagta ctcaaggctt gggtacctgg gtggggttca | |
| tcagagaaga | ||
| 6001 | agcagatttg tgggagacaa caacaaattc tattctggtt gtatggagac | |
| tcgcaggaaa | ||
| 6061 | aaattggata ttctagtttg aaggtaggaa agtattgctg tgaagatgta | |
| gatttgaatg | ||
| 6121 | tcatcagcaa aacataaata aagccaaggg agggttgagg ctgtagaatg | |
| agaaaaacaa | ||
| 6181 | agggcccact tagcaccttc atctgatttc ttttctttct ttcttttttt | |
| cttttttttt | ||
| 6241 | ttttttgaca gagctttgct cttgttgccc aggctggagt gcaatggcac | |
| gatctcggct | ||
| 6301 | cactacaacc tccacctcct gggttcaagc tattctcctg cctcagcctc | |
| ccaagtagct | ||
| 6361 | cggattacag gcatgcgcca ccaggcccgg ctaattttgt atttttagta | |
| gagatggggt | ||
| 6421 | ttctccatgt tggtgaggct ggtctcgaac tcccgacctc gggtgatccg | |
| cctgcctcgg | ||
| 6481 | cctcacaaag tgctgggatt acacgagtga gccaccacac ctggcccatg | |
| gtgattatct | ||
| 6541 | ttatgtctta tcctcctcca tatccccagt acctagtcaa gggagtggca | |
| ttaaatgcaa | ||
| 6601 | atcagtgttt gccaactaaa taaaagccca acagcaaaca gatgttggaa | |
| tttcagagtt | ||
| 6661 | gtggaacgat gggggctcat ggagggtttc attactctaa tgtcaaggta | |
| atgggttctt | ||
| 6721 | gtcctggctc tgccactagg cttctgtgtg acctctgaca agtctcctcc | |
| tacctataaa | ||
| 6781 | gagagtacag ccaaaaaatg gtctcatgta tagagcttca aacactgctg | |
| ataaatttca | ||
| 6841 | cactgatttt tctcttttaa tccacacagc aatcttactt gaaagggaag | |
| tcggctgggc | ||
| 6901 | ggggggctc acgcctgtaa tcccagcact ttgggaggcc gagagtgggg | |
| gatcacgaga | ||
| 6961 | tcgagaccat cctggctaac acggtgaaac cccgtctcta ctaaaaatac | |
| aaaaaattag | ||
| 7021 | ccgggcatgg tggcaggtgc ctgtagtccc agctactcgg gaggctgagg | |
| caggagaatg | ||
| 7081 | gcatgaaccc aggaggcgga gcttgcagtg agccgagatc gtgcggctgc | |
| actccagcct | ||
| 7141 | gggcgacaga gccagactcc gtcaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaga aagaaagagg | |
| gagggagaga | ||
| 7201 | gagagaaaga aagaaaaaga aggaaggaag gaaggaaaga aggagggaag | |
| ggaaagggaa | ||
| 7261 | agggaaaagg aaggaaggaa agaagggaaa gggagaagtc gtattattat | |
| ggactcaaac | ||
| 7321 | ccaggtctgt ctgtctgtct gacttgaacc ttgttcttta ctatgattgc | |
| cctcatgtat | ||
| 7381 | gtctcactca acagggatat tatcaggacc ctcttgagat cacatgcgca | |
| ttctttcaaa | ||
| 7441 | gcattgtgct gaggctggca gactttcata attggcctgg cactggctct | |
| gtcatgggga | ||
| 7501 | cagggggaca gagctgaatg tgatggaggt ttcctattat tctctaactc | |
| ccttcctggg | ||
| 7561 | gaccactgag ttgggcaacc atgttctgtt aaatggcaac agggcagaac | |
| aaaattagtg | ||
| 7621 | actgtgtttc cagattttta cccagatctt aaactcctga ggcctgctga | |
| aaaatgaatg | ||
| 7681 | agtatcaggg tgtgagtttg tacacctctg tatgtctctg ggcaaccaat | |
| cagacaactt | ||
| 7741 | ctcctattac attggacact tgggtttcag caatttccat cttgctaatg | |
| tgatttctca | ||
| 7801 | aaaatatttt ctgtcttttg gtgctttgat gataaatgtc catatatgga | |
| atgtagtcat | ||
| 7861 | ttcctgctac taagattcct tctggtttgt ataagggagg agttcacctt | |
| attcgcattt | ||
| 7921 | catggtattc cacaaagagc tccctccccc ttcccatgta atttatttga | |
| gatctgctga | ||
| 7981 | catgagttgt tggagcttga agggaattaa taatgtactg cagtgactcc | |
| tatcccagga | ||
| 8041 | aaacttgtta aaaatacaaa gcctcggctg ggtgtgatgg ctcacgcctg | |
| taatcccagt | ||
| 8101 | actttgggag gtcgaggcgt gtggatcaca aggtcagaag atcaagatca | |
| tcctggctaa | ||
| 8161 | cacggtgaaa ccccgtctct actaaaatac aaaaaattag ccaggcgtgg | |
| tggtgtgtgc | ||
| 8221 | ctgtaatccc agctactcag ggaggctgag ggggagaat tacttgaacc | |
| caggaggcgg | ||
| 8281 | aggttgcagt gagccaagat cgagccactg aactccagcc taggcgactg | |
| agtgagactc | ||
| 8341 | catatcaaaa aaaaaaaaat acaaagcctc aacccctcct tcccatcagg | |
| cctcttgcat | ||
| 8401 | cagagtctct gggatggggc ccaggaatct gtattctttc ccagctcccc | |
| agaatgttca | ||
| 8461 | gccaggtttg gaaactgatc tatccgattc ttcttgtttc acagttaggg | |
| aatctgtagc | ||
| 8521 | tctgggaagg gaaggaactt gccccagtca catctgatat tagtgcttct | |
| ttctccaatg | ||
| 8581 | aagagccttt aggctgggag tccagagaca tgggttcaag tccaggctat | |
| accagtcatc | ||
| 8641 | acctcgggca agtcatttca cctctccaag cctctgcttc cttactgtga | |
| gaataatgcc | ||
| 8701 | attgtgttgg gaatcaaaag agagagtggc aatggaaatg ctttgtcaag | |
| ctttctattt | ||
| 8761 | tgtgcacatg gaagttgtta agagctagaa ccagccagtg ttcactcctg | |
| tataccacgc | ||
| 8821 | tgttcccttc caacagaggt cagggtcctg ctgtgttggg ggtggccgcc | |
| agccagtttc | ||
| 8881 | ggtggttgct gggcttcagg ccatctgtta ccaactctct tctctccatc | |
| ttttgcaggt | ||
| 8941 | gttgggatgg ccaccaactg ggggagcctc ttgcaggata aacagcagct | |
| agaggagctg | ||
| 9001 | gcacggcagg ccgtggaccg ggccctggct gagggagtat tgctgaggac | |
| ctcacaggag | ||
| 9061 | cccacttcct cggaggtaag cccctagctc ctccccacag cattcaccat | |
| ggcccactgt | ||
| 9121 | ctggccccgg ccaggctgag ggtcactcct ttgcatcagg gaccatatct | |
| cttttgcctt | ||
| 9181 | attttttcca gtaactaaaa ttgatctcta gaagtagaaa ataaaaaggc | |
| agtgtcctgg | ||
| 9241 | agtaatcaaa tttaaatatg gggtttgaag tgtgacttag gcaaattact | |
| taaccgctct | ||
| 9301 | cagctgcagt ttcttcaggt gtaaaaatgg gataataata ggacctacct | |
| cactggtttg | ||
| 9361 | gtaagagaat tacaggatga ttcatgtgaa gcactttgcc cagtgagcta | |
| ttactgaaaa | ||
| 9421 | ccccataatc actctacctt ctctgtaact ggtttgtgat atatgctttc | |
| aagcctttct | ||
| 9481 | ctgtgcattt atatacatag ataggtatat atagaaatac gtctttttta | |
| aaaaacaaat | ||
| 9541 | tgtatcatat atattattct atgatatgtt tttggttttt tatttgtctg | |
| tcttagaact | ||
| 9601 | ttctaatgcc ttctattagg gtcatcttca ttctgaggca tagtattcca | |
| gatgtgggtg | ||
| 9661 | tatcacagtt tagcttccct ctactcatgt ctatttaggt gatttctcat | |
| tattttatga | ||
| 9721 | ccataaatag cattataggg aacatccatg catatgtctg ttggggcacc | |
| tatgtgagtg | ||
| 9781 | tttctccagg ttcaatacgt aaaagtagaa ctgctgagtc caaaccacac | |
| ctttttaaaa | ||
| 9841 | cctcatcctt agggaagaaa aaaaaataaa aaaataaaat cttttttaat | |
| ttggtgacta | ||
| 9901 | ggtaagacat tttcatggtt caaattcaaa tggtacaaga gtttacccta | |
| atgcagcttg | ||
| 9961 | tgttttggtt tcttgttgat cctttcagat ggcttattca taacaagtaa | |
| ctaataacaa | ||
| 10021 | gtaaatatat tccttggggc ctcgctctgt tgcccaggct ggagtgtagt | |
| ggcacaatct | ||
| 10081 | tggctcactg caacctccgc ctcctgggtt caagcaattc tcccacctca | |
| gcctcccaag | ||
| 10141 | tagctgggac tacaggcatg tgccactacg cctggctaat tttttttttt | |
| tttttggtag | ||
| 10201 | ggacagggtt tcaccatgtt gtccaggctg gtctcaaact cctgacttca | |
| agtgatccac | ||
| 10261 | tggcctctgc cccccaaaat tgctgggatt acaggtgtga accaccgtgc | |
| ccagcctcct | ||
| 10321 | tttgcccact tttttttctt taacttaaca gtacacctta agaccatatt | |
| ggtgactaaa | ||
| 10381 | gagctgccaa catctcttct ttttttagcc agacccattc ttttttgtct | |
| ctgtgtgccc | ||
| 10441 | agaacctaca caggcctgat ggagtccaca ctcagtaatt gtttgctaag | |
| gcccaagtaa | ||
| 10501 | atgacaatgt ctgtcaccta aggcaggctg atggtatgga atagaattgc | |
| ttgggctgtg | ||
