Abstract
Stem cells are characterized by their capability to self-renew and terminally differentiate into multiple cell types. Somatic or adult stem cells have a finite self-renewal capacity and are lineage-restricted. The use of adult stem cells for therapeutic purposes has been a topic of recent interest given the ethical considerations associated with embryonic stem (ES) cells. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are adult stem cells that can differentiate into osteogenic, adipogenic, chondrogenic, or myogenic lineages. Owing to their ease of isolation and unique characteristics, MSCs have been widely regarded as potential candidates for tissue engineering and repair. While various signaling molecules important to MSC differentiation have been identified, our complete understanding of this process is lacking. Recent investigations focused on the role of epigenetic regulation in lineage-specific differentiation of MSCs have shown that unique patterns of DNA methylation and histone modifications play an important role in the induction of MSC differentiation toward specific lineages. Nevertheless, MSC epigenetic profiles reflect a more restricted differentiation potential as compared to ES cells. Here we review the effect of epigenetic modifications on MSC multipotency and differentiation, with a focus on osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation. We also highlight clinical applications of MSC epigenetics and nuclear reprogramming.
1. Introduction
Two characteristics distinguish stem cells from other cell types: the ability to self-renew and to differentiate into multiple lineages. Embryonic stem (ES) cells are pluripotent cells derived from the inner cell mass of the blastocyst during early embryogenesis [1, 2]. ES cells are unique in their ability to form all cell types in the human body and self-renew indefinitely and thus have been extensively investigated in the arena of regenerative medicine since their isolation 30 years ago [1, 2]. However, ethical considerations, technical challenges, and governmental regulations have hindered their use [3]. As a result, the study of somatic or adult stem cells, which does not generate the same ethical concerns, has increased dramatically.
Unlike ES cells, adult stem cells are characterized by a restricted differentiation potential and finite self-renewal. Adult stem cells have been localized to many tissues including mesenchymal [4], neural [5], gastrointestinal [6], hepatic [7], gonadal [8, 9], and hematopoietic [10]. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are multipotent adult stem cells that differentiate into osteoblastic, chondrogenic, myogenic, and adipogenic lineages [11–13]. MSCs are found in large numbers in the adult human, primarily in bone marrow and adipose tissue and have been widely investigated for their potential role in treating human disease. While much knowledge has been garnered regarding the characteristics and clinical applications of MSCs [14], our understanding of their behavior is still limited. Given the therapeutic potential of MSCs for a variety of conditions including bone and cartilage defects, ischemic heart disease, and cerebral ischemia, it is important that we continue to elucidate the precise mechanisms that direct MSC fate.
Though stem cell behavior is largely mediated by DNA sequence, there are multiple levels of regulation apart from this genetic blueprint including posttranscriptional, translational, posttranslational, and epigenetic regulatory processes. Epigenetic regulation is based upon heritable changes in the pattern of gene expression that occur without a change in the primary nucleotide sequence [15]. These changes remain as cells divide mitotically and meiotically and often last for multiple generations. A fundamental example of epigenetic regulation occurs as cells terminally differentiate. For example, a terminally differentiated epithelial cell shares the same DNA sequence as its ES cell precursor. However, these two cell types differ significantly in behavior and function, and some regulatory process or processes must underlie this change in phenotype. In this case, epigenetic mechanisms are largely responsible for the variable activation and repression of specific genes at specific time points during the lifespan of the cell, allowing for the terminally differentiated phenotype. Major mammalian epigenetic mechanisms include DNA methylation and histone modifications, both of which have been tightly linked to gene regulation and other cellular processes including division and survival [16, 17].
In recent years, epigenetic regulation has also emerged as an important modulator of stem cell differentiation [18]. Moreover, the disruption of epigenetic regulation has been associated with human disease [19]. An example of this occurs in patients with Angelman’s syndrome or Prader-Willi syndrome, where epigenetic deregulation of imprinted genes at the 15q11–13 loci on the maternal or paternal allele, respectively, produces the associated phenotype [20, 21]. Epigenetic deregulation has also been implicated in many malignancies, including MSC-derived tumors [22–28]. Given its association with various disease states, epigenetic regulation has become an important focus of potential therapy. The mechanism of action of many anticancer drugs involves the alteration of DNA methylation patterns or the modification of histone proteins [29]. The therapeutic potential of epigenetic manipulation is not limited to drug therapy, however. It is also under investigation as a therapeutic modality as it relates to the process of cellular reprogramming.
Investigation of the epigenetic regulation of cell fate determination has largely focused on ES cells. Recent studies have also elucidated epigenetic states responsible for lineage-specific differentiation of adult stem cells. While DNA methylation patterns are crucial for ES cell differentiation, histone modifications and other chromatin-based mechanisms may serve a larger role in MSC differentiation capacity [30]. Interestingly, DNA methylation profiles of MSCs suggest that, in contrast to ES cells, MSCs have a limited differentiation potential [31]. Presently, it is uncertain whether unraveling the epigenetic landscape of MSCs will lead to novel strategies to enhance their differentiation capacity. It is plausible that the heritability of gene expression in reprogrammed cells can be enhanced by the controlled manipulation of epigenetic alterations. In this paper, we summarize our current understanding of the epigenetic profile of MSCs, specifically highlighting signatures related to multipotency and differentiation into osteogenic and adipogenic lineages. We also focus on the reprogramming of MSCs and whether alterations of the MSC epigenome can enhance their therapeutic potential.
