ID | 112430 |
Author |
Ozone, Chikafumi
RIKEN|Nagoya University
Suga, Hidetaka
Nagoya University
Eiraku, Mototsugu
RIKEN
Kadoshima, Taisuke
RIKEN
Yonemura, Shigenobu
RIKEN|Japan Science and Technology Agency
Tokushima University Educator and Researcher Directory
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Takata, Nozomu
RIKEN
Oiso, Yutaka
Nagoya University
Tsuji, Takashi
RIKEN
Sasai, Yoshiki
RIKEN
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Content Type |
Journal Article
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Description | Anterior pituitary is critical for endocrine systems. Its hormonal responses to positive and negative regulators are indispensable for homeostasis. For this reason, generating human anterior pituitary tissue that retains regulatory hormonal control in vitro is an important step for the development of cell transplantation therapy for pituitary diseases. Here we achieve this by recapitulating mouse pituitary development using human embryonic stem cells. We find that anterior pituitary self-forms in vitro following the co-induction of hypothalamic and oral ectoderm. The juxtaposition of these tissues facilitated the formation of pituitary placode, which subsequently differentiated into pituitary hormone-producing cells. They responded normally to both releasing and feedback signals. In addition, after transplantation into hypopituitary mice, the in vitro-generated corticotrophs rescued physical activity levels and survival of the hosts. Thus, we report a useful methodology for the production of regulator-responsive human pituitary tissue that may benefit future studies in regenerative medicine.
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Journal Title |
Nature Communications
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ISSN | 20411723
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NCID | AA12645905
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Publisher | Springer Nature
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Volume | 7
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Start Page | 10351
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Published Date | 2016-01-14
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Remark | Supplementary Information : ncomms_7_10351_s1.pdf
Supplementary movies : ncomms_7_10351_s2.mov, ncomms_7_10351_s3.mov |
Rights | This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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DOI (Published Version) | |
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FullText File |
ncomms_7_10351_s2.mov
11.1 MB
ncomms_7_10351_s3.mov
8.73 MB
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language |
eng
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TextVersion |
Publisher
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departments |
Medical Sciences
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