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Rat Model Market revenue to hit $1.8 billion by 2025: Global Market Insights, Inc. – GlobeNewswire

Selbyville, Delaware, Dec. 05, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) --

Global Rat Model Market value is set to surpass USD 1.8 billion by 2025, according to a new research report by Global Market Insights, Inc. Growing usage of rat models in the development of novel vaccines and increase in the adoption of rat models for conducting various research studies on diseases such as autoimmune diseases, cancer, cardiovascular diseases are some of the factors that will majorly drive the rat model industry growth over the projected timeframe.

Rat model is defined as the use of animals to study the development and advancement of diseases since there are various similarities between humans and rats. The upsurge of rat models in biological research studies coupled with functional resemblances of rats to human body are few factors boosting the market growth in the upcoming years. Growing number of animal testing procedures for ensuring drug safety and regular use of rat model in animal testing owing to its genetic similarities with humans are also few factors that are offering significant traction to the market growth. Rats are one of the animals that are widely used in the medical research since they are the primary model for mechanistic studies of human reproduction. Hence, all these factors are expected to boost the adoption of rat models across the globe and is further projected to boost the market growth in the upcoming years.

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On the basis of rat type, the rat model market is segmented as inbred, outbred, knockout, hybrid and others. The inbred rat model business held the maximum share of over 25.0% in 2018. Upsurge of rat models in autoimmune disorder research is rapidly increasing as rat models can mimic autoimmune diseases that affect humans and these models offer a large scale of tissue samples than mice models. These factors further assist researchers to understand the mechanism of diseases that will further play a significant role in propelling the global market growth in the near future.

Some major findings of the rat model market statistics report include:

Based on technology, the rat model market is segmented into CRISPR, microinjection, embryonic stem cell, nuclear transfer and others. The CRISPR technology market accounted for 31.5% market share in 2018. Rapid growth of CRISPR technology is owing to certain advantages such as ease of use, cost-effectiveness, time saving, and greater efficiency required to alter target genes compared to other gene targeting technologies. Hence, the above-mentioned advantages enhance the demand and adoption of CRISPR technology in rat model industry, thereby boosting the business growth.

Browse key industry insights spread across 450 pages with 376 market data tables & 11 figures & charts from the report, Rat Model Market Size By Rat Type (Inbred, Outbred, Knockout, Hybrid), By Technology (CRISPR, Microinjection, Embryonic Stem Cell, Nuclear Transfer), By Application (Research & Development, {Infectious Disease, Immunological Disease, Cancer, Cardiovascular Diseases, Diabetes, Genetic Diseases, Neurological Diseases}, Production And Quality Control, Academics), By Use (Human, Veterinary), By End-use (Companies {Pharmaceutical, Biotechnology, Cosmetics}, Organizations {Government, Non-Government}, Academic And Research Institutes, Contract Research Organizations) Industry Analysis Report, Regional Outlook (U.S., Canada, Germany, UK, France, Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Netherlands, Czech Republic, Poland, Belgium, Finland, Hungary, Denmark, Ireland, Sweden, China, Japan, Australia, South Korea, New Zealand, Taiwan, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Israel), Application Potential, Price Trends, Competitive Market Share & Forecast, 2019 2025 in detail along with the table of contents:

https://www.gminsights.com/industry-analysis/rat-model-market

On the basis of application, the market is segment into research & development, production and quality control, academics and others. The research and development segment held the largest revenue share at around 72.2% in the year 2018. The demand of rat models for research and development is in order to check the cognitive function that rats and humans share. Since rats are able to remember wider variety of tasks, it in turn helps the researchers to perform several studies on rats about memory and learning. Hence, such factors are responsible for boosting the rat model market growth for research and development.

On the basis of use, rat model is segmented into human and veterinary. The use of animal model for humans held the highest market share of over 80% in the year 2018. Rise in testing procedures on rats for understanding of diseases such as cardiovascular diseases and diabetes among others that can harm humans is propelling the market growth. Furthermore, increase in the number of rat models for understanding the biological behavior of diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, autoimmune diseases and cancer are few factors that are expected to impel the segmental growth.

On the basis of end-use, rat model industry is segmented into companies, organizations, academic & research institutes and contract research organizations. Companies held the highest market share of over 61.2% in the year 2018. Growing number of research & development activities in the biotech and pharma industry that demands for animal testing for confirming the efficacy and safety of drugs along with the development of novel vaccines are propelling the segmental growth.

