Figure 1: iPSCs cultivated atop a 'feeder' layer of mouse  embryonic fibroblasts (top left) maintain expression of a  fluorescent pluripotency marker (top right; green). However,  these cells also thrive (bottom left) and maintain their  pluripotency (bottom right) when grown on a glutaraldehyde-fixed  feeder cell layer. Image reproduced under the terms of the CCAL,  with copyright shared by Yue et al
  Stem cells are renowned for their capacity to develop  into a wide range of mature cell types but they cannot maintain  this flexibility on their own. In the body, neighboring cells  help maintain this pluripotent state. But to grow these cells  in culture, scientists have had to devise a variety of  specialized techniques.
    This is especially true for embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells    (iPSCs), which are ESC-like cells derived from adult tissue. To    preserve their pluripotency, these cells have typically been    grown atop a supporting layer of feeder cells. Now, a    strategy developed by a team led by Yoshihiro Ito at the RIKEN    Advanced Science Institute, Wako, promises to make ESC and iPSC    cultivation considerably easier.  
    Feeder cells provide valuable growth factors for stem cells but    also make culture complicated and create opportunities for    contaminationan especially serious concern for clinical    applications. Early attempts to isolate the key features of    feeder cells have fallen short. It was difficult to culture    stem cells on growth-factor immobilized substrates, says Ito.    Feeder cells provide a complex microenvironment that cannot    simply be replaced with one or several growth factors.  
    As an alternative, the researchers subjected feeder cell layers    to chemical fixation treatments that killed the cells while    physically preserving them and maintaining their external    structure largely intact. This resulted in a robust cell    culture surface that retained virtually all of the features    with which stem cells would typically interact. Mouse iPSCs    maintained their pluripotent state even after extensive    cultivation on feeder cells that had previously been fixed with    either formaldehyde (FA) or glutaraldehyde (GA). GA fixation is    a harsher treatment, but Ito and colleagues noted that GA fixed    cells also provided a superior substrate, and this GA-fixed    layer was robust enough to be washed and reused.  
    The researchers were pleasantly surprised to find that mouse    iPSCs grown in this manner were virtually indistinguishable    from those cultured by traditional methods (Fig. 1). Feeder    cells were believed to secrete proteins or other compounds that    maintain the growth of undifferentiated stem cells, says Ito. But fixed cells lose this    secretion capability, which shows that providing the right    contact microenvironment is more important for iPSCs. Given    how rugged the fixed cell layers are, he anticipates that this    approach could offer a commercially viable cell culture tool    once it has been tested and optimized for cultivation of human    iPSCs.
    More information: Yue, X.-S., Fujishiro, M., Nishioka,    C., Arai, T., Takahashi, E., Gong, J.-S., Akaike, T. & Ito,    Y. Feeder cells support the culture of induced pluripotent stem    cells even after chemical fixation. PLoS ONE 7, e32707 (2012).    http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0032707
    Provided by      RIKEN  
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Stem cells thrive on superficial relationships