← Back to search

Evidence for premature aging due to oxidative stress in iPSCs from Cockayne syndrome.

Human molecular genetics · 2012 · Vol. 21 (17) · pp. 3825-34

Abstract

Cockayne syndrome (CS) is a human premature aging disorder associated with neurological and developmental abnormalities, caused by mutations mainly in the CS group B gene (ERCC6). At the molecular level, CS is characterized by a deficiency in the transcription-couple DNA repair pathway. To understand the role of this molecular pathway in a pluripotent cell and the impact of CSB mutation during human cellular development, we generated induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from CSB skin fibroblasts (CSB-iPSC). Here, we showed that the lack of functional CSB does not represent a barrier to genetic reprogramming. However, iPSCs derived from CSB patient's fibroblasts exhibited elevated cell death rate and higher reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Moreover, these cellular phenotypes were accompanied by an up-regulation of TXNIP and TP53 transcriptional expression. Our findings suggest that CSB modulates cell viability in pluripotent stem cells, regulating the expression of TP53 and TXNIP and ROS production.

Publication Types

["Journal Article", "Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural", "Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't"]

Keywords

[]

MeSH Terms

["Aging, Premature", "Cell Death", "Cell Hypoxia", "Cell Survival", "Clone Cells", "Cockayne Syndrome", "DNA Damage", "Gene Expression Regulation", "Humans", "Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells", "Models, Biological", "Oxidative Stress", "Reactive Oxygen Species"]

Funding

R01 NS075449 NINDS NIH HHS (United States)
1-DP2-OD006495-01 NIH HHS (United States)

Linked Datasets (1)

GSE36648 GSE via ncbi_elink
GEO

Expression data in induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) derived from a DNA repair deficient fibroblast

Homo sapiens

Analysis Pipelines (1)

Microarray geo_data_processing GSE36648