| 10561 | aacctagatt ttgtgaatta cttgtatgaa tctaaaatga agcattttct | |
| cttccacgct | ||
| 10621 | tttgtttctt ctgttaatca ataggtacca tgtgaagatc caacacttgg | |
| tctttctggg | ||
| 10681 | aggttatgga gcctagaaaa ggcgtaatcc acaatgagat ttctaatcca | |
| gaaaaaaagt | ||
| 10741 | cagaaagtgt acgtgtgtgt gtatgtgtgt gtgtgtgtgt gtgtgagaga | |
| gagagagaga | ||
| 10801 | gaatgatttt actccaaatc tttaccaaat gcctgctcta tgccgggcca | |
| ttgtaggcac | ||
| 10861 | tgaggacaga gaggtgagtc agccagagcc ctagcctctg gggctcctgg | |
| tctagttaga | ||
| 10921 | gaacatacca caaaacaaaa ttaaataaca tcagctctat gaggaaacac | |
| aggcagtctg | ||
| 10981 | ctacacaaag ttaactatca tttattgagt atttagtatg tgccaggcat | |
| tattctaaac | ||
| 11041 | actttggaat cactgactcc tcaccacaac agagataagg aaaccgaagc | |
| ccagagaggc | ||
| 11101 | taagtaacct acctgaggtt atttaaatgg taaaataatt ggcagagcca | |
| ggatgtgaac | ||
| 11161 | ccaaggaatt tggctcctga gtccatgctc tgaacatcca tgcttttttt | |
| cctctcccaa | ||
| 11221 | gatactatat aggacagctg gaagaaagag tagttcatta tgattagatg | |
| attgagatgg | ||
| 11281 | ggggtggtat ttgaactaga ccttaaaaga caaataggga aaaggaacag | |
| catagcaagg | ||
| 11341 | acccaaaagt aggaaaaggc aaaaaaaaaa aaaaatgttc aagagaatgc | |
| agctgaaatg | ||
| 11401 | cagggcgcat aagtggatat agtgggaaag aaggcaggcc agcgtcagac | |
| agccgcgggg | ||
| 11461 | ccttagctac tgggtggagg aggagtatga actttatcct gtagatcaga | |
| gctgcaaact | ||
| 11521 | agccatatct aggctgagta tttggctcct gcagtgtttg gggagttaat | |
| ttgtttttta | ||
| 11581 | caataagtaa tacgttcaaa tacatttgaa cagggcgcaa aattcaaaag | |
| ggtattcagt | ||
| 11641 | acagagtaag tccccttcct ccagccactg tttccctgac caggggcaag | |
| cattgttaac | ||
| 11701 | agttgttttc accagagtat ttttaaaaag tcagagccaa catttaaaaa | |
| aaaaaatcat | ||
| 11761 | gaaattaaaa caaaaaatct agcaacccaa cttgtcttga aaaattatat | |
| catctggcaa | ||
| 11821 | ctctggccta ctttcctgca tggcaacaat tggctagagc agagttctgg | |
| ctgccccctt | ||
| 11881 | tagagaagat gcaagtactt ctttttgcca caattcctat cactccctgt | |
| tgcttcctgg | ||
| 11941 | ctacaaagca gaattttgtc atgcacgtgc tataggtttt tttaaatagt | |
| agaaaaatgt | ||
| 12001 | ttcttttttt ttttttgaga cagagtctca ctctgtcgcc aggctggagt | |
| gcagtggcac | ||
| 12061 | gatctcagct cactgcaacc tctgcctcct gggttcaagc gattctcctg | |
| cctcagcctc | ||
| 12121 | cagagcagct gggactacgg gtgtgtgcca ccacgcccag ctaatttttg | |
| tatttttagt | ||
| 12181 | agagatgggg tttcaccatg ttggccagga tggtctcgat ctcttgatct | |
| tgtgatctgc | ||
| 12241 | ccgcctcggc ctcccaaagt gctgggatta caggcatgag ccaccgtgcc | |
| cggccagtaa | ||
| 12301 | tgtcatttta tgttaatgtc tctatcaaaa gtgagaagac tgtgtgtttc | |
| agcctttagc | ||
| 12361 | ctgtagatag cagagaacag ctataaacta ttgatcctaa attcaggagg | |
| gcataatgag | ||
| 12421 | ccctgggaca gaggcagagg gatgtcttag cagaaaaact ctgagttttt | |
| gaggccaaga | ||
| 12481 | tgagacttgt tgggggcagc agagctctat gtgttcaagc caaggaaatg | |
| ctcctgtagt | ||
| 12541 | catcacatag ctactcaggg tattaggtca ccccttatgt aatctgcagt | |
| cattcccatt | ||
| 12601 | ctaactcata aaggcttcag actgaataaa ccttattctc acaaatagcc | |
| ttcctcagtt | ||
| 12661 | ttatcttaga tgctgaggcc agggcagtgg tacacacctg cagtctcagc | |
| tactggggag | ||
| 12721 | gctgagacag gaggattgct tgagcccagg aatttgaggc tatagtgcac | |
| tatgatggca | ||
| 12781 | cctatgaata gccactgtat tccagtctgg gcaacatagt aagaccccac | |
| tccaaaaaaa | ||
| 12841 | aaaaaaaaag atgctgagaa gggtaattta gaaattatct accaaaattt | |
| aaaatagatt | ||
| 12901 | tacctgaatt acttgatatt tttactttta gaaatttaga atgtatggac | |
| tttctcatat | ||
| 12961 | atgaaaatat ctagaatgta tattctagga tacccattga aacattaatg | |
| gtaataggaa | ||
| 13021 | aataaagaaa ccacctatat actagattca ataaattatg gtatatccta | |
| agagtagaat | ||
| 13081 | aatatacagc aattaaaaat aatgaaaatg ctctatttga acatataagg | |
| aaatatttaa | ||
| 13141 | aaagcacaat gtagtatagt ttgctatggg ggtgaaaaaa agagaaaata | |
| tatgtgtata | ||
| 13201 | catatatatc aatacaaaga tgactggaag gatgtgtgag acactagtct | |
| gtcatttgcc | ||
| 13261 | tctggggagg agaactgggt ggctggggcc cagtettttc cccaggagac | |
| tggaatgaga | ||
| 13321 | gtgagacata cttctcacta tatattctta tgtctctttt gaattttgta | |
| tcatgtattt | ||
| 13381 | gtattacctg ttaaaaaaat aataatattt tggctgggca tggtggctca | |
| tgcctgtaat | ||
| 13441 | cccaacactt tgggaggctg aggcaggcag atcacttgag gccaggtgtt | |
| tgagaccagc | ||
| 13501 | ctggacaaca cagtgaaacc ccatctctac taaaaataca aaaattacct | |
| gggtgtggtg | ||
| 13561 | gcacacacct gtagtctcag ctacttggga ggctgaggca ggagaattgc | |
| ttgaacccag | ||
| 13621 | gagatggagg ttgcagtgag ccgagattgt accactgcac tccagcctgg | |
| gcaacagagt | ||
| 13681 | gagactctac ctcaaaaaaa aaaatagtac tttaaaaata aatatctaaa | |
| taccaagttc | ||
| 13741 | taacaccgta aacttatacc accataatga caaactgata ttaactcaaa | |
| ggttaaactc | ||
| 13801 | aggaatgctt tataatacaa gtcacaagat tttcttttca tctcttaccc | |
| aagttctagt | ||
| 13861 | tcagttgttg gcagggatct cagaatgcac ttttcccttc tagaatcagt | |
| gtccttgatg | ||
| 13921 | gtatttgggt ttctcgtcta tgataaagtc caaagaatgc ggaatgcagc | |
| tgaactctag | ||
| 13981 | gcctgttaac ctgagtcacc atcactaaca ttggtggaaa aaacactcct | |
| ggcttctact | ||
| 14041 | aagggaacca gagttcactt gtcctaccca gtaaccaaat caaaatcaaa | |
| aggcaaggaa | ||
| 14101 | actggagtgt gagctcctga tgcatggaag ggcctgggct tgaacatcaa | |
| ccagcaagga | ||
| 14161 | gcaggcttcc atgtatgtat gtgtgtgttg tgtttagtaa ccatcctggt | |
| tcaaatccca | ||
| 14221 | gcaccccgtt actagctgaa tataattttg gatctgttaa ctgttctggt | |
| tcaaatccca | ||
| 14281 | gcaccagttc ctagctgaat ataattttgg atctgttaac ctctctttct | |
| caggtcccgt | ||
| 14341 | ctctgttaag tgtggataat aatagtatct tcctcacagg gctgaatgat | |
| gaatctatgt | ||
| 14401 | aaagtattta aaatagtacc ttgcacatag taagtgctca ataacttgtg | |
| ggtttctttt | ||
| 14461 | tgttatttgc attttgcttt tttgcttctc tctcttcaat acgtagagat | |
| aaactatcac | ||
| 14521 | agaatctgga agctctctgg gttccactct cccccttcca ctctcccaag | |
| gtaaccacta | ||
| 14581 | atctacagtt ggtgtgtcct cagtaaatat aggccagact ttccatggga | |
| ttccatttgc | ||
| 14641 | aggaagacaa cccgttcaca ggtgccctac ccctgtocca ttctctcttc | |
| ttgatcacag | ||
| 14701 | gtggtgagct atgccccatt cacgctcttc ccctcactgg tccccagtgc | |
| cctgctggag | ||
| 14761 | caagcctatg ctgtgcagat ggacttcaac ctgctagtgg atgctgtcag | |
| ccagaacgct | ||
| 14821 | gccttcctgg agcaaactct ttccaggtag gggacagtga agcattgggg | |
| ggccaggagc | ||
| 14881 | tgccagagcc aaggaactgg aagattgcag agccgtgagg tgttactgtg | |
| tcagctgact | ||
| 14941 | tggtgggata gaggaaaggt acctccaaag aacaaaaagt cataggagtc | |
| aggaaagctg | ||
| 15001 | gcttctaatc ctggctcgac cagttattta tatggcctca agccactccc | |
| tttccttctc | ||
| 15061 | tgggcctaag gtttcttcat ctgaaaaatg aagagactgg cttaaatcca | |
| agatcccttt | ||
| 15121 | attgttgaca ttctgtaatc cgtgacaccc tactttgaag actgatattt | |