The U.S. rat model market is estimated to expand at more than 8.0% CAGR over the projected period. As per the American Burn Association, around 486,000 people were reported at emergency departments for burn/fire injuries. Therefore, various research institutes in the country are conducting physiological tests that rats and humans share in order to mimic the human skin structure. Hence, owing to this, the demand for rat model will significantly escalate in the near future.

Key players are executing several growth strategies such as acquisitions and mergers in order to increase their geographic presence and their product portfolio. For instance, in April 2019, Charles River Laboratories completed the acquisition of Citoxlab. The acquisition would lead to important expansion of the treatment option, thereby resulting in better quality of life. It will further bolster the companys global position by expanding its scientific product portfolio, that will in turn enhance their client partner relations across the drug discovery and development continuum.

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Browse Related Reports:

Animal Model Market Analysis Report 2025: On the basis of animal type, the animal model market is segmented as mice, rats, fish, birds, cattle, pigs, amphibians, rabbits, guinea pigs, dogs, cats, sheep, hamsters, monkeys, and others. The mice market held the maximum share of over 51.7% and was valued at around USD 7 billion in the year 2018. The upsurge of mice models in cancer research is burgeoning owing to low-cost factors and widespread availability. Some of the prominent industry players include Charles River, Envigo, genOway, Horizon Discovery Group Plc, Harbour BioMed, Taconic Biosciences, Inc., Janvier Labs, The Jackson Laboratory and TRANS GENIC Inc, Ltd.

https://www.gminsights.com/industry-analysis/animal-model-market

About Global Market Insights

Global Market Insights, Inc., headquartered in Delaware, U.S., is a global market research and consulting service provider; offering syndicated and custom research reports along with growth consulting services. Our business intelligence and industry research reports offer clients with penetrative insights and actionable market data specially designed and presented to aid strategic decision making. These exhaustive reports are designed via a proprietary research methodology and are available for key industries such as chemicals, advanced materials, technology, renewable energy and biotechnology.

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Rat Model Market revenue to hit $1.8 billion by 2025: Global Market Insights, Inc. - GlobeNewswire

Dosage analysis of the 7q11.23 Williams region identifies BAZ1B as a major human gene patterning the modern human face and underlying…

INTRODUCTION

Anatomically modern humans (AMHs) exhibit a suite of craniofacial and prosocial characteristics that are reminiscent of traits distinguishing domesticated species from their wild counterparts (13). This has led to the formulation of a self-domestication hypothesis according to which modern humans (3) went through a domestication process in the course of their evolution. Recent evidence, along with the well-warranted distinction between domestication and selective breeding (4), is also extending this notion to other species that might have undergone a self-domestication phase, such as cats, dogs, and bonobos (3). Thus, as self-domestication represents a special case of domestication, the most parsimonious hypothesis must posit the same core mechanisms to underlie both. For this reason, the self-domestication hypothesis also entails the prediction that key aspects of modern humans anatomy and cognition can be illuminated by studies of the so-called domestication syndrome, the core set of domestication-related traits that was recently proposed to result from mild neural crest (NC) deficits (5). However, both the neurocristopathic basis of domestication and its extension to the evolution of AMHs remain to be tested experimentally.

Williams-Beuren syndrome [WBS; OMIM (Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man) 194050] and Williams-Beuren region duplication syndrome (7dupASD; OMIM 609757), caused respectively by the hemideletion or hemiduplication of 28 genes at the 7q11.23 region [WBS critical region (WBSCR)], represent a paradigmatic pair of neurodevelopmental conditions whose NC-related craniofacial dysmorphisms and cognitive/behavioral traits (6, 7) bear directly on domestication-related traits relevant for AMHs (facial reduction and retraction, pronounced friendliness, and reduced reactive aggression) (fig. S1A). Structural variants in WBS genes, for example in the case of GTF2I and its paralogs, have been shown to underlie stereotypical hypersociability in domestic dogs and foxes (8, 9).

Among the WBSCR genes, we focus here on the chromatin regulator BAZ1B (also known as Williams syndrome transcription factor, WSTF), on the basis of the following lines of evidence that implicate it in domestication-relevant craniofacial features: (i) its established role in NC maintenance and migration in Xenopus laevis and the craniofacial defects observed in knockout mice (10, 11); (ii) the observation that its expression is affected by domestication-related events in canids (12); (iii) the first formulation of the neurocristopathic hypothesis of domestication, which included BAZ1B among the genes influencing NC development (5); (iv) the most comprehensive studies focusing on regions of the modern human genome associated with selective sweep signals compared to Neanderthals/Denisovans (hereafter archaics) (13, 14), one of which specifically included BAZ1B within the detected portions of the WBSCR; and (v) the thus far most detailed study systematically exploring high-frequency (HF) (>90%) changes in modern humans for which archaic humans carry the ancestral state, which found BAZ1B enriched for mutations in modern humans (most of which fall in the regulatory regions of the gene) (15).