2. Major Epigenetic Mechanisms
Epigenetic mechanisms play a central role in the promotion of appropriate transcriptional pathways during both embryonic development and adult tissue maintenance. Regulation of gene expression at the epigenetic level occurs via modifications of chromatin architecture that alter the accessibility of genes to transcription factors and other modulators. Specifically, these modifications regulate gene expression by facilitating the opening of DNA (euchromatin) to permit transcription or the condensing of DNA (heterochromatin) to repress transcription. Loss of proper chromatin modifications during development and differentiation has been associated with embryonic lethality [32–34]. We will briefly summarize the major mechanisms underlying epigenetic regulation as they have been reviewed extensively elsewhere [35, 36].
2.1. DNA Methylation
Mammalian DNA methylation is unevenly dispersed over much of the genome in a pattern described as global methylation [36]. DNA methylation consists of the addition of a methyl group to position 5 of cytosine (m5C) at cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) dinucleotides and occurs symmetrically on both DNA strands. Regions dense in CpG dinucleotides, known as CpG islands, are found near promoters of many human genes [37]. In general, promoter DNA methylation is associated with repression of the corresponding gene [38, 39]. However, this association is not always straightforward. Genes associated with methylation-free CpG islands often remain silent while genes that correspond to methylated promoters occasionally undergo transcription. This relationship may depend on the content of promoter CpG dinucleotides, where methylation of high content CpG promoters usually represses transcription, while methylation of low content CpG promoters can either activate or repress transcription [40]. Occasionally, DNA methylation may require additional epigenetic events to occur concomitantly for transcription to be affected [41].
DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) catalyze the methylation of CpGs. Two DNMTs, DNMT3a and DNMT3b, are responsible for de novo DNA methylation during embryonic development and cell differentiation [42]. During cell division, a third DNMT, DNMT1, recognizes hemimethylated DNA and ensures methylation profile fidelity by catalyzing the methylation of its corresponding daughter strand [43]. DNA methylation is crucial for many processes including long-term gene silencing [41, 44], proper development [45–48], X chromosome inactivation [49], and genomic imprinting [50–53].
Though DNA methylation occurs in all cells, the unique pattern of methylation varies based on cell type [54]. Bibikova et al. [55] investigated the DNA methylation status of over 1500 CpG sites in 14 human ES cell lines and compared it to the methylation status of 38 non-ES cells lines. Using bead array and cluster analyses and methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (PCR), the authors reported that, based on methylation profiles, human ES cells contain a unique epigenetic signature [55]. This finding may have implications on ES cell pluripotency and developmental potential. We have recently begun to uncover methylation patterns unique to MSCs as well (see below) [56, 57].
Currently, the “gold-standard” method to analyze DNA methylation patterns is bisulfite genomic sequencing [58]. This methodology consists of the bisulfite-mediated chemical conversion of unmethylated cytosine in CpG dinucleotides to uracil whereas methylated cytosines remain protected from chemical conversion [59]. PCR then substitutes uracils with thymidines and subsequent sequencing illustrates the methylation state of the original sequence. A quantitative assessment of the extent of methylation can be evaluated by bacterial cloning of the PCR products.
2.2. Histone Modifications
Chromatin, which is comprised of DNA and proteins, refers to the state in which DNA and these proteins are packaged within eukaryotic cell nuclei. As described above, chromatin can be packaged loosely as euchromatin, which facilitates gene transcription, or tightly as heterochromatin, which facilitates gene repression. The nucleosome is the fundamental unit of chromatin and is composed of 2 subunits of each of the four core histone proteins (H2A, H2B, H3, H4) around which 147 base pairs of DNA are wrapped. Histones are small basic proteins that are predominantly globular in nature other than their unstructured N-terminal “tails”. Subsequent to histone protein translation, N-terminal tails can be covalently modified in numerous ways to regulate gene expression [35]. The most thoroughly investigated histone modifications are acetylation and methylation.
The histone code hypothesis suggests that “distinct modifications, on one or more tails, act sequentially or in combination to form a “histone code” that is read by other proteins to bring about distinct downstream events” [65–67]. Histone codes can be transient or stable; if stable, these codes constitute epigenetic regulation as they imply heritability [67, 68]. Epigenetic regulation mediated by histone modification is dynamic in nature and inherently complex. For example, the methylation of histone lysine residues, catalyzed by histone methyltransferases (HMTs), can correlate with either transcriptional activation and repression [69]. Trimethylation of lysine 4 of histone H3 (H3K4me3) marks euchromatin and gene activation. In contrast, H3K27me3 and H3K9me3 signal heterochromatin and gene repression. The H3K27me3 mark is thought to be critical to the “stemness” of stem cells [70, 71], as H3K27 demethylation triggers cellular differentiation [72–74]. Further adding to histone modification complexity, the ability of HMTs to methylate H3K9 in order to silence transcription often depends on the methylation status of adjacent lysine residues on H3 [18, 75]. HMTs and histone demethylases (HDMs) work in tandem to determine the level of histone lysine methylation found within a cell [76].