| ccatttggaa | ||
| 15181 | ttaggggaag tcagcctggt tttggaggaa aacagaggta gggaaggtta | |
| ttgggttaaa | ||
| 15241 | gtcagatttt ctacttctcc taagcagcga cactttcttg tcacctcagg | |
| cctctcatct | ||
| 15301 | ttggatggga tggggtacag actgggccac actcagggca tgaggaagca | |
| acctctgaaa | ||
| 15361 | togttcagcc catccgccct tetetgtctc tttcccttga tctttttttt | |
| tttttcttca | ||
| 15421 | gattctgggg caatttctta aaatttcttt atttatttta gaattaaata | |
| tatataggct | ||
| 15481 | gggcgcggtg gctcaggcct gtaatcccag cactttggga ggccgaggtg | |
| ggtggatcac | ||
| 15541 | ttaaggtcag gagtttgaga ccagcctggc caacatggtg aaaccccgtc | |
| tctactaaaa | ||
| 15601 | atataaaaaa attagctggg tgtggtggcg ggtgcctata atcccagcta | |
| cttgggaggc | ||
| 15661 | tgaggcagga gaatcgcttg aacccaggag gcagaggctg cagtaagcca | |
| agatcacgac | ||
| 15721 | actgtactcc agcctgggcg acagagcgag actccatctc aaaaaaaaag | |
| aaataataat | ||
| 15781 | acatatatat atgtatatat attcattgta gaattaaata tctagaaata | |
| ttatgtattt | ||
| 15841 | acatatacat gctagatgtg tatatactgt acaggttgag catccctaat | |
| ccaaaaatcc | ||
| 15901 | aaaagctgaa atgctccaaa attcaaaact tgttgaacac cacatgactc | |
| taccagtgga | ||
| 15961 | aaacgccacg cctgatgtca tgtgacaggt gcagtcaaaa cacagtcaaa | |
| agtttgtttc | ||
| 16021 | atgcacaaaa ttaattaaaa tattgtataa aataatcttc aggctatgag | |
| tataaggtgt | ||
| 16081 | atatgaaaca aatgaatttt gtgtttagac ttgagtccca tccccaagat | |
| gtctcattac | ||
| 16141 | gtatatgcaa atcttccaaa atccgaaaga cttctggtcc caagcatttc | |
| ggataaggga | ||
| 16201 | tatccaacct gtaattgcat gtctttgatt aatttttcaa cagaaattag | |
| acttttgttg | ||
| 16261 | gagacaaaat cttttaaaaa tgtgtgggtg aatatgagaa ggggtcataa | |
| tggtaagaag | ||
| 16321 | cttggaaacc attgacttgt agccaaaaac ccaatgagtc atgaatgtat | |
| gaatctgccc | ||
| 16381 | accaccttgc ccctgagctg tttcttggaa tgggcccagc tttgtacctg | |
| caatcctgga | ||
| 16441 | ttgtgggaaa catgagcagc ctggcttata accctaatga tgcaattatg | |
| aaggagactt | ||
| 16501 | gcagctcatc tttgcaaccc ctgccttctc tgttcctctc tcctctcata | |
| cacatataaa | ||
| 16561 | ccctagttcc taagggagaa gagcccccta caaaacatga aggggagcac | |
| ctcttcagaa | ||
| 16621 | aaaggaaagt gtgtctcaac ttccttggag gctgaagccc agctgggact | |
| ctcctcctaa | ||
| 16681 | ccaagggctg gcatgagaga gctcaccctt gggagagagc tggctgagga | |
| gcagaggaac | ||
| 16741 | ttcagggcag gcctgggcta cttggcttcc ccccactggt ctgctgtgac | |
| gtttctgtaa | ||
| 16801 | caaggtgatt caggcttgag caggtgtgca gaatccaccc tgaatctcaa | |
| agggcagtaa | ||
| 16861 | gtgtgatgtt aatcacctgt ggattccttc ttactgtggc tcttgttgag | |
| acttcagaaa | ||
| 16921 | accatactgg ataggcccct aacacatgtc acatgtcatg gcagtacact | |
| gagctgtgac | ||
| 16981 | gatgagcctg catagacaca gccattacct tcatgaggtt tatagtcaaa | |
| caggagagat | ||
| 17041 | gacactaatc atcacacaaa gaaaatgtaa aattgcaact gcagtcagtg | |
| ctgtaaagga | ||
| 17101 | gtggttctta gttctatgag aacacatagt agggggatct gactcagata | |
| gggaaggctt | ||
| 17161 | ccctgaggaa atcacatcat atgaggacta gttgaagaag aaacaaacaa | |
| acaaaaaaaa | ||
| 17221 | cccaggatat ttagcttggg tcagaaaaat cttattggtg cacagggcat | |
| aactgctgtc | ||
| 17281 | ttctaatctc caagggctgc tgtggaggag gaggagaagg ctcaccctgg | |
| gaggtcgcag | ||
| 17341 | agggtaggaa aagctatgga gagttagtat taggtcaacc agaaggcttg | |
| ccaaccatca | ||
| 17401 | gagctattca agtagaatag atacatcatg tcattttcta gctcttcttc | |
| ggtgcagtat | ||
| 17461 | gttcaattct ttgaatgtaa tatcttattg gctttttacc acaactctat | |
| gatataaata | ||
| 17521 | taattatatt ctccatttta aagatcagca aactgagaca cagagaggtg | |
| aaatgattcc | ||
| 17581 | ctgaggttgc ctactagtga gtggtagagc taggatttga acccaggtct | |
| agagttggat | ||
| 17641 | tcttagccac tgttctctac cacattgggg cggacattca agttttggcc | |
| agtagactca | ||
| 17701 | gagaggattc aggagtcaat gactgaggat gggactcctt gaaattttag | |
| gtccaattaa | ||
| 17761 | gcctgcaaaa tgttctctgt ttcttcctcc agcaccatca aacaggatga | |
| ctttaccgct | ||
| 17821 | cgtctctttg acatccacaa gcaagtccta aaagagggca ttgcccaggt | |
| aaccattccc | ||
| 17881 | agccctactc cagtctgtaa cctgtccctc ccatctctgt ttgttttctg | |
| ttttgcttga | ||
| 17941 | agaatttggt ccaggccctc agctcatggg aatctgcctc tcactggtcc | |
| tcactgggtt | ||
| 18001 | tatcccagtg accaattcta ggatgaccag aagaatgatt ccactgggct | |
| tgggagtgtt | ||
| 18061 | tgctggtacc tctaatctct gtgtagagtt catggtacct gtgtgctctg | |
| tggctaggtc | ||
| 18121 | ctcagagtca gtccctgggc aggtactgtc agccttcagt tttccccaca | |
| gactgtgttc | ||
| 18181 | ctgggcctga atcgctcaga ctacatgttc cagcgcagcg cagatggctc | |
| cccagccctg | ||
| 18241 | aaacagatcg aaatcaacac catctctgcc agctttgggg gcctggcctc | |
| ccggacccca | ||
| 18301 | gctgtgcacc ggtgggtccc ctgggcagcc cccggcatac ctgtggggtg | |
| acatgctgat | ||
| 18361 | gggtgtacag tcactggcta ggccagggaa ctccagctat gattgtgctt | |
| tcctgggccc | ||
| 18421 | cgggtcacat gttgcccctg gccaccccga cagcagtttc cacttgtaat | |
| gagatccttg | ||
| 18481 | gtatgtcagg gagaaaaagg acctcatagc tcatctagtc ctgtccctcc | |
| attgtacagg | ||
| 18541 | cagagggaac aatatcttga gagccccaga gagaggaatg cagggacttc | |
| tgtctggggg | ||
| 18601 | ctgggcctgg tagcatccat ttctagccag cagtgatgct ccaggttgca | |
| atgattttag | ||
| 18661 | atggtctgca gcaggattcc agacagcacc tggaggccca gagtaagggg | |
| ctccagctca | ||
| 18721 | ctgggacact agggtaggtt ggggtgggga cagaggctct caggtctcct | |
| ccaggcatat | ||
| 18781 | acaccagggg ccaaggttag ggcagcccag catattccaa cctgaagtgg | |
| atcttacagg | ||
| 18841 | aatgtgatgg gaggatgctt tttagtgctc agctgattct cagagtcatg | |
| ttgctgtata | ||
| 18901 | tatgaggtca tgggcagagg ggtcttccag gtccatccaa ttactgaaca | |
| gccatctctc | ||
| 18961 | ttccaacaga catgttctca gtgtcctgag taagaccaaa gaagctggca | |
| agatcctctc | ||
| 19021 | taataatccc agcaagggac tggccctggg aattgccaaa gcctgggagc | |
| tctacggctc | ||
| 19081 | acccaagtaa gggtgtgaaa aggtagcagg aggatcctgc tttagtttca | |
| gcattcatgg | ||
| 19141 | gtttagcaac ttcttttctt gccagccatc attagagaat aaggggattt | |
| ttctaggaat | ||
| 19201 | agaaacttat acctttacat gccaaaatta ttttaaggtt tccttcttaa | |
| ataacagatg | ||
| 19261 | ctgactatga tttaactttt tcttattgag tggaggtcat cattatgact | |
| gtcaacaatt | ||
| 19321 | gcagcttgct gtaatacagt agtgctacct agggttagag aggcacgcaa | |
| ggctgtttgc | ||
| 19381 | ctgcgctaat agctctgact gctaggcttt aagttcttag tcatttcctt | |
| tttttttttt | ||
| 19441 | ttttgagaca gagtctcact ctctcaccca ggctggagtg cagtggtaca | |
| atcttggctt | ||
| 19501 | acttcaacct ccacctcccg ggttcaagca attcttctgc ctcagcctcc | |
| tgagtagctg | ||
| 19561 | ggatttcagg cgcatgctgc cacacctggc taatttttgt atttttagta | |
| gagacggggt | ||
| 19621 | ttcaccatgt tggtcatgct ggtctcgaac tcctgacctc gtgatccgcc | |
| caccttggcc | ||
| 19681 | tcccaaagtg ctgggattac aggcatgagc cactgcaccc ggcctctcat | |
| tcattttctt | ||