Our previous work had established the largest cohort of 7q11.23 patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines and revealed major disease-relevant transcriptional dysregulation that was already apparent at the pluripotent state and became further exacerbated upon differentiation (16). Here, we first harness this resource to dissect the impact of BAZ1B dosage on the NC of patients with WBS and 7dupASD, both in terms of function (i.e., NC migration and induction) and of transcriptional and chromatin dysregulation, thereby defining the BAZ1B dosagedependent circuits controlling the NC. Next, we apply these experimentally determined BAZ1B-dependent circuits underlying craniofacial morphogenesis to interrogate the evidence from paleogenomic analyses, which were thus far only of a correlative nature. We find major convergence between the BAZ1B control and the genes harboring regulatory changes in the modern human lineage. Together, the definition of the role of BAZ1B dosage in craniofacial neurocristopathy and its application to domestication-relevant paleogenomics demonstrate a major contribution of BAZ1B to the modern human face and offer experimental validation for the prediction at the heart of NC-based accounts of (self-) domestication: that the modern human face acquired its shape as an instance of mild neurocristopathy.

To dissect the role of BAZ1B in the craniofacial dysmorphisms that characterize WBS and 7dupASD, we started from our previous characterization of WBS patient and 7dupASD patientspecific iPSC lines and differentiated derivatives (16) and selected a cohort of 11 NC stem cell (NCSC) lines (four from patients with WBS, three from patients with 7dupASD, and four from control individuals), which also represent the largest cohort of patient-specific NCSCs described so far. Given the centrality of the cranial NC for the development of the face, we first validated the cranial identity of our NCSC cohort by transcriptomic profiling through a manually curated gene expression signature (fig. S2A), confirming their suitability for the study of craniofacial dysregulations. We then knocked down BAZ1B via RNA interference in all lines across the three genetic conditions, including also NCSCs derived from a particularly informative patient with atypical WBS (hereafter atWBS) bearing a partial deletion of the region that spares BAZ1B and six additional genes (Fig. 1A) (17). To establish a high-resolution gradient of BAZ1B dosages, we selected two distinct short hairpin RNA (shRNA) against BAZ1B (i.e., sh1 and sh2) along with a scrambled shRNA sequence (hereafter scr) as negative control, for a total of 32 NCSC lines. Knockdown (KD) efficiency was evaluated at the RNA level by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) (Fig. 1B and fig. S1C), confirming the attainment of the desired gradient with an overall reduction of about 40% for sh1 and 70% for sh2, as well as reduction at the protein level, as detected by Western blot (fig. S1E).

(A) Schematic representation of the KD strategy on our iPSC-derived NCSC cohort. (B) BAZ1B mRNA levels in all the interfered lines (scr, sh1, and sh2) as measured by qPCR. Data represent aggregates of samples with the same number of BAZ1B copies (7dup, CTL + atWBS, and WBS). Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is used as a normalizer. (C) Eight- and 16-hour time points from the wound-healing assay analyses performed on a 7dupASD and a WBS NCSC line upon BAZ1B KD. Cells from the same line infected with the scr sh were used as references for the migration (n = 2). (D) Days 7, 10, and 12 of NC differentiation from embryoid bodies (EBs) of an scr-interfered iPSC line and its respective BAZ1B KD (n = 3). (E) mRNA levels of NC markers at day 12 of differentiation in three individual experimental replicates [bright-field images are reported in (D)]. An iPSC line is included as a negative control. Students t test was used (ns, not significant; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, and ****P < 0. 0001).