Histone acetylation is also a widely studied histone modification. The opposing activities of histone acetyltransferases (HATs) and histone acetyl-deacetylases (HDACs) are responsible for the level of cellular histone acetylation [76]. In general, acetylation of histone lysine residues correlates with transcriptional activation whereas histone lysine deacetylation silences gene transcription. Acetylation of H3K9 (H3K9ac) and acetylation of H4K16 (H4K16ac) are common marks found on euchromatin near genes that are actively being transcribed [56]. Although histone modifications mainly act by altering chromatin architecture, specific modifications (e.g., H3K4me3 and H3K9ac) also mediate gene regulation by recruiting and tethering transcriptional modulators to chromatin [77–81].
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays, which were originally designed to study RNA polymerase II behavior [82–85], have allowed researchers to map the positioning of histone modifications within the genome or onto individual promoters [86]. A specific histone modification can be immunoprecipitated so that DNA sequences associated with it can be identified by PCR [86]. Researchers can also indentify histone proteins that are associated with a particular region of the genome using ChIP.
Various lines of evidence suggest that chromatin within undifferentiated ES cells is generally less compact, and thus more “transcription-permissive”, compared with differentiated cells [87]. For example, pericentric heterochromatin progressively clusters as human and mouse ES cells differentiate [88, 89]. In addition, using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP), a technique that measures the exchange rate of chromatin-associated proteins [90], Meshorer and colleagues [91] demonstrated that ES cells contain hyperdynamic chromatin proteins that loosely bind to chromatin. As ES cells begin to differentiate, these hyperdynamic proteins become immobilized on chromatin, which signal lineage commitment of these cells [91]. Indeed, the loose association of chromatin and its structural proteins may be an important marker of cellular pluripotency. Less well defined is the association of specific histone modifications to MSC cell fate. Collas et al. [56] have described the presence of bivalent histone marks (H3K4me3 and H3K27me3) on lineage-specific promoters in undifferentiated MSCs derived from adipose tissue. This finding, in addition to evidence that these same lineage-specific promoters are hypomethylated (see below), may suggest that adipogenic promoters in MSCs are preprogrammed for adipogenic stimulation [56].
Researchers investigating differences in histone modification patterns between epidermal stem cells and terminally differentiated cells of the epidermal lineage found that Myc-induced differentiation of adult stem cells correlates with numerous chromatin modifications [92]. Specifically, quiescent epidermal stem cells were found to contain high levels of H3K9me3 and H4K20me3 and low levels of H4 acetylation and H4K20me1 (a modification generally associated with gene activation) [92]. As Myc-treated stem cells underwent differentiation, there was a corresponding increase in H4 acetylation as well as the silencing H3K9me2 and H4K20me2 marks [92]. These data suggest that a single transcription factor has the ability to induce widespread change in chromatin state, though it remains unclear how Myc-induced differentiation of epidermal stem cells induces an increase in chromatin modifications associated with both gene activation and gene silencing. More importantly, alterations in chromatin architecture, largely mediated by epigenetic phenomena, probably underlie numerous mechanisms that facilitate cell differentiation. By elucidating avenues to manipulate such phenomena, we can potentially improve our ability to attenuate pathologies associated with tissue degeneration by directing cell fate.
3. Mesenchymal Stem Cells: Epigenetic Characteristics and Potency
Though MSCs have attracted significant attention for their potential to regenerate tissue, we have yet to identify a cell marker specific to MSCs. In order facilitate a more consistent approach to the study of MSC biology, the International Society of Cryotherapy has proposed that human MSCs meet the following criteria: (1) plastic adherence of cultured cells in standard culture conditions; (2) expression of CD105, CD73, and CD90 and lack of expression of CD34, CD45, CD14 or CD11b, CD79α or CD19, and HLA-DR surface molecules; (3) the capacity to differentiate into osteoblasts, adipocytes, and chondroblasts in vitro [93]. Populations of multipotent cells derived from adipose tissue, bone marrow, and skeletal muscle have all been found to meet these defined criteria in vitro [94–98]. Not surprisingly, these differing populations of MSCs are closely related in various capacities. For example, MSCs derived from adipose tissue (adipocyte-derived stem cells; ASCs), as well as MSCs derived from bone marrow (bone marrow MSCs; BMMSCs), express similar gene expression profiles [99–101], surface markers [94, 98], and share a similar differentiation potential [98, 102]. Sorensen et al. [103] reported that DNA methylation profiles between MSCs isolated from human adipose tissue, bone marrow, and muscle are also similar. In contrast, MSC promoter methylation profiles are distinct from other cell types, including human ES cells, multipotent ES cell-derived mesenchymal cells, and hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) [103, 104].
As phenotypic, transcriptomic, functional, and now, epigenetic evidence suggests that MSCs isolated from various tissues are related, it is plausible that MSCs originate from a common origin [112]. To this end, pericytes, which have been isolated within mesodermal tissues including fat, bone, and muscle, have been found to contain several characteristic features to MSCs [113–115]. As such, authors have hypothesized that MSC populations may be traced to a pericytic origin [112, 113].
