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Retrotransposon instability dominates the acquired mutation landscape of mouse induced pluripotent stem cells.

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2022-12-03

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Gerdes, Patricia
Lim, Sue Mei
Ewing, Adam D
Larcombe, Michael R
Chan, Dorothy
Sanchez-Luque, Francisco J
Walker, Lucinda
Carleton, Alexander L
James, Cini
Knaupp, Anja S

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Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) can in principle differentiate into any cell of the body, and have revolutionized biomedical research and regenerative medicine. Unlike their human counterparts, mouse iPSCs (miPSCs) are reported to silence transposable elements and prevent transposable element-mediated mutagenesis. Here we apply short-read or Oxford Nanopore Technologies long-read genome sequencing to 38 bulk miPSC lines reprogrammed from 10 parental cell types, and 18 single-cell miPSC clones. While single nucleotide variants and structural variants restricted to miPSCs are rare, we find 83 de novo transposable element insertions, including examples intronic to Brca1 and Dmd. LINE-1 retrotransposons are profoundly hypomethylated in miPSCs, beyond other transposable elements and the genome overall, and harbor alternative protein-coding gene promoters. We show that treatment with the LINE-1 inhibitor lamivudine does not hinder reprogramming and efficiently blocks endogenous retrotransposition, as detected by long-read genome sequencing. These experiments reveal the complete spectrum and potential significance of mutations acquired by miPSCs.

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Humans
Mice
Animals
Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells
Retroelements
DNA Transposable Elements
Mutation
Long Interspersed Nucleotide Elements

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