| 19741 | catagttttc ttgtctgttt cccaattctc agctcttact tttgactgct | |
| gttggtatgc | ||
| 19801 | ttgaatttgg aatcctccac cccccatgcc catgcctccc ttctgatttg | |
| ctgtggtttg | ||
| 19861 | ggaaaacaaa tgatccagat tgttatgatt gggtctgaag agtgtgaggg | |
| cctcttggat | ||
| 19921 | gagtaaatgc ataagctttg actacgaaat tttatggtat cctttttaac | |
| tgcttagagg | ||
| 19981 | cattttttgc tttcttccta tttctcaagt gaagatgtta ggtaagtgat | |
| tttcagatca | ||
| 20041 | tcgaggggcc gctatactaa cagttattgc aatgttaata tagcattaat | |
| agtccttaat | ||
| 20101 | gtacacttac tagtgctaca ccttgtgcta agctctgtac atacaggatc | |
| tcattgaatt | ||
| 20161 | ctcataataa gctctctgag gtcaatactg ttcaactccc tcattttaca | |
| gatgaggaaa | ||
| 20221 | ctgaggttct gagaaacgaa gtgaattgtt aaggctaagt gatgagttgg | |
| tggcagatcc | ||
| 20281 | caaagtctac ctccctctaa aacctccact cttaatcatg ctcttacctc | |
| caagggagcc | ||
| 20341 | tctctgtcct tgctaagcct cactaagccc aaagaaacct cagactgtaa | |
| gcatttagaa | ||
| 20401 | gtcatcagac aaatattctt tcaagtatat tggctaggtt gtattttaag | |
| agagtgaagc | ||
| 20461 | caggggatgg gtcagctggg gaactgctga cagacaaatg ctgcagaggg | |
| ttttgcctgc | ||
| 20521 | cagcctgtca gtaacgtgga cagaaaatac ttgtgtgtcc aaaattaggc | |
| actggtaggt | ||
| 20581 | aggagttatg tggcacctga gccagaactg gcttccccca ttgtgagagt | |
| gagataggtt | ||
| 20641 | cttctgctga catagcacat gaccttggca agttagttct tctctgagct | |
| tcagtttcct | ||
| 20701 | catttgtaaa ataggagtaa taataatacc taaaggggtg ttagtgagaa | |
| ttaaatgaga | ||
| 20761 | tcatggatct gaaaaatgtt tttaaaaatc tgtgtggatc attatgtggt | |
| actttcaata | ||
| 20821 | ataataatag gccgggtgca gtggctcaca cctctaatcc cagcactttg | |
| ggagaccgag | ||
| 20881 | gcgggtggat catcagaggt caggagttca aggccagcct ggccaacatg | |
| gtgaaacctt | ||
| 20941 | gtctctacta aaaaatacaa aaattagcca ggcatggtgg caggcacctg | |
| tagtcccagc | ||
| 21001 | tacttgggat gctgaggcag gagaatcact tgaacccggg aggtggaagt | |
| tgcagtggcc | ||
| 21061 | aagatcaccc cactgcactc cagcctgggc gacagagcga gactccatct | |
| caaaaaaaaa | ||
| 21121 | aaaaacaaaa aacaaaccca aataataata ataatagcta tcatttgaca | |
| agtattagtt | ||
| 21181 | ttaattcata caacagcaaa ctgaggctaa gagagtttga ataacttgcc | |
| caaagttaca | ||
| 21241 | caaccggtaa gtatagaatt catctgcctc taaagcctat gttctctcta | |
| cttccctatt | ||
| 21301 | ctgcctttaa gagatatggt tccacagtat tgactgaaaa actgcattgg | |
| tagagcagat | ||
| 21361 | taattttcgt caattatctc atgattttta aaatttctta aaaatggaag | |
| cctgcaaaat | ||
| 21421 | gacttacaat ttcaatttag acaaactctc aaagcatagg gcctgtggtt | |
| agaatgagta | ||
| 21481 | gaataagaaa aggggactac tggtgataaa agtttgggaa ctgtgatctt | |
| tttaacacca | ||
| 21541 | atttttttct ttttttttga gacagagttt cgtttttgtt gcccaggctg | |
| gagtgcaatg | ||
| 21601 | gcacgatctc ggctcactac atcctccacc ttccaggttc aagggatttt | |
| cctgccttag | ||
| 21661 | cctcccaagt aactgggatt acaggtgccc accaccacgc ctggctaatt | |
| ttgtattttt | ||
| 21721 | agtagaaacg gggtttctcc atgttggtca ggctggtctc aaactcccga | |
| cctcaggcaa | ||
| 21781 | tccgcccgcc tcggcctctt aaagtgctgg gactataggc gtgagctacc | |
| atgcccagcc | ||
| 21841 | ataacactct tattttatag atgggaaaac cagggcccaa ggaacgaaat | |
| tgccttaccc | ||
| 21901 | aagtcaatta ccaagacaca ctacaagtca ctggcagagc ctggactacc | |
| tacgactcag | ||
| 21961 | gggtcctcac ccccagcccg catgcgtcct tagctgacaa ctttcctact | |
| aggaaacaga | ||
| 22021 | ctgctgagaa ctgctcagaa ctgaaggcag gagaggtcaa atatgttttc | |
| tgagcccagc | ||
| 22081 | tctgattgtt tagcagttgg caggctgact taattagctg gggcgtgcag | |
| ttcctcttta | ||
| 22141 | acctccagct gccagcette ctcctccgcc tetttttgga ggtgggccag | |
| cctgggccaa | ||
| 22201 | ctgcctccct cccacacaca ccctcaccca tgagcgggac agtttaggct | |
| gcaaagtgaa | ||
| 22261 | gagcaaagcc attggccctt aggactctct cagggcaaga tgacttgtga | |
| gagcaccact | ||
| 22321 | tttagtttgt ctctcaggca cccaactcaa agccaagact cagcttaaca | |
| tcacatctga | ||
| 22381 | cctcatgaga tttcaggcaa accaggagag gggacttact aagacctata | |
| ttttggctaa | ||
| 22441 | gcagaaagga gtcaggcaaa cagagtttag actaagaggt tcagccaagg | |
| tcaggagaag | ||
| 22501 | cagagataga caagagaggc taagcagagg aggtcaggga atacacactt | |
| agaatcctaa | ||
| 22561 | gccaaagcct agggttccat gggtctcagg aagaagccac agacacaaag | |
| cagtacagtc | ||
| 22621 | acagcaaaaa tggagtttgg aggctgagcg cagtggctca cacctgtaat | |
| gctaacactt | ||
| 22681 | tgggaggccg aggcgggcag atcacctgag gtcaggagtt cgagcccagc | |
| ctggccaaca | ||
| 22741 | tggtgaaacc ccatctctac tcaaactaca aaaattagcc ggcgggggtg | |
| gtgcacacct | ||
| 22801 | gaaatcccag ctacccggga ggctgaagca ggagaatcgc tggaacccag | |
| ggggtggagg | ||
| 22861 | ttgcagtgag cctagattgt gccactgcac tccagcctgg gcaacagggg | |
| gagactccgt | ||
| 22921 | ctcaaaaaaa taaataaaat aaaatgtaaa agaaaaaaaa tgcagtttgg | |
| tactgctgag | ||
| 22981 | cattagccct aggaatctct taggggactg gacctatctt tgacaacgga | |
| aatatgttag | ||
| 23041 | ctggcagcca aacagatagt tccctggcat aagcttttcc ctgagccctc | |
| aagcccctgc | ||
| 23101 | ctctttaaga aatacatgaa taatcagaga ggaagaagcc acataagccc | |
| tagtgatctc | ||
| 23161 | attaatacta tgagatcaaa tgtggccctg tgtacattat aggaatcttg | |
| ggagggccca | ||
| 23221 | ggagataatg tcgttgtttg tagttggccc tgtgggtttc tgtagggttc | |
| catcttgtgt | ||
| 23281 | aagaaccaca ttcctttatt gtatccttta caatctagta atagagccat | |
| tagccccgga | ||
| 23341 | ccccctgcat tgttctttta caaaatgttc ctcaatactc ccacttgttt | |
| attcttccag | ||
| 23401 | aaagatttta gaattatgtt aagttctaag aaaaagtcct cttgggtttt | |
| tgagatggtt | ||
| 23461 | ttaaatctaa attttaattt gcacagaaat tcatcaaccc atgacatcat | |
| tacaatattt | ||
| 23521 | catctgccca ctggagaagg gtcagaggca tcttcatttt tgaagttttc | |
| tattttcagg | ||
| 23581 | aaatcatatg tgatagcatc aggtgtctat gcctgaggta atctcaaggt | |
| tcctgagaga | ||
| 23641 | gggaacatct gttctttcag ggaagcggtg ttcttattct tattccagga | |
| ggtggggcgg | ||
| 23701 | tatgggggtt gaggggagaa acaaaagaag aacaagttct atagtagcct | |
| cgggccacct | ||
| 23761 | gtgctctttc cccagtgctc tggtgctact gattgctcaa gagaaggaaa | |
| gaaacatatt | ||
| 23821 | tgaccagcgt gccatagaga atgagctact ggccaggtaa gtaaaggaag | |
| ggggacttct | ||
| 23881 | aggtgtggct ccaggattag gggtggggca ctcagaacat agcatccatt | |
| ccctctggct | ||
| 23941 | cttgcccatt tttcccagga acatccatgt gatccgacga acatttgaag | |
| atatctctga | ||
| 24001 | aaaggggtct ctggaccaag accgaaggct gtttgtgtaa gcattcccaa | |
| gaatccagtg | ||
| 24061 | gaaggctggt ttatgaaact catcctgcca ccctcttccc caaaatgatt | |
| ctttcttctg | ||
| 24121 | ggagatgtga tggcttgctt ccttctctca taattcctga aatatctcat | |
| cctcccagga | ||
| 24181 | aattttggag aaagccagcc acgctgtgct tctatcagag ctgttgacat | |
| tctggatcag | ||
| 24241 | ggtctcctta gagatcatct tagttttcat atgccctaag ttcccaaaag | |
| ttttcttgcc | ||
| 24301 | tctcctagta aggtgaggtc aggcctgaga agctgagctg ggcagtcagg | |