3.1. Epigenetic Profile of MSCs in Culture
In the last two decades, MSCs have been isolated from many animal [116–122] and human tissues [123–131]. Excitement regarding their use for tissue engineering purposes in part stems from the finding that MSCs navigate toward injured tissue [132] and are considered MHC II negative cells, lacking the co-stimulatory molecules CD40, CD80, and CD86 [133]. As a result, they can be allogeneically transplanted without the need for immunosuppression of the recipient. Indeed, the therapeutic potential of MSC-based treatment for a variety of conditions has already been demonstrated in humans [60–64, 134–140]. Specifically, investigators have evaluated their efficacy in the treatment of critical size bone defects, cartilage degeneration, metabolic bone disease, ischemic heart disease, and cerebral ischemia (Table 1). Nevertheless, obstacles have limited the widespread use of MSCs. In general, it has proven difficult to harvest large quantities of MSCs from many tissues, especially that of bone marrow [4]. As a result, MSCs must be expanded ex vivo after their isolation to be used for therapeutic purposes. A potential concern regarding this strategy, however, stems from the finding that MSCs display variable proliferative and differentiation capacities in culture [141]. In contrast to early-passage MSCs, late-passage MSCs have a reduced differentiation potential [142]. Moreover, MSCs may undergo malignant transformation in vitro, though this finding is controversial [143–145]. Studies addressing such concerns have documented that late-passage MSCs display normal karyotypes [146–148] and genomic stability [149], yet their behavior change in culture implies alterations of some aspect of their regulation.
Epigenetic profiles of nonmesenchymal-derived cells occasionally display instability in culture [157–159]. To evaluate if similar phenomena occur in MSCs, Dahl and colleagues [57] examined CpG methylation patterns in human BMMSC cultures for 170 cell cycle- and cancer-related promoters. Nearly 90% of these genes maintained their methylation profile between early and late passage, indicating that MSC cultures derived from bone marrow have a stable CpG methylation status in vitro. Furthermore, the methylation profile of ASCs remains consistent up to at least 4 passages in vitro, which corresponds to 20 population doublings from a single cell [160]. Further studies are required to assess the methylation status of ASCs after longer periods in culture (i.e., after 15 passages), but it appears unlikely that alterations of promoter DNA methylation are responsible for the reduced differentiation capacity seen in late-passage MSCs [150].
In contrast, histone modification patterns have been implicated in variable cell behavior in culture. Under normal conditions, adipogenic and myogenic promoter regions in ASCs are associated with a bivalent combination of histone modifications. Specifically, promoter regions are enriched with H3K4me3 and H3K27me3, while lacking H3K9me3 and H3K9ac [161, 162]. As early passage ASCs differentiate, there is a corresponding rise in H3K9 acetylation and H3K27 demethylation, thereby relieving H3K4me3/H3K27me3 bivalency. In contrast, late-passage MSCs are associated with H3K27me3 maintenance and minimal H3K9 acetylation [161]. There is also global upregulation of the Polycomb repressor complex protein ExH2 (an enzyme that catalyzes the methylation of H3K27) and a global increase of H3K9 deacetylation in long-term cultured MSCs [161]. From this data, it appears that histone modification-mediated epigenetic alterations in late-passage MSCs may be responsible for a deceased ability to differentiate as cultured MSCs age. However, further studies are needed to more fully characterize this epigenetic variability on a global scale.
3.2. Are MSCs Pluripotent from an Epigenetic Standpoint?
Pluripotent cells have the ability to become cell types of all lineages in the body whereas multipotent cells differentiate into various cell types from one lineage. MSCs are often referred to as multipotent given their proclivity to form cell types within the mesodermal lineage. Recently, Jaenisch and Young [163] noted that it is unclear whether a truly pluripotent stem cell can be isolated from the adult animal. However, analyses have demonstrated that certain populations of MSCs have the ability to differentiate into cell types from all 3 germ layers [164–169]. Jiang et al. [170] localized a cell within human BMMSC cultures that, upon stimulation, could differentiate into mesenchymal, neuroectodermal, endodermal [171], and endothelial tissues [172, 173]. After injection into early blastocysts, the authors reported that this population of MSCs contributed to most or all adult cell types, thereby indicating pluripotency [170]. D’Ippolito and colleagues [174] also isolated a unique subpopulation of human bone marrow stromal cells, termed marrow-isolated adult multilineage inducible (MIAMI) cells, which could differentiate into mature cells of all 3 germ layers. Nevertheless, MSCs have not yet met more stringent criteria for pluripotency, including germline contribution or tetraploid complementation [163].
Presently, it is generally accepted that MSCs are confined to the mesodermal lineage, but under certain conditions can differentiate into most or all tissues. This notion of lineage-restriction has been supported by epigenetic studies from the laboratory of Collas et al. [103, 112, 160, 175]. MSC lineage-specific promoters are largely hypomethylated in MSCs. In contrast, the endothelial promoter for CD31 is fully methylated in ASCs and BMMSCs, which correlates with a lack of CD31 expression in MSCs. Furthermore, using methylated DNA immunoprecipitation (MeDIP), it was found that hypermethylated genes in MSCs are often associated with regulation of development, transcription, signaling, and metabolic functions. Interestingly, many promoters of genes expressed in nonmesodermal derived cells remain hypomethylated in MSCs, even though MSCs generally do not differentiate into cells that express these genes. Thus, the Collas et al. laboratory has proposed that strong methylation of lineage specification and developmental promoters may restrict MSC differentiation capacity; however, hypomethylation of lineage-specification promoters is of little predictive value in differentiation capacity [112]. This is consistent with a lineage-priming molecular model of MSC differentiation capacity, which posits that MSCs express a subset of genes corresponding to differentiation pathways to which they can commit [176]. Furthermore, in ES cells, methylation occurs on pluripotency-associated loci as cells lose pluripotency (i.e., during differentiation) [159, 177]. Taken together, epigenetic data support the notion that MSCs are better classified as multipotent than pluripotent.