NCSCs need to migrate to reach specific target regions in the developing embryo and give rise to distinct cell types and tissues, including craniofacial structures that are major areas of change in human evolution. Since BAZ1B KD was shown to affect the migration of the NC in X. laevis and to promote cancer cell invasion in different lung cancer cell lines (10, 18), we hypothesized that the BAZ1B dosage imbalances entailed in the 7q11.23 syndromes could result in a defective regulation of NCSC migration and might underlie the NC-related alterations typical of patients with WBS and 7dupASD. To test this, we compared the migration properties of patient-specific BAZ1B KD NCSC lines (sh2) to their respective control NCSC line (scr) by the well-established wound-healing assay. The 7dupASD NCSC KD lines took longer to fill the wound when compared to the respective control lines (scr), as indicated by images taken at 8 and 16 hours after a gap was created on the plate surface (Fig. 1C and fig. S1F). We instead observed an opposite behavior for the WBS BAZ1B KD lines, which were faster than the respective scr lines in closing the gap (Fig. 1C and fig. S1F). In contrast to the previous observations from X. laevis (10), we also observed a minor delay in NC induction as a consequence of BAZ1B KD (Fig. 1D and fig. S1D), by means of a differentiation protocol based on NC delamination from adherent embryoid bodies (EBs), which recapitulates the initial steps of NC generation (19). In particular, starting from 2 to 3 days after attachment of EBs, we observed a lower number of outgrowing cells in the KD line (Fig. 1D, days 7 and 10), coupled with an evidently higher cell mortality. Cells were eventually able to acquire the typical NC morphology, although lower differentiation efficiency was evident, as shown by images taken at day 12. In addition, the delay in NC formation was associated with a down-regulation of well-established critical regulators of NC migration and maintenance, including NR2F1, NR2F2, TFAP2A, and SOX9 (Fig. 1E). These results show that BAZ1B regulates the developing NC starting from its earliest migratory stages and that the symmetrically opposite 7q11.23 dosages alterations prime NCSCs to symmetrically opposite deficits upon BAZ1B interference. In turn, the central role of the NC in the development of facial morphology allows relating such findings to the symmetrically opposite craniofacial dysmorphisms of the two 7q11.23 syndromes.

Having defined the functional impact of BAZ1B dosage on NC function, we predicted that a main molecular readout of its dosage imbalances would be at the level of transcriptional regulation, given its critical role as transcriptional regulator in different cell and animal models (2022). To test this hypothesis and gain mechanistic insights into the specific BAZ1B dosagedependent downstream circuits, we subjected 32 interfered NCSC lines to high-coverage RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis. As shown in fig. S2A, a manually curated signature from an extensive literature review (2328) validated the cranial identity of our NCSC lines, while clustering by Pearson correlation excluded the presence of any genotype- or hairpin-specific expression change. Confirming our previous observations in the two largest cohorts of iPSC lines (29), a principal component analysis (PCA) corroborated the significant impact of individual genetic backgrounds on transcriptional variability, with most KD lines clustering with their respective control scr line. This was consistent with the narrow range of experimentally interfered BAZ1B dosages and pointed to a selective BAZ1B dosagedependent transcriptional vulnerability (fig. S2B).

To dissect it, we thus resorted to a combination of classical pairwise comparative analysis, contrasting shBAZ1B-interfered NCSC lines (sh1 + sh2) with their respective controls (scr), with a complementary regression analysis using BAZ1B expression levels as independent variables, subtracting the contribution of individual genetic backgrounds. This design increases robustness and sensitivity in the identification of genes that, across multiple genetic backgrounds and target gene dosages, might have a different baseline (scr) across individuals while still being robustly dysregulated upon BAZ1B interference.

The two analyses identified a total of 448 genes with false discovery rate (FDR) < 0.1 (1192 with P < 0.01 and FDR < 0.25) whose transcriptional levels followed BAZ1B dosage, in either a direct (202; 539 with P < 0.01 and FDR < 0.25) or an inverse (246; 653 with P < 0.01 and FDR < 0.25) fashion. In addition, genes identified in the regression analysis included around 90% of the differentially expressed genes (DEGs) (27 of 29, FDR < 0.1) found in the comparative analysis (Fig. 2A). Consistent with the differential efficiency of the two short hairpins, we found a globally stronger transcriptional impact for the group of samples targeted by sh2 (fig. S2C) and a milder but nevertheless clearly distinguishable effect of sh1, resulting in particularly informative gradient of dosages over the scr control lines.

(A) Overlap between genes directly or inversely following BAZ1B levels identified in the pairwise comparative analysis (scr versus shBAZ1B) and in the regression analysis on BAZ1B-level sensitive genes on iPSC-derived NCSCs (FDR < 0.1). (B) Volcano plot reporting DEGs identified in the RNA-seq analysis on iPSC-derived NCSCs [fold change (FC) > 1.25; FDR < 0.1]. (C) Top most specific enrichments for GO biological processes among the DEGs in the RNA-seq analysis on iPSC-derived NCSCs. (D) Heat map representing DEGs that are dysregulated in genetic disorders involving mental retardation (Mental), intellectual disability (Intellectual), and/or facial dysmorphisms (Face) according to OMIM database classification. cnv, copy number variant. (E) Putative regulators of genes that follow BAZ1B levels identified by a master regulator analysis. Regulators were divided in four different groups based on their main functions.