| gaggaagagg | ||
| 24361 | agcagctggc tcatgctgtg attggtctgg atgccactgt ctgagctcga | |
| gcctggattt | ||
| 24421 | gtgttccaag ccaagcctta tccttttctc taggggccac caccaggtag | |
| atttggtgct | ||
| 24481 | acatatttgg gtagcattgc agcacatata tttagaccta gacctttgtg | |
| attgttaaaa | ||
| 24541 | ttaaaactgt ccatggaatt tcacaatacc actcactgtt tttcaaaatg | |
| tgcttttatc | ||
| 24601 | ataactaaac aaagtagtta atttactttt cagataaact agacaatatc | |
| aaataggtca | ||
| 24661 | aagaaaagga aaagacattt aaaaagcctg tgtcttaatc agactcatca | |
| ttttacatgt | ||
| 24721 | ttgcgttttc accttcaccc ctgccattaa aaattttttc attctggttt | |
| cagctgcttt | ||
| 24781 | aagcagtgga aatataaagt gtgttttact acacatggca gtatgattct | |
| gctgctcggt | ||
| 24841 | aatttcgagc caacatttgt atgcatttac caaatttgat tctagtgacc | |
| ttcttgttcc | ||
| 24901 | ttctggcctt cttagaatga ctctaaatct ggcatattct aaagtattct | |
| gtatggcaca | ||
| 24961 | cctccctgtt ttcagtggaa gccctggtag tgtggatatc tactttcact | |
| ggttccagtg | ||
| 25021 | aacccctgac caggctccca ctgtgggctg aattttgaaa aagccaaatt | |
| catcttgatg | ||
| 25081 | caccctgaaa tagattgaac cactgaacaa atcagttata atttaacaca | |
| gcagccttct | ||
| 25141 | ccatcctgtg ttccagggat ggccaggaaa ttgctgtggt ttacttccgg | |
| gatggctaca | ||
| 25201 | tgcctcgtca gtacagtcta caggttggta ttttctgtga gaccattctt | |
| tgcctcctgg | ||
| 25261 | gacccacaag agctccacag agacccaatt caggcttata acaacctggg | |
| ttttccgagt | ||
| 25321 | cctcacttca cttctttctc agggagcttg ctgctagaac ctcctatcct | |
| ccctcaagcc | ||
| 25381 | ttttgctacc tatcactcta cacagtcttc tagaatttga atcctcagga | |
| atccacagag | ||
| 25441 | cttcagccat ttacactgtt tccagagatg tgctggcaaa tgtttaacaa | |
| caatcagctc | ||
| 25501 | tcactggttg atataagcca gttccagcat actgctgacc attttttttc | |
| ctgccaactc | ||
| 25561 | ttacctttcc tttatctgaa tcagaaagtt ttatcatctc ctcattcatg | |
| ttaatgacag | ||
| 25621 | ttatatcacc tcattttgct atcctaccat gtagtttcat tagtttccac | |
| atccattatt | ||
| 25681 | tcatttaacc ctcacaacca ctcggtgagg catataatta tccccattat | |
| acagatggag | ||
| 25741 | aaactaacgt ttagagagat ggagaggctt ctctaaggcc ctacaggaag | |
| ttcccaggtt | ||
| 25801 | ttctgacttt caggccgatg gtattcccat tcttctcctc tgctcctaac | |
| atccacatca | ||
| 25861 | tggagaggct aagaagctct gctctcagct gggagatgat aaaggaggaa | |
| ataagtttag | ||
| 25921 | aaataccatg ggcagtgagc tggaggtcat gagcttgact gcctctgtgt | |
| gatgatgggc | ||
| 25981 | aagttcctga ccctttctag gtctgtttct atgagcgggg ggagctacac | |
| tagaaaactg | ||
| 26041 | agggggctcc ttctaggtct gtaattcatc taggactccc cccgagggtt | |
| gagctccaca | ||
| 26101 | tgaggaggct ctatagaggt ggtatctcga tagaacatcc ttttctttag | |
| ataggtggtt | ||
| 26161 | agcagtggtg gcaacttgct gactacagga gagataaact gtctattaga | |
| aaaataggtc | ||
| 26221 | taggccgggc acggtggttc acgcctataa toccagcact ttgggaggcc | |
| aaggcaggtg | ||
| 26281 | gattacctga ggtcaggagt tcaagaccag cctggccaac atggtgaaac | |
| cccgtctcta | ||
| 26341 | ctaaaaatac aaaaattagc cgggcgtggt ggcatacccc tgtaatccca | |
| gctactcagg | ||
| 26401 | acgctgaggc aggagaattg cttgagcccg ggaggcagag gttgcagtaa | |
| gttgagatca | ||
| 26461 | tgccactgca ctccagcctg gctgacagag cgagactctg tctcaaaaaa | |
| aaaaaaaaga | ||
| 26521 | aatgggtcta gatttcaaaa cacgacaaag aaaacttaga agagtttgag | |
| ataacaagga | ||
| 26581 | aggaaagtag tgtttaaaga ggtagacttt tttttttttt tgagacagag | |
| ttttgctctt | ||
| 26641 | gttgaccagg ctggagtaca gtggtgcgat ctcggctcac tgcaaccttt | |
| gacttccagt | ||
| 26701 | ttcaagcgat tctcctgcct cggcctcctg agtagctggg attacaggca | |
| cccaccacca | ||
| 26761 | cacccagcta atttttgtat ttttaataga gacagggttt caccatgttg | |
| gccaggctgg | ||
| 26821 | tctcgaactc ctgaccttac gatccaccca ccttggcctc ccaaagtgct | |
| gggattacag | ||
| 26881 | gtgttagcca ccacacctgg ccaagaggta gacattttta gggaactgag | |
| cagctcagag | ||
| 26941 | caggtttaga catggagaga gatctagaag gettagtgac ttactagatg | |
| accctgggca | ||
| 27001 | agtccttgct tatctttggt tttgctttcc tgcttctacc ataatggggt | |
| atttctctgg | ||
| 27061 | gtttatttct gatgttctgg tcacgtgtga ttctgcgtgg aatgccagac | |
| tagtagttgg | ||
| 27121 | gttcctgggg ttattgatga agatcaggtc aaggtgctac aggtggacca | |
| gtagtatcaa | ||
| 27181 | aggaaggaca gcattgggtg ggggtcacag gagagacctg atcctgctgt | |
| gtgcagtttg | ||
| 27241 | cagtggtctg gagccaagga cagactgtct ccccattgca tgagaatggg | |
| aaccagagtt | ||
| 27301 | gggaggcatg atcccctgct gtttccttgc cttttatacc ctcagctctt | |
| gtggtaataa | ||
| 27361 | accattcatc ctgtgatcat ccacttgaga cctgtgttca tattattctc | |
| ttagcctgag | ||
| 27421 | tatcccttcc ctattgagtc tcacttgtca ggctctacct gtccttcaga | |
| accccactca | ||
| 27481 | aatttcaact tattcagcaa caacaacaaa tatttattga gcaactacaa | |
| agtgccagga | ||
| 27541 | actgtgttag acactggaga tacaacagaa aatgaggaaa atgataagag | |
| ccctgtgcta | ||
| 27601 | tggagctcac agtctggtca gagaaatggg catcagaaag taaacaaaaa | |
| tatggccatt | ||
| 27661 | tactgtggct cgtacctgta atcccagcac tttgggaggc ctaggtaggt | |
| ggattgcatg | ||
| 27721 | agctcaggag ttcaagacca gcctgggcaa catggcaaaa ccccatctct | |
| acaaataata | ||
| 27781 | caaaaattag ctgggtgtgg tggcgtgcac ctgtagtccc agctacttgg | |
| gaggctgagg | ||
| 27841 | agggaggatc acttgagccc aggaggtaga agttgcagtg agccaagatt | |
| gcgctgttgc | ||
| 27901 | actccagtct gggtgacaga gcaagaccca cgtctcaaaa gaaaaaaaaa | |
| gtaaacaaaa | ||
| 27961 | ataggaaaaa aaaattggga tttgtgtgtg tatgtttgtg tgcgtgtgcg | |
| tgtatgtgtg | ||
| 28021 | catgtgtgtg ttttagtctc aggtaactgc tttcaatgaa acaactgggt | |
| aaaaagagaa | ||
| 28081 | ttatgggaaa tccacattaa atagagtgga cagggaagcc ttctctgaaa | |
| aggtgacatt | ||
| 28141 | gagctgagat gtaaggatgg taaggatcca gctatgcatg ggaaaagccg | |
| aaaggaaggg | ||
| 28201 | ggtttcaggt tgagggaaaa gcagtgcagg ccctgaggag ggaaagagct | |
| ttgtgatttg | ||
| 28261 | aggaatgaca ggcctgtgtg agtagaatgg cagagactag gagtcaggga | |
| tggtacaagg | ||
| 28321 | ttgaaaaagt agacaggagc cagctcctga aggatottga aggccatggt | |
| agggagtatg | ||
| 28381 | gaacacagtg ggaagctgag cacgtagaca aatgttctac ccttacacct | |
| tctattgttt | ||
| 28441 | cccacagatt gggggattct tgcctttgca ggggctcaca gtctggcaca | |
| atgatacata | ||
| 28501 | actacaacat atcacacctg gctcacaagg atgttagaat gatcctgggt | |
| gataatgagg | ||
| 28561 | gtgaagatac aaatcatgat acctggcacc taatggatgg atgttcagta | |
| aacgtcagct | ||
| 28621 | gaagtaaaat aaagtcgaat tccttttgtc ttcttccctc tgcagaattg | |
| ggaagcacgt | ||
| 28681 | ctactgctgg agaggtcaca tgctgccaag tgcccagaca ttgccaccca | |
| gctggctggg | ||
| 28741 | actaagaagg tgcagcagga gctaagcagg ccgggcatgc tggagatgtt | |
| gctccctggc | ||
| 28801 | cagcctgagg ctgtggcccg cctccgcgcc acctttgctg gcctctactc | |
| actggatgtg | ||
| 28861 | gtacgtgggc agcctgtttc tcctaccaca ggcctcctag gtggcagaga | |