4. Epigenetic Control of MSC Cell Fate
Questions of how the epigenetic state of a cell influences fate determination have predominately focused on ES cells. In ES cells, for example, lineage-specific promoters that are associated with terminal differentiation are often DNA methylated [178]. This presumably impedes improper or premature differentiation toward a specific lineage, thereby preserving pluripotency. Recently, studies have found that some of these same promoter regions are unmethylated in MSCs [112], indicating that the epigenetic state of ES cells changes as they differentiate into MSCs. However, whether these epigenetic alterations are the cause or result of ES cell fate decisions remains unclear. Furthermore, the mechanisms underlying MSC differentiation toward a particular cell type within the mesodermal lineage have yet to be fully elucidated. Here, we review epigenetic regulation associated with osteogenic differentiation (Table 2) and adipogenic differentiation (Table 3) of MSCs, as these pathways have been the most widely investigated.
4.1. Osteogenic Differentiation
Osteogenic differentiation of MSCs is a complex process that is tightly controlled by numerous signaling pathways and transcription factors [11]. Runt-related transcription factor 2 (Runx2) is considered a master regulator of osteogenic differentiation and is expressed at many stages of bone development and maturation [179–181]. Runx2 transcriptional activity is itself subject to robust regulation, as demonstrated by its association with numerous coactivators and corepressors [181–184]. It is becoming increasingly clear that epigenetic regulation is also crucial to Runx2 activity and thus osteogenic differentiation. Epigenetic regulation generally results in structural changes in chromatin that alter the binding ability of Runx2 and other transcription factors to osteogenic promoter regions. The most thoroughly studied promoter of the osteogenic lineage is the promoter for osteocalcin (OC), which contains binding sites for many factors crucial to the activation of osteoblast-specific genes including Runx2 [105, 109, 185–188]. Acetylation of histones H3 and H4, as well as a decreased level of DNA methylation, increases accessibility of the OC promoter to osteo-inductive transcription factors [105, 109, 185]. Furthermore, HOXA10-mediated chromatin hyperacetylation and H3K4 Trimethylation induce chromatin structural changes that facilitate Runx2-mediated activation of genes that encode OC and other osteoblastic phenotypic markers [110]. In addition, CreMM/CHD9, a recently characterized member of the CHD chromatin remodeler family [189–191], has been detected in MSCs near newly formed adult bone [192]. CReMM/CHD9 binds to promoters for both Runx2 and OC during osteogenic gene expression. Though CReMM/CHD9 is thought to alter chromatin architecture via DNA-dependent ATPase activity, the exact epigenetic mechanism linking CReMM/CHD9 to osteogenic differentiation is unknown [192].
Skeletal loading and loading-induced dynamic fluid flow are also key regulators of osteogenic differentiation [193–199]. A recent investigation addressed whether these regulators act via epigenetic modifications [106]. Mechanically induced differentiation is associated with a decreased level of DNA methylation at the promoter for osteopontin (OPN; an important factor for bone remodeling) as well as increased OPN expression and osteogenic differentiation. Similarly, biologically-induced osteogenic differentiation of MSCs (using growth media supplemented with β-glycerolphosphate, ascorbic acid, and dexamethasone) correlates with a decrease in OPN promoter methylation as well as increased OPN expression [106].
It is not surprising that modifications of epigenetic regulation at genes crucial to osteogenic differentiation occur as MSCs become osteoblasts. However, recent evidence suggests that alterations of epigenetic regulation may occur on a more global scale as MSCs differentiate toward bone. For example, methylation at the promoter region for the mesodermal transcription factor Brachyury, which silences brachyury expression, is associated with osteo-induction of MSCs [107]. In addition, Hsiao and colleagues [108] reported that thyroid hormone receptor interactor-10 (Trip10), an adaptor protein involved in diverse cellular functions, is epigenetically modified during human BMMSC differentiation. The authors elected to investigate whether variation of Trip10 epigenetic regulation could alter MSC differentiation patterns because of its association with the H3K27me3 mark. Interestingly, after transfection of MSCs with in vitro-methylated Trip10 promoter DNA, MSCs underwent progressive cytosine methylation of the endogenous Trip10 promoter, which led to reduced Trip10 expression and accelerated MSC differentiation toward osteogenic and neuronal lineages [108]. In addition to demonstrating that Trip10 expression levels are associated with osteogenic differentiation, this study illustrated how manipulation of the MSC epigenome in a manner distinct from classic nuclear reprogramming (see below) could be utilized as a therapeutic modality. However, further studies regarding the long-term effects of this type of epigenetic manipulation are necessary before it can be widely used in humans.
