4.3 Review

Translational prospects for human induced pluripotent stem cells

Journal

REGENERATIVE MEDICINE
Volume 5, Issue 4, Pages 509-519

Publisher

FUTURE MEDICINE LTD
DOI: 10.2217/RME.10.39

Keywords

cell therapy; disease modeling; DNA methylation; epigenome; human embryonic stem cell; macular degeneration; personalized medicine; reprogramming; teratoma; toxicology

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The pace of research on human induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells is frantic worldwide, based on the enormous therapeutic potential of patient-specific pluripotent cells free of the ethical and political issues that plagued human embryonic stem cell research. iPS cells are now relatively easy to isolate from somatic cells and reprogramming can be accomplished using nonmutagenic technologies. Access to iPS cells is already paying dividends in the form of new disease-in-a-dish models for drug discovery and as scalable sources of cells for toxicology. For translation of cell therapies, the major advantage of iPS cells is that they are autologous, but for many reasons, perfect immunologic tolerance of iPS-based grafts should not be assumed. This article focuses on the functional identity of iPS cells, anticipated safety and technical issues in their application, as well as a survey of the progress likely to be realized in clinical applications in the next decade.

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