| cctacagccc | ||
| 28921 | aatgtgttgg ggagggtgga gctggcattg tgacaagggg aaggtggagc | |
| tggcaaggtt | ||
| 28981 | ggtgatgctc tggagaaccc ctagaactct gagcagaagg gcagcctcat | |
| aatggaagga | ||
| 29041 | tgggggctgg aatccattgt aagctccctc agcaaaggta gagatgagga | |
| tggcaaccag | ||
| 29101 | agggaaggga ctaaggcagg tggcaagaat tgagaagtgt atcaggctgc | |
| ctgctgcaga | ||
| 29161 | gccctgagct gttgctaaag aaaggcctgt tctcattgca tcggctgctg | |
| cagggggttt | ||
| 29221 | gttgggagtg tcatccagat agtagcatcc tgcctgaagg aatttgtggc | |
| tgttctccct | ||
| 29281 | cctgctcttc ctctgatgct gctctgcata accagctgga cctaagcttc | |
| ttgcctcttt | ||
| 29341 | agcctttaaa cttttgataa ctgctttctg cctcctgcca gggtgaagaa | |
| ggggaccagg | ||
| 29401 | ccatcgccga ggcccttgct gcccctagcc ggtttgtgct aaagccccag | |
| agagagggtg | ||
| 29461 | gaggtaggtg gatctccctt tgcagggctc ctcaatgaga gggactagca | |
| ggctgtggcc | ||
| 29521 | agtgctcatt ggcacttact ctgggcacag tcccgggcat gggggaaact | |
| attggaactg | ||
| 29581 | acacaggcca catgttggac agtgtcccct aagaccctgt gaccaagtcc | |
| gggagcacag | ||
| 29641 | gggaatctga ttaaccagca ttgaagggtt tggacaagtt ttacctgagg | |
| tgcctgtggg | ||
| 29701 | tagattgttg ggaagtagag tagggtcata ttaggagact ggagagaata | |
| catgtctgtt | ||
| 29761 | ttcctttcta gtttgaaact ccttgaggtc aggggtcatg tctgcctctc | |
| cagaggagag | ||
| 29821 | gattttttta atctttgtct taagaggtgg gtaggaattt cccaggtgga | |
| aaggaggaag | ||
| 29881 | agtgttccat acaaaaggga caacctcaag ccaaggcacc gggccatgaa | |
| agtgtgagat | ||
| 29941 | gtttggaggt taatgagaaa ctggtgaggc tggaggggga gctgggaggg | |
| gacagggatt | ||
| 30001 | taggctggaa aaatggtttg catcctgatt ataaagggcc ttgaatatat | |
| actgagaaat | ||
| 30061 | tggattttat cttaagggca gtgggaagcc attagggagt tttaagccag | |
| gaagggacac | ||
| 30121 | attgatccag gactcaagtg gttagcagtg gtgggaactt gcaaaactta | |
| cagtttctgc | ||
| 30181 | attgtagaag atgtcctgga atgaggggag acactggaag cagaaagacc | |
| gtggaagagg | ||
| 30241 | ctgatacagt tgttcagaag agcaacgtag aggcctgggc tagggctatg | |
| actatggggc | ||
| 30301 | caactggaga gacatgtcct agatagtgag agggtagtgg aagggaggag | |
| ttaaatatga | ||
| 30361 | ctcaggggta ccttttgcct gattgggagt aggaaggtcc aggaggggca | |
| ggttcaggca | ||
| 30421 | gaagtaataa gttctgcttg gacaagttga gtttgtttgg gggccagtca | |
| tatgatgtct | ||
| 30481 | aagcagggag cctgcattaa atatttggaa gttaacaatt tttttttttt | |
| ttttgagacg | ||
| 30541 | gattctcgct ctgtcaccag gctggagtgc agtggcatga tcttggctca | |
| ctgcaaccac | ||
| 30601 | tgcctcccag gttcaagcga ttctcctgcc tcagcctect gagtagctgg | |
| gactacaggt | ||
| 30661 | gtgcgccacc acacccagct aatttttgta tttttagtag agatggggtt | |
| tcatcatatt | ||
| 30721 | ggccaggatg gtctcaatct cttgacctca tgatctgcct gcctcggcct | |
| cccaaagtgc | ||
| 30781 | tgggattaca ggcgtgagcc accatgcccg gccggaagtt aacaattttt | |
| agggtataga | ||
| 30841 | tggagactca ggaataggag agatctcctt gggaaaatgt acatggggga | |
| gagagcaagc | ||
| 30901 | gtggaggacc aattcccctg ggaccccagc atttaagaga aggagccagc | |
| aatggagctt | ||
| 30961 | gagaaggaac agctgtaggt aggaggagaa ccagggcaga acagtgtagt | |
| ggaagatgtg | ||
| 31021 | ttcactgcat gagtaagggc tctcctgtca aagtgagctt ccctcctgag | |
| aagccagata | ||
| 31081 | tgccctggct tcactgagcg ggtgccagga actgaggctg ctgacttgcc | |
| catgtggccc | ||
| 31141 | caaaagtgag ggcatgggat ggaggaggta ggcagagggt ccagggtgac | |
| tggccagttt | ||
| 31201 | cattgcaggt aacaacctat atggggagga aatggtacag gccctgaaac | |
| agctgaagga | ||
| 31261 | cagtgaggag agggcctcct acatcctcat ggagaagatc gaacctgagc | |
| cttttgagaa | ||
| 31321 | ttgcctgcta cggcctggca gccctgcccg agtggtccag tgcatttcag | |
| agctgggcat | ||
| 31381 | ctttggggtc tatgtcaggt gagccaatca ggagaagctc tttccactac | |
| ctgcttgcaa | ||
| 31441 | gagtgccagc caagtgagcc agcctagagg ggaacactgg aaagagtcag | |
| gaatcctggg | ||
| 31501 | cttcggtgcc agctctgcca atcactagct ttattacctg tttctttatc | |
| tattaaatga | ||
| 31561 | ggccaaggac ccaagacctg cccaccttac cagggtatca gatgaagccc | |
| tgatgagaag | ||
| 31621 | tcctttgcaa ccgtgaagga aactccaaat agcaccaaga ggactcagaa | |
| cacatggttt | ||
| 31681 | gacaacctag gactagaagg agactccaga gaggcataga gactctaaaa | |
| tcctagcact | ||
| 31741 | ttcttggtat agacagttac ccaggtactg ctcagctggg tccagggaag | |
| gtcctgggtt | ||
| 31801 | tggggctgag tccaggtgat gtgtgtcccc tgcctccatt tctataggca | |
| ggaaaagaca | ||
| 31861 | ctcgtgatga acaagcacgt ggggcatcta cttcgaacca aagccatcga | |
| gcatgcagat | ||
| 31921 | ggtggtgtgg cagcgggagt ggcagtcctg gacaacccat accctgtgtg | |
| agggcacaac | ||
| 31981 | caggccacgg gaccttctat cctctgtatt tgtcattcct ctcctagccc | |
| tcctgagggg | ||
| 32041 | tatcctccta aagacctcca aagtttttat ggaagggtaa atactggtac | |
| cttcccccag | ||
| 32101 | ctttccatct gaggaccaga aaagttgtgt ctcccttaga tgagatctag | |
| acgcccccaa | ||
| 32161 | atccttgaga tgtgggtata gctcagggta agctgctctg aggtaaaggt | |
| ccatgaaccc | ||
| 32221 | tgccccactc ctgtcagccc ctcatcagcc ttttcagcag gttccagtgc | |
| ctgacttggg | ||
| 32281 | ataggactga gtggtaggag gagggggagt ggaggggcat agcctttccc | |
| taattctgcc | ||
| 32341 | ttaaataaaa ctgcattgct gattcagtga tgattcctta cttcgtgcat | |
| agaggggagg | ||
| 32401 | cgggagctgt aatctacgtt agcccactta agatgtatta gagcagggaa | |
| gtgactggtc | ||
| 32461 | tgtaatcagg gtccccctag accagtctct acaggtggaa ccctgaagtt | |
| tcaatcctta | ||
| 32521 | gccacccact aatgctctta ctggatcaca gggaggaatg agagtccctg | |
| gcaggagccc | ||
| 32581 | aggagggaag gcaaccaaga tgggacatac ataacagttg tgaactggct | |
| tcagtcactt | ||
| 32641 | tcctgcttag ctcaggggct tgtcaaaggc cctgtcagtg aagcctcctt | |
| cgctctgccc | ||
| 32701 | aaaccaaaag ttctagaagg aagatattgg ggatagtcct aggaaatacc | |
| cctcccttcc | ||
| 32761 | catctgccac acaaatcaga gccactaatg aatatacagc ctcagggcac | |
| agatacctaa | ||
| 32821 | gaaaacaagt caccacttct tgagatcaca ggctttattc ctacaaccac | |
| agggcttgag | ||
| 32881 | cctgactggg gcaagaaaac agagtttcat ctgagaatgt ctcttatggg | |
| ctgggttctg | ||
| 32941 | ttcaggggag ggtgggaaca gaggacaagg aagacaagct cctctggccc | |
| taggaacaaa | ||
| 33001 | acacatttac tccttcaaag aagcagatga tctgaatacc ctctggagac | |
| tgaatctgcc | ||
| 33061 | catacagccc ctggagccaa tgggcagaca gtactggcat ctggcacaaa | |
| agggaattca | ||
| 33121 | gacccagaac agaagcagca aaatatttta aaaatagtaa attgttcctg | |
| gactcacaaa | ||
| 33181 | tcattgtttt taagggcaag tgcatgccca atataagtac tggggcttcc | |
| taagagagct | ||
| 33241 | gacataggat tacacagctg cctccctgct tcagtggagg ccctcacatc | |
| ccctttgaac | ||
| 33301 | acttaacttg ggtaggagag gtagcctttt cgtctctgtt ctgggttctg | |
| agagctctgc | ||
| 33361 | agtctggagg cacagcagac tgaggctgac ctgggccctg tcctttctgc | |
| ctggcagtca | ||
| 33421 | caggatgttg tctctacctg gagacaaagc tggtttccgg tcccagacag | |
| ctggtcaagg | ||