Support for the role of epigenetic regulation in MSC osteogenic differentiation has also come from reports of abnormal bony development. Oculo-facial-cardio-dental (OFCD) syndrome is characterized by teeth with excessively long roots and craniofacial, eye, and cardiac abnormalities [200–204]. Genetic studies have associated this X-linked dominant syndrome to mutations of the BCL-6 corepressor (BCOR) protein [204]. Under normal conditions, the repressive actions of BCOR are mediated by chromatin modifications via interactions with HDACs, HDMs, and H2A ubiquitin ligase [205–207]. MSCs have been isolated from dental and craniofacial tissues [208–210], which led Fan et al. [111] to investigate whether BCOR mutations enhance the osteo/dentinogenic potential of MSCs. Using gain- and loss-of-function assays, the authors demonstrated that the AP-2α gene, a repressive target of BCOR, is largely responsible for the osteo/dentinogenic capacity of MSCs. The methylation of H3K4 and H3K36 at the AP-2α promoter is associated with gene activation [211, 212]. BCOR normally catalyzes the demethylation of H3K4me3 and H3K36me2 [213, 214], but fails to do so when mutated [111]. The resultant methylation impedes the binding of the BCL-6 repressor protein to the AP-2α promoter, leading to uncontrolled AP-2α expression. As such, a BCOR mutation that impairs its demethylating activity permits uncontrolled osteo/dentinogenic differentiation of MSCs in the OFCD syndrome [111].
4.2. Adipogenic Differentiation
The development of adipocytes during adipogenic differentiation of MSCs occurs in two phases [131, 215]. The first phase, determination, is the commitment of MSCs to the adipogenic lineage, which entails losing the ability to differentiate into another lineage. The second stage, differentiation, occurs as MSCs begin to express the phenotypic characteristics of a mature adipocyte. Similar to osteogenic differentiation, adipogenesis is a highly coordinated process that involves numerous transcription factors performing specific functions at various time points [216–218]. Just as Runx2 serves as a master regulator of osteogenic differentiation, the nuclear hormone receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPAR-γ) has a significant role in adipogenic differentiation [219, 220]. In addition, many coregulators and transcription factors central to adipogenesis have chromatin-modifying activities [221–223], supporting the role of epigenetic regulation during the differentiation of MSCs to adipocytes.
Noer et al. [160] examined the DNA methylation profile of both adipogenic and nonadipogenic genes in human ASCs using bisulfite genomic sequencing. The promoters for four adipogenic genes—PPARγ2, leptin (lep), fatty acid-binding protein 4 (fabp4), and lipoprotein lipase (lpl)—were found to be hypomethylated in freshly harvested human ASCs [160]. Interestingly, the CpG methylation profiles between and within donors were described as mosaic (i.e., they were not uniform) [160], which is consistent with stem cells found elsewhere in the body [224, 225]. Of note, mosaic CpG methylation is believed to stem from stochastic methylating events at various CpG sites due to environmental-, health-, and age-related factors [226–229]. Noer and colleagues [160] also noted that promoter regions for housekeeping genes such as GAPDH and LMNB1 were unmethylated whereas nonadipogenic lineage-specification gene promoters (Myogenin, myogenic; CD31/PECAM1 and CD144/CDH5, endothelial) were hypermethylated. These findings suggest that the commitment of MSCs to the adipogenic lineage may be reflected by a particular epigenetic signature in which adipogenic gene promoters are hypomethylated while nonadipogenic promoters are methylated. In vitro analyses have correlated the demethylation of various adipogenic promoters, including that of PPARγ, with adipogenic differentiation in murine cell lines as well [151, 230, 231]. However, the pattern of promoter DNA methylation in ASCs does not always correlate with protein expression [101, 160]. This indicates that additional regulatory layers are necessary for adipogenic differentiation.
Specific histone-mediated chromatin architecture modifications have been documented as multipotent MSCs become “preadipocytes” during determination [232]. H3K4me2, an active mark of transcription, has been identified at promoters of adipogenic genes including adiponectin (apM1), glut4, and lep during determination [154]. As cells progress toward committed adipocyte precursors during differentiation, further characteristic epigenetic marks have been described. In addition to promoter DNA demethylation at glut4 and lep [152, 233, 234], these promoters also undergo H3K9 demethylation, H3 acetylation, and H3K4 Trimethylation [154, 232], all of which are epigenetic marks of gene activation. Furthermore, the downregulation of cellular HDACs during differentiation appears to facilitate adipogenic lineage commitment, while its overexpression attenuates it [155]. Interestingly, unphosphorylated retinoblastoma (Rb) protein recruits HDAC3 to promoters of PPARγ gene targets, thereby inhibiting the transcription of their associated genes and thus repressing adipogenic differentiation [156, 235].
MSC differentiation is required for proper tissue development and repair, but it can be detrimental when it occurs excessively. A example of this lies in the obesity epidemic currently plaguing the United States and globally [236]. As epigenetic regulation has become an increasingly recognized programming factor in the process of adipogenesis, it could follow that epigenetic deregulation has a role in the development of obesity. In fact, induced methylation alterations have been linked to obesity in mice [153, 237]. It is hopeful that further study of the epigenetic regulation of adipogenic differentiation will provide insight into potential therapies for obesity and related metabolic disorders.
