4.7 Article

L-Proline induces differentiation of ES cells: a novel role for an amino acid in the regulation of pluripotent cells in culture

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 298, Issue 5, Pages C982-C992

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00498.2009

Keywords

mouse; primitive ectoderm; embryonic stem cells

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council
  2. ARC Special Research Centre for the Molecular Genetics of Development
  3. Australian Stem Cell Centre

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Washington JM, Rathjen J, Felquer F, Lonic A, Bettess MD, Hamra N, Semendric L, Tan BS, Lake JA, Keough RA, Morris MB, Rathjen PD. L-Proline induces differentiation of ES cells: a novel role for an amino acid in the regulation of pluripotent cells in culture. Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 298: C982-C992, 2010. First published February 17, 2010; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00498.2009.-The development of cell therapeutics from embryonic stem (ES) cells will require technologies that direct cell differentiation to specific somatic cell lineages in response to defined factors. The initial step in formation of the somatic lineages from ES cells, differentiation to an intermediate, pluripotent primitive ectoderm-like cell, can be achieved in vitro by formation of early primitive ectoderm-like (EPL) cells in response to a biological activity contained within the conditioned medium MEDII. Fractionation of MEDII has identified two activities required for EPL cell formation, an activity with a molecular mass of <3 kDa and a second, much larger species. Here, we have identified the low-molecular-weight activity as L-proline. An inhibitor of L-proline uptake, glycine, prevented the differentiation of ES cells in response to MEDII. Supplementation of the culture medium of ES cells with >100 M L-proline and some L-proline-containing peptides resulted in changes in colony morphology, cell proliferation, gene expression, and differentiation kinetics consistent with differentiation toward a primitive ectoderm-like cell. This activity appeared to be associated with L-proline since other amino acids and analogs of proline did not exhibit an equivalent activity. Activation of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling pathway was found to be necessary but not sufficient for L-proline activity; addition of other activators of the mTOR signaling pathway failed to alter the ES cell phenotype. This is the first report describing a role for amino acids in the regulation of pluripotency and cell differentiation and identifies a novel role for the imino acid L-proline.

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