| 33481 | gagggtagtg tgggtcaaca ctggccctca gcactcctga gggggcaaag | |
| aggatgggca | ||
| 33541 | aagtttggag caggaggaat cctaggtaaa ggtcaggatc atgttcactg | |
| gatggtcagg | ||
| 33601 | cagcggtggc tgaagaggtg actgatgaca gatgggtcag ccacagtaga | |
| catgtccccg | ||
| 33661 | aggtcatggt cattctgagc aatcttccga agcactcgcc tcatgatttt | |
| ccctggggaa | ||
| 33721 | ccacagacct ctagttactt ggtgaaagca ctgacccacc ctagccctgc | |
| caaaggcttt | ||
| 33781 | catccacgca caccccacca ccaccaggcc tcagcccatc ccaatccatg | |
| gaggcctctg | ||
| 33841 | aacatacctg agcgggtttt aggcaagcca ggtgcattct ggatgtagtc | |
| tggtgtggca | ||
| 33901 | atggggccaa tcttttctct aactgtaacc aacaaatcat caagcatttc | |
| ttcagcaccc | ||
| 33961 | ttagccagac ttttcaaaaa tcaaagtaga gatggctttg ttccccacct | |
| gtttcctcct | ||
| 34021 | caagtccctg cccacagaga cagcctcagg ttcactgctt ctcttgctct | |
| caacacactt | ||
| 34081 | gtctctttac tctctcattt tatcttatgg aactcaggct gtagaatgag | |
| cctgctagag | ||
| 34141 | tttaaatgcc acctttctag cagtgtggcc ttgggcaagt gatttaactt | |
| ccatgagtct | ||
| 34201 | cagtttcatc atctttagca tgaaggtaac aataagatct gtttcatgga | |
| ggtgactcta | ||
| 34261 | gggattaagt ggggtaattc atttaaagca cttagcctag cggtggcaca | |
| aagtattcta | ||
| 34321 | gaaatgttgg ctattattat tatcctagtg ggagactagt ggagac | |
| // | ||
| Human GSS Protein Sequence | |
| (SEQ ID NO: 13) |
| 1 | matnwgsllq dkqqleelar qavdralaeg vllrtsqept ssevvsyapf | |
| tlfpslvpsa | ||
| 61 | lleqayavqm dfnllvdavs qnaafleqtl sstikqddft arlfdihkqv | |
| lkegiaqtvf | ||
| 121 | 1glnrsdymf qrsadgspal kqieintisa sfgglasrtp avhrhvlsvl | |
| sktkeagkil | ||
| 181 | snnpskglal giakawelyg spnalvllia qekernifdq raienellar | |
| nihvirrtfe | ||
| 241 | disekgsldq drrlfvdgqe iavvyfrdgy mprqyslqnw earlllersh | |
| aakcpdiatq | ||
| 301 | lagtkkvqqe lsrpgmleml lpgqpeavar lratfaglys ldvgeegdqa | |
| iaealaapsr | ||
| 361 | fvlkpqregg gnnlygeemv qalkqlkdse erasyilmek iepepfencl | |
| lrpgsparvv | ||
| 421 | qciselgifg vyvrqektlv mnkhvghllr tkaiehadgg vaagvavldn | |
| pypv | ||
| Mus musculus glutathione synthetase, mRNA (cDNA clone | |
| MGC:6012 IMAGE:3593913), complete cds | |
| (SEQ ID NO: 15) |
| 1 | cccacgcgtc cgcagctgga caacgagcga gttgggatgg ctaccagctg | |
| gggcagcatc | ||
| 61 | ttgcaggatg agaagcagct ggaagaactg gcaaagcagg ccatagaccg | |
| ggccctggcc | ||
| 121 | gagggcgtgt tgctgaggtc cgcacagcat cccagctcct ccgacgtggt | |
| gacatatgcc | ||
| 181 | ccattcacgc ttttcccctc gccagtaccc agtgctctgc tggagcaggc | |
| ctatgctgtg | ||
| 241 | cagatggact tcaacatact ggtggatgct gtcagccaga acccagcctt | |
| cctggagcaa | ||
| 301 | acactgtcta gcaccatcaa aaaggacgac tatactgccc gtctctttga | |
| tatctacaaa | ||
| 361 | caagtcctga aagagggcat tgcccagacc gtgttcctgg gcctgaatcg | |
| ctcagattac | ||
| 421 | atgttccagt gcggcgcaga cggctccaaa gccctgaaac agatcgagat | |
| caacactatc | ||
| 481 | tctgccagct ttgggggcct ggcctcccgg actccagctg tgcaccgaca | |
| cgttctcaat | ||
| 541 | gtcctgaata agaccaaaga agcttccaag atcctgtcca ataaccccag | |
| caagggactg | ||
| 601 | gccctgggga togccaaagc ctgggagctc tatggctcag ctaatgcggt | |
| ggtgctactg | ||
| 661 | attgctcaag agaaggaaag gaacatattt gaccagcgtg ccgtagagaa | |
| cgagctgcta | ||
| 721 | gacaggaaga tccatgtcat ccgtggaaga tttgaagatg tctctgaaag | |
| gggttctctg | ||
| 781 | gaccaaaacc gaaggctgtt tatggatgac caggaagttg ctgtggtgta | |
| cttccgagat | ||
| 841 | ggctacatgc ccagtcagta taattcacag aactgggaag cacgcctgat | |
| gctagagaga | ||
| 901 | tctcgtgctg ccaagtgtcc agacattgcc atacagctgg ctgggactaa | |
| gaaggtgcag | ||
| 961 | caggaactga gcagggtggg tctgctggaa gcactgctcc cgggccagcc | |
| cgaggctgtg | ||
| 1021 | gcccgcctcc gagccacctt tgctggcctc tattcactgg acatgggtga | |
| agaaggggac | ||
| 1081 | caggccattg ctgaggccct tgctgctcct agccactttg tgctgaagcc | |
| ccagagagag | ||
| 1141 | ggtggaggta acaacttata cggggaagaa atggtacaag ctctggagca | |
| gctgaaggac | ||
| 1201 | agtgaggaga gagcctccta catcctcatg gagaagattg aacctgagcc | |
| ttttaggaat | ||
| 1261 | tgcttgctac ggcctggcag ccctgcccaa gtggtccagt gtatctcgga | |
| gctgggtatt | ||
| 1321 | tttggagtct atgtcagaca gggaacaaca ctggtgatga acaagcatgt | |
| ggggcacctg | ||
| 1381 | cttcgaacca aagccgtgga gcatgcagac ggaggtgtgg cggcaggagt | |
| ggcagtcctg | ||
| 1441 | gacaacccct accctgtgtg aaggcgccat ctggacttca ctcaggaggc | |
| cttctatccc | ||
| 1501 | ctgtacttgg cactcctctt ctgaggggtt gcccctgtcc ctatcttagg | |
| ggagcttgtc | ||
| 1561 | tcttccatag acctccaaaa cttcagggaa gggaaaaccc agggtatctt | |
| ccctcagcag | ||
| 1621 | ccttccagcc gaggaccaga aaagctatga ttccattaga agacttctgg | |
| aggtccccag | ||
| 1681 | atctttggag tgtgggaatg gaagctgctt tgaggcaaag gctcataaac | |
| cctgcaagtc | ||
| 1741 | ttcatggtct tctcaccagc ctttccagca ggttctagtg ccttgacctg | |
| gggtaggacc | ||
| 1801 | gagtgaagga ggaagagggt aaaagggcac agacttcccc agctctgccc | |
| taaataaaat | ||
| 1861 | aacaatgctg attcaaaaaa aaaaaaaaa | |
| Glutathione synthetase (GSS) [Mus musculus] Protein | |
| Sequence | |
| (SEQ ID NO: 16) |
| 1 | matswgsilq dekqleelak qaidralaeg vllrsaqhps ssdvvtyapf | |
| tlfpspvpsa | ||
| 61 | lleqayavqm dfnilvdavs qnpafleqtl sstikkddyt arlfdiykqv | |
| lkegiaqtvf | ||
| 121 | lglnrsdymf qcgadgskal kqieintisa sfgglasrtp avhrhvlnvl | |
| nktkeaskil | ||
| 181 | snnpskglal giakawelyg sanavvllia qekernifdq ravenelldr | |
| kihvirgrfe | ||
| 241 | dvsergsldq nrrlfmddqe vavvyfrdgy mpsqynsqnw earlmlersr | |
| aakcpdiaiq | ||
| 301 | lagtkkvqqe lsrvglleal lpgqpeavar lratfaglys ldmgeegdqa | |
| iaealaapsh | ||
| 361 | fvlkpqregg gnnlygeemv qaleqlkdse erasyilmek iepepfrncl | |
| lrpgspaqvv | ||
| 421 | qciselgifg vyvrqgttlv mnkhvghllr tkavehadgg vaagvavldn | |
| pypv |
1.-39. (canceled)
40. A method for producing induced pluripotent stem cells generated from somatic cells of aged donors (A-iPSCs), the method comprising: supplementing somatic cells of aged donors prior to the initiation of reprogramming, during reprogramming, and/or after reprogramming of the somatic cells with an effective amount of GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof, thereby producing A-iPSCs with at least one of DNA damage response, apoptosis response, glucose metabolism, and genomic stability levels approximating those of induced pluripotent stem cells from young donors (Y-iPSCs), wherein the supplementation is carried out by adding GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof to a culture medium in which the somatic cells are maintained or by transfecting the somatic cells with a vector harboring a nucleic acid sequence encoding GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof.
41. The method of claim 40, further comprising reducing expression of A-iPSC glutathione peroxidase 2 (GPX2) or glutathione synthase (GSS) by