5. Nuclear Reprogramming of Mesenchymal Stem Cells
Direct epigenetic manipulation (e.g., by transfection of methylated DNA) has not been widely used in humans because the long-term effects of such therapies are unknown. The epigenetic program of a cell can be altered in other ways, however. Several strategies have been employed to reprogram somatic cells to a pluripotent embryonic state. We will briefly summarize these strategies as they have been extensively reviewed previously [163, 238, 239].
Somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT), also referred to as nuclear transplantation (NT), is the process by which the nucleus of a somatic donor cell is introduced into an enucleated oocyte. SCNT has been used to generate cloned animals including the cloned sheep Dolly [240]. SCNT also mediates the creation of genetically matched replacement cells. As such, SCNT is of great medical interest as it has the potential to circumvent immunologic incompatibility associated with cells donated from a source other than the patient. Moreover, nuclear reprogramming of MSCs has been most widely studied in the context of SCNT. Another cellular reprogramming strategy consists of fusing somatic cells with ES cells to produce a hybrid that demonstrates ES-like features including pluripotency. However, a shortcoming of this approach is the resultant tetraploidy of reprogrammed cells. A third strategy involves the transient incubation of somatic cells with extracts of ES cells devoid of their nuclei. This method has been utilized to enhance somatic cell pluripotency in vitro without creating cells with 4 sets of chromosomes. Finally, Takahashi and Yamanaka engineered a groundbreaking nuclear reprogramming strategy with the creation of induced pluripotential stem (iPS) cells in 2006 [241]. The authors successfully reprogrammed mouse embryonic/adult fibroblasts to pluripotent ES-like stem cells (iPS cells) by introducing the transcription factors Oct4, Sox2, c-Myc, and Klf4 into differentiated cells via viral-mediated transduction [242, 243]. The ectopic expression of these reprogramming factors in infected cells initiates a sequence of epigenetic events in endogenous genes critical for the maintenance of pluripotency and lineage specification of ES cells, thereby activating the pluripotential state of iPS cells [76, 163, 241, 244]. Using a combination of similar factors, authors have also isolated iPS cells from human fibroblasts [242, 245, 246]. However, the finding that mice derived from iPS cells often develop malignancies has considerably hindered the application of this technique [247]. Interestingly, the oncogenic transcription factor c-Myc may not be necessary to reprogram cells, though it facilitates a speedy and efficient reprogramming process [246, 248, 249]. The factor or combination of factors essential to reprogramming still remains unclear, as does the specific molecular circuitry underlying pluripotency. Nevertheless, because nuclear reprogramming carries the potential to create patient-specific cells allowing for customized therapy, it is currently of great interest to many investigators.
Within the last few years, research has revealed specific epigenetic modifications that occur during the processes of differentiation and reprogramming. For example, as ES cells commit to a particular lineage, the transcription factor Oct4, which is thought to be necessary to maintain ES cell pluripotency, is rapidly silenced. Epigenetically, Oct4 silencing correlates with a loss of gene activity marks (H3K4me3, H3K7ac, and H3K9ac), as well as an increase of gene silencing marks (H3K9me3 and DNA methylation) at the Oct4 promoter [163, 250]. In order to generate iPS cells from somatic cells, these silencing marks must be progressively removed from the Oct4 promoter. Furthermore, lineage-specification genes must be repressed in order to dedifferentiate a cell during the reprogramming process. iPS cells display chromatin modifications that prevent the transcription of genes encoding developmental regulators, thus maintaining pluripotency by repressing differentiation [163, 251, 252]. The promoters of pluripotency regulators also exhibit decreased DNA methylation patterns in iPS cells [247, 251, 252]. Taken together, these data indicate that epigenetic remodeling is an essential element to the nuclear reprogramming of somatic cells.
Although progress has been made in the field of nuclear reprogramming, there are still limitations to its therapeutic application. SCNT, for example, is an inherently inefficient process. Most clones die soon after implantation or are born with severe abnormalities due to faulty reprogramming [253, 254]. Some authors have hypothesized that, compared to terminally differentiated cells, less differentiated cell types may increase SCNT efficiency as they may be more easily reprogrammed. Faast and colleagues [255] examined if MSCs could increase the SCNT efficiency compared to terminally differentiated fibroblasts in a pig model. The use of MSCs did not increase cleavage rates compared to adult fibroblasts obtained from the same animal, but the percentage of embryos that developed to the blastocyst stage was almost doubled [255]. These findings were consistent with earlier studies that demonstrated improved SCNT efficiency using ES cells compared to differentiated somatic cells [256–260]. Jin et al. [261] also reported that compared to fetal fibroblasts, porcine MSCs have greater donor cell potential. In contrast, other investigators have noted that no significant difference exists between the number of MSCs that reach the blastocyst stage compared to fibroblasts after SCNT [262, 263]. Recently, Brero et al. [264] evaluated the efficiency of nuclear reprogramming by SCNT in MSCs and adult fibroblasts in a rabbit model by monitoring levels of histone modifications associated with transcriptionally active euchromatin (H3K4me2/3) or transcriptionally repressive facultative heterochromatin (H3K27me3). Subsequent to SCNT, H3K27me3 was found to be reprogrammed (i.e., largely undetectable) in both MSCs and adult fibroblasts, which was consistent with H3K27me3 patterns in control embryos. However, the reprogramming status of the H3K4me2/3 mark largely depended on cell type as it was inconsistent between MSCs, fibroblasts, and control embryos [264]. Based on the development of cloned embryos to the blastocyst stage as well as the level of reprogrammed histone modifications, the authors reported that MSCs were not better nucleus donors than adult fibroblasts [264]. It remains unclear why reports differ with respect to cloning efficiency using donor cells at different stages of development, but variations in methodology, technique, and species may be responsible. Further studies to address this issue will be required.
