Challenges and prospects for the establishment of embryonic stem cell lines of domesticated ungulates

Embryonic stem (ES) cell lines provide an invaluable research tool for genetic engineering, developmental biology and disease models. These cells can be maintained indefinitely in culture and yet maintain competence to produce all the cells within a fetus. While mouse ES cell lines were first establ...

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Published inAnimal reproduction science Vol. 98; no. 1; pp. 147 - 168
Main Authors Keefer, C.L., Pant, D., Blomberg, L., Talbot, N.C.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.03.2007
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Summary:Embryonic stem (ES) cell lines provide an invaluable research tool for genetic engineering, developmental biology and disease models. These cells can be maintained indefinitely in culture and yet maintain competence to produce all the cells within a fetus. While mouse ES cell lines were first established over two decades ago and primate ES cells in the 1990s, validated ES cell lines have yet to be established in ungulates. Why competent, pluripotent ES cells can be established from certain strains of mice and from primates, and not from cows, sheep, goats or pigs is an on-going topic of interest to animal reproduction scientists. The identification of appropriate stem cell markers, functional cytokine pathways, and key pluripotency-maintaining factors along with the release of more comprehensive bovine and porcine genomes, provide encouragement for establishment of ungulate ES cell lines in the near future.
Bibliography:http://hdl.handle.net/10113/8485
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anireprosci.2006.10.009
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ISSN:0378-4320
1873-2232
DOI:10.1016/j.anireprosci.2006.10.009