supplementing the A-iPSC with an effective amount of GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof,
thereby rescuing one or more of DNA damage response, apoptosis, and genomic stability in the A-iPSC.
42. The method of claim 40, wherein the supplementation:
is sufficient to restore GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof levels in the A-iPSCs to about 50% or more of the respective levels of embryonic stem cells (ESCs);
is sufficient to reduce oxidation capacity of glutathione in the A-iPSCs to about 80% to about 120% of that of ESCs;
is sufficient to restore genomic stability of the A-iPSCs to approximately that of Y-iPSCs;
is sufficient to restore apoptosis rate of the A-iPSCs to approximately that of Y-iPSCs;
is sufficient to restore DNA damage response of the A-iPSCs to approximately that of Y-iPSCs;
is sufficient to reduce oxidation capacity of glutathione in the A-iPSCs to approximately that of Y-iPSCs; and/or
is sufficient to reduce GPX2 levels in the A-iPSCs to approximately those of Y-iPSCs.
43. The method of claim 42, wherein the genomic stability is measured by incidence of aneuploid clones; the apoptosis rate is measured by DNA fragmentation assay in response to a DNA damaging agent; and the DNA damage response is measured by ATM or H2AX phosphorylation in response to a DNA damaging agent.
44. An A-iPSC produced by the method of claim 40, wherein the A-iPSC in the absence of GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof supplementation was first deficient in GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof expression, expressing either no GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof or a level of GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof substantially lower than that of a control iPSC derived from a healthy young donor (Y-iPSC) or embryo (ESC), and wherein the A-iPSC comprises a vector harboring nucleic acid for GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof.
45. An A-iPSC produced by the method of claim 40, wherein the A-iPSC is characterized by GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof expression levels, oncogenic potential, GPX2 expression levels, and/or GSS expression levels comparable to those of a control Y-iPSC or embryonic stem cell (ESC).
46. The method of claim 40, wherein the reprogramming of the somatic cells is carried out with Yamanaka factors OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, and MYC.
47. The method of claim 40, wherein the reprogramming of the somatic cells is carried out with pluripotency factors selected from the group of those of Yamanaka wherein one or more of OCT4, SOX2, KLF4 and MYC are replaced as follows: Nanog and Lin28 replace Klf4 and MYC; esrb replaces Klf4; SV40 LT (T) replaces Klf4, MYC lin28 and Nanog; BIX-01294 replaces SOX2, OCT4; VPA replaces Klf4 and MYC.
48. A method for reducing the oncogenic potential of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) or A-iPSCs, the cells having one or more of genomic instability, a defect in apoptosis, a defect in DNA damage response, and a defect in glucose metabolism, and exhibiting excessive glutathione-mediated H2O2 scavenging activity compared to embryonic stem cells (ESCs) or induced pluripotent stem cells from young donors (Y-iPSCs), the method comprising
supplementing iPSCs or A-iPSCs with pluripotency factor GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof as an adjunct to reprogramming to substantially restore the at least one of DNA damage response, apoptosis response, glucose metabolism and genomic stability to levels substantially the same as those of Y-iPSC or ESC, wherein the supplementation is carried out by adding GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof to a culture medium in which the iPSCs or A-iPSCs are maintained, or by transfecting the iPSCs or A-iPSCs with a vector harboring a nucleic acid sequence encoding GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof.
49. The method of claim 48, wherein the supplementation:
is sufficient to restore GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof levels in the iPSCs or A-iPSCs to about 50% or more of the respective levels of embryonic stem cells (ESCs);
is sufficient to reduce oxidation capacity of glutathione in the iPSCs or A-iPSCs to about 80% to about 120% of that of ESCs;
is sufficient to restore genomic stability of the iPSCs or A-iPSCs to approximately that of Y-iPSCs;
is sufficient to restore apoptosis rate of the iPSCs or A-iPSCs to approximately that of Y-iPSCs; and/or
is sufficient to restore DNA damage response of the iPSCs or A-iPSCs to approximately that of Y-iPSCs.
50. The method of claim 49, wherein the genomic stability is measured by incidence of aneuploid clones; the apoptosis rate is measured by DNA fragmentation assay in response to a DNA damaging agent; and the DNA damage response is measured by ATM or H2AX phosphorylation in response to a DNA damaging agent.
51. An iPSC or A-iPSC produced by the method of claim 44, wherein the iPSC or A-iPSC exhibits increased GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof expression relative to an untreated control iPSC or A-iPSC, and wherein the iPSC or A-iPSC comprises a vector harboring nucleic acid for GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof.
52. The iPSC or A-iPSC of claim 51, wherein the iPSC or A-iPSC further exhibits decreased GPX2 expression relative to an untreated control iPSC or A-iPSC.
53. An iPSC derived from a somatic cell of an aged donor (A-iPSC) where the A-iPSC has been engineered to express GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof by transfecting the iPSC with a vector harboring nucleic acid for GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof at levels comparable to an iPSC derived from a healthy young donor (Y-iPSC) or an embryonic stem cell (ESC), wherein the iPSC comprises the vector harboring nucleic acid for GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof, and wherein the iPSC originally displayed reduced GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof expression levels compared to a Y-iPSC or ESC control.
54. The iPSC of claim 53, wherein the iPSC in the absence of GLUT3, an exosome subunit, or a combination thereof supplementation was first deficient in GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof expression, expressing either no GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof or a level of GLUT3, exosome subunit, or a combination thereof substantially lower than that of a control iPSC derived from a healthy young donor (Y-iPSC) or embryo (ESC).