Because SCNT has proven to be an inefficient process regardless of the nuclear donor used, investigators have attempted to improve SCNT pharmacologically. The HDAC inhibitor Trichostatin A (TSA) has been shown to increase SCNT efficiency in mice [265, 266], pigs [267, 268], cattle [269, 270], and rabbits [271], though these findings are not universal [272, 273]. TSA reversibly binds to and inhibits the actions of HDACs, thereby causing acetylated histones to accumulate in cells [274]. TSA has also been shown to affect DNA methylation, DNMT expression levels, and heterochromatin remodeling [275–277]. Indeed, as epigenetic factors dynamically interact with one another, agents targeting epigenetic mechanisms have pleiotropic effects. To further evaluate the epigenetic factors modified by TSA, Martinez-Diaz and colleagues [278] assessed changes in epigenetic markers in pre- and postimplantation organism development after SCNT and TSA treatment using porcine bone marrow cells (BMCs; putative MSCs) and fetal fibroblasts. While TSA treatment increased the immunofluorescent (IF) signal of H3K14ac in embryos derived from both cell types, it did not increase the IF signal of H3K9me2. The authors also reported that TSA treatment accelerated the rate of development to the blastocyst stage for fibroblast-derived embryos but not for embryos derived from BMCs. Furthermore, embryos reconstructed from fibroblasts developed postimplantation with and without TSA treatment, whereas TSA treatment was necessary for postimplantation development in BMC-derived embryos [278]. This study partially clarified the epigenetic actions of TSA treatment during SCNT. However, it further demonstrated that the question of whether less differentiated cells (in this case BMCs) are more amenable to nuclear reprogramming than further differentiated cell types has yet to be solved.
6. Outlook
Stem-cell-based therapy may eventually serve as a potential remedy to many human pathologies previously thought to be incurable. MSCs in particular are promising for conditions requiring the regeneration of tissue such as bone and cartilage defects. However, before such treatments become readily available, we must further elucidate the mechanisms responsible for stem cell behavior. As we have discussed, MSCs are subject to many levels of control. Epigenetic phenomena have only recently been identified as important regulators of MSC fate. Numerous epigenetic modifications occur concomitantly during both osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation of MSCs. While much knowledge has been generated regarding the epigenetic modifications responsible for MSC differentiation, further investigation to this end will augment our ability to use MSCs therapeutically. Indeed, it is conceivable that manipulation of epigenetic signatures associated with multipotency and pluripotency, as well as modifications associated with lineage-specific differentiation, could direct patient-specific therapy. Identification of the factors necessary to reprogram mesenchymal-derived somatic cells to less differentiated states can also provide insight into the regulation of MSC fate determination.
Abbreviations
ApM1: | Adiponectin |
ASC: | Adipose-derived stem cell |
BCOR: | BCL-6 corepressor |
BMC: | Bone marrow cell |
BMMSCs: | Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell |
ChIP: | Chromatin immunoprecipitation |
CpG: | Cytosine-phosphate-guanine |
DNMT: | DNA methyltransferase |
ES: | Embryonic stem |
fabp4: | Fatty acid-binding protein 4 |
FRAP: | Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching |
Glut4: | Glucose transporter type 4 |
H3K9ac: | Acetylation of lysine 9 on histone 3 |
H3K4me3: | Trimethylation of lysine 4 on histone 3 |
H3K27me3: | Trimethylation of lysine 27 on histone 3 |
HAT: | Histone acetyltransferase |
HDAC: | Histone acetyl-deacetylase |
HDM: | Histone demethylase |
HMT: | Histone methyltransferase |
HSC: | Hematopoietic stem cell |
IDH: | Hschemic heart disease |
IF: | Immunofluorescent |
iPS: | Induce pluripotential stem cell |
lep: | Leptin |
lpl: | Lipoprotein lipase |
LVF: | Left ventricular function |
MeDIP: | Methylated DNA immunoprecipitation |
MSC: | Mesenchymal stem cell |
NT: | Nuclear transplantation |
OC: | Ostecalcin |
OFCD: | Oculo-facial-cardio-dental |
OI: | Osteogenesis imperfecta |
OPN | Osteopontin |
PCR: | Polymerase chain reaction |
PPARγ: | peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma |
RB: | retinoblastoma |
Runx2: | runt-related transcription factor 2 |
SCNT: | somatic cell nuclear transfer |
STEMI: | ST-segment elevated myocardial infarction |
Trip10: | thyroid hormone receptor interactor-10 |
TSA: | Trichostatin A. |
Conflict of Interests
The authors declare no conflict of interests.
Acknowledgments
The authors apologize to the investigators whose original work was not cited due to space constraints. The reported work was supported in part by research Grants from the National Institutes of Health (RRR, HHL, RCH, and TCH), and the 863 and 973 Programs of the Ministry of Science and Technology of China (no. 2007AA2z400 and no. 2011CB707900 for J. Luo and T. C. He).