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Review
. 2003 Sep 30;100 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):11819-22.
doi: 10.1073/pnas.1834207100. Epub 2003 Aug 14.

Nuclear reprogramming and stem cell creation

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Review

Nuclear reprogramming and stem cell creation

J B Gurdon et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. .

Abstract

The transplantation of a somatic cell nucleus to an enucleated egg results in a major reprogramming of gene expression and switch in cell fate. We review the efficiency of nuclear reprogramming by nuclear transfer. The serial transplantation of nuclei from defective first-transfer embryos and the grafting of cells from such embryos to normal host embryos greatly increases the proportion of nuclei that can be seen to have been reprogrammed. We discuss possible reasons for the early failure of most nuclear transfers from differentiated cells and describe the potential value of growing oocytes, rather than unfertilized eggs, as a source of nuclear reprogramming molecules and for the eventual identification of these molecules. Nuclear transfer provides a possible route for the creation of stem cells from adult somatic cells.

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Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Diagrams to show the time scale of nuclear reprogramming in Xenopus and the mouse. (A) Oogenesis and early development of Xenopus. (B) In Xenopus egg nuclear transfers, reprogrammed gene expression is seen at the late blastula stage after at least 12 cell division cycles. (C) In Xenopus oocyte nuclear transfers, reprogrammed gene expression is seen in the complete absence of DNA replication and cell division. (D) In mouse nuclear transfer to eggs, reprogrammed gene expression has been seen at the blastocyst stage.

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