Melanie T Odenkirk, Haley C Jostes, Kevin R Francis, Erin S Baker
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Due to their self-renewal and differentiation capabilities, pluripotent stem cells hold immense potential for advancing our understanding of human disease and developing cell-based or pharmacological interventions. Realizing this potential, however, requires a thorough understanding of the basal cellular mechanisms which occur during differentiation. Lipids are critical molecules that define the morphological, biochemical, and functional role of cells. This, combined with emerging evidence linking lipids to neurodegeneration, cardiovascular health, and other diseases, makes lipids a critical class of analytes to assess normal and abnormal cellular processes. While previous work has examined the lipid composition of stem cells, uncertainties remain about which changes are conserved and which are unique across distinct cell types. In this study, we investigated lipid alterations of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) at critical stages of differentiation toward neural or mesodermal fates. Lipidomic analyses of distinct differentiation stages were completed using a platform coupling liquid chromatography, ion mobility spectrometry, and mass spectrometry (LC-IMS-MS) separations. Results illustrated a shared triacylglyceride and free fatty acid accumulation in early iPSCs that were utilized at different stages of differentiation. Unique fluctuations through differentiation were also observed for certain phospholipid classes, sphingomyelins, and ceramides. These insights into lipid fluctuations across iPSC differentiation enhance our fundamental understanding of lipid metabolism within pluripotent stem cells and during differentiation, while also paving the way for a more precise and effective application of pluripotent stem cells in human disease interventions.
Molecular omicsBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Biochemistry
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
3.40%
发文量
91
期刊介绍:
Molecular Omics publishes high-quality research from across the -omics sciences.
Topics include, but are not limited to:
-omics studies to gain mechanistic insight into biological processes – for example, determining the mode of action of a drug or the basis of a particular phenotype, such as drought tolerance
-omics studies for clinical applications with validation, such as finding biomarkers for diagnostics or potential new drug targets
-omics studies looking at the sub-cellular make-up of cells – for example, the subcellular localisation of certain proteins or post-translational modifications or new imaging techniques
-studies presenting new methods and tools to support omics studies, including new spectroscopic/chromatographic techniques, chip-based/array technologies and new classification/data analysis techniques. New methods should be proven and demonstrate an advance in the field.
Molecular Omics only accepts articles of high importance and interest that provide significant new insight into important chemical or biological problems. This could be fundamental research that significantly increases understanding or research that demonstrates clear functional benefits.
Papers reporting new results that could be routinely predicted, do not show a significant improvement over known research, or are of interest only to the specialist in the area are not suitable for publication in Molecular Omics.