Year 2 + NCE

Currently, CIRM is supporting the generation of hundreds of human iPSC and ESC lines for basic research, translational research, and disease treatments. In the past, the only way to prove that these cell lines are pluripotent- a necessity for peer-reviewed publications- was to transplant a million or so of the cells to the muscle, kidney, or other site in an immunodeficient mouse. A month or two later, if the cells are pluripotent, they will develop into a large tumor called a teratoma. The teratoma contains recognizable tissues like cartilage, glandular tissue, and nerve cells; if a sufficient diversity of cell types is identified in the tumor, the cell line is said to be pluripotent. The teratoma technique is difficult to learn, unreliable, and uses laboratory animals; one researcher called it the “most ridiculous assay on the planet”, and most stem cell researchers would prefer a different kind of assay for pluripotency of human stem cells. This Tools and Technologies award proposed to develop new methods for determining whether or not human stem cells are pluripotent by analyzing the activities of their genomes. We’ve known for several years that the gene expression profile- which of the 25,000 genes are active- for human pluripotent stem cells (hESCs and iPSCs) is very different from any other cell types. We published this information in 2008 in the scientific journal Nature. For the assay of pluripotency, which we call “PluriTest”, we collected gene expression profiles from more than 400 samples of normal pluripotent human cells and developed a new computer algorithm to use the gene expression information to identify the typical features of pluripotency. Pluripotent cells can have a range of different gene expression profiles, but there is overlap among them in which genes are turned on and which are turned off. PluriTest captures these variations, making it easy for researchers to confirm the pluripotency of their cells by comparing their cells’ gene expression profile to the typical profile generated by PluriTest. This approach is the same one taken by researchers developing diagnostic assays for cancers; “molecular diagnostic” tests are extremely valuable for determining the characteristics of a cancer and how it should be treated. The PluriTest molecular diagnostic test is extremely accurate and sensitive in determining whether or not a cell line is pluripotent. Once the gene expression profile of a cell line is obtained, at a cost of about $150 to $300, the data are uploaded to the PluriTest website, and ten minutes later, the user gets both a “pluripotency score” and a “novelty score” for his or her cell line. If the pluripotency score is high, the cells are definitively pluripotent; if a teratoma assay were performed on the cells, it would be positive every time. However, a cell line may have both a high pluripotency score and a high novelty score; this is the case for aneuploid cell lines (cells with duplicate or missing chromosomes) and embryonic stem cell-like tumors. PluriTest can identify cells that are not fully reprogrammed in iPSC techniques (“partially reprogrammed cells”) and can be used to track the progress of differentiation protocols. When cells differentiate, they move slowing from the “pluripotent, not novel space” to the “non-pluripotent, highly novel space”. We plan to use this approach to develop molecular diagnostic tests for differentiation- we are working on a “CardioTest”, a “NeuroTest” and a “HepatoTest”, using the same approach of collecting huge numbers of samples so that we can accurately identify the common variations among specific cell types. PluriTest has caught on in the stem cell research community: in the 3 months since the paper was published (in Nature Methods), more than 1500 gene expression profiles have been uploaded to our website and analyzed by PluriTest.