Cell Stem Cell
Volume 20, Issue 6, 1 June 2017, Pages 874-890.e7
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Comprehensive Cell Surface Protein Profiling Identifies Specific Markers of Human Naive and Primed Pluripotent States

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.stem.2017.02.014Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Flow cytometry profiles cell surface proteins in naive and primed human PSCs

  • The human PSC state can be defined using robust state-specific protein markers

  • Identified cell surface proteins track the dynamics of naive-primed PSC conversions

  • Analyses of early-stage naive cells reveal transcription events during conversion

Summary

Human pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) exist in naive and primed states and provide important models to investigate the earliest stages of human development. Naive cells can be obtained through primed-to-naive resetting, but there are no reliable methods to prospectively isolate unmodified naive cells during this process. Here we report comprehensive profiling of cell surface proteins by flow cytometry in naive and primed human PSCs. Several naive-specific, but not primed-specific, proteins were also expressed by pluripotent cells in the human preimplantation embryo. The upregulation of naive-specific cell surface proteins during primed-to-naive resetting enabled the isolation and characterization of live naive cells and intermediate cell populations. This analysis revealed distinct transcriptional and X chromosome inactivation changes associated with the early and late stages of naive cell formation. Thus, identification of state-specific proteins provides a robust set of molecular markers to define the human PSC state and allows new insights into the molecular events leading to naive cell resetting.

Keywords

embryonic stem cells
pluripotency
reprogramming
differentiation
blastocyst
cell surface markers
antibody library

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