Particularly noteworthy among the genes that we found correlated with BAZ1B levels were (i) crucial regulators of cranial NC, further highlighting a convergent BAZ1B dosagedependent dysregulation of the foundational CUL3-centered regulatory axis orchestrating NC-mediated craniofacial morphogenesis (30), and (ii) genes associated with variation of human facial shape or causative of dysmorphic facial features and mild intellectual disability when mutated (Fig. 2B and table S1).

Gene Ontology (GO) analysis performed on genes directly following BAZ1B levels suggested specific enrichments in biological processes such as histone phosphorylation, chromosome localization, RNA processing, and splicing. Genes inversely following BAZ1B levels were instead enriched in categories particularly relevant for NC and NC-derivative functions, such as cell migration and cardiovascular and skeletal development (Fig. 2C). By querying the OMIM database, we found that several DEGs were associated with genetic disorders whose phenotypes include mental retardation, intellectual disability, and/or facial dysmorphisms (Fig. 2D), underscoring the pertinence of BAZ1B-dependent dysregulation across both the neurocristopathic and cognitive axes.

Last, a master regulator analysis identified candidate regulators of BAZ1B DEGs, including factors involved in enhancer marking [CEBPB, p300, RBBP5, HDAC2 (histone deacetylase 2), KDM1A, and TCF12], promoter activation [TBP (TATA boxbinding protein), TAF1 (TBP-associated factor 1), and POL2 (polymerase 2)], and chromatin remodeling (CTCF, RAD21, and YY1) (Fig. 2E and fig. S2D), several of which are themselves causative genes of intellectual disability syndromes with neurocristopathic involvement, as in the case of our recently identified Gabrielede Vries syndrome caused by YY1 haploinsufficiency (31, 32). Chromatin remodeling was indeed the most prominently enriched group within the overall domain of transcriptional regulation. Two master regulators are particularly noteworthy, as they are themselves regulated by BAZ1B dosage. The first is EGR1 (FDR < 0.1), which is itself among the genes inversely correlated with BAZ1B levels, which is implicated in cranial development (in animal models) (33, 34) and whose promoter has been recently shown to feature a bivalent state in human embryonic cranial NC (23, 35). The second is MXI1, identified as master regulator of genes directly following BAZ1B levels (FDR < 0.001), which is itself found among the genes inversely correlated with BAZ1B and is itself a regulator of BAZ1B, pointing to a cross-talk between the two (fig. S2C). Notably, two differentially expressed targets of MXI1, TGFB2 and NFIB, are also involved in intellectual disability and craniofacial defects (30, 36, 37).

The transcriptional readout and functional impact of BAZ1B dosage (at the level of NC induction and migration) established its role as a master controller of the NC. We thus predicted, on the basis of its molecular function, that BAZ1B would directly bind to key NC target genes and that for some of these, the binding would be dosage sensitive. These genes would be, in turn, the most likely direct targets to mediate the dosage-dependent transcriptional and functional phenotypes described above. To test this prediction, we set out to both identify BAZ1B direct targets and characterize their promoter and enhancer states, so as to mechanistically link their transcriptional dysregulation with BAZ1B dosagedependent chromatin binding. Given the absence of chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP)grade BAZ1B antibodies, to carry out our ChIP coupled with sequencing (ChIP-seq) on scr and KD lines, we first designed a tagging strategy to establish, by CRISPR-Cas9 editing, a series of in-frame 3xFLAG endogenously tagged BAZ1B alleles in representative iPSCs of the four genotypes (Fig. 3A and fig. S3, A and B). These were then differentiated to NCSCs (fig. S3C) and subjected to ChIP-seq with anti-FLAG antibody, enabling a faithful characterization of BAZ1B genome-wide occupancy across dosages (one tagged allele in WBS, two tagged alleles in atWBS and CTL, and two tagged alleles in the context of 1.5-fold dosages in 7dupASD).

(A) Schematic representation of the strategy for CRISPR-Cas9mediated tagging of endogenous BAZ1B. Briefly, iPSCs from the four genotypes were electroporated with the donor plasmid and the Cas9/single-guide RNA ribonucleoprotein complex; clones were selected via hygromycin and PCR, differentiated to NCSCs, and then subjected to ChIP-seq. (B) PCA showing the distribution of the four BAZ1B-tagged NCSC lines according to their chromatin profiles. (C) Overlap between genes expressed in our NCSC lines (purple) and genes bound by BAZ1B at their enhancer (red) or promoter (blue) regions. (D) Top most specific enrichments for GO biological processes among the genes that are bound by BAZ1B and expressed in our NCSC cohort. (E) Most represented BAZ1B DNA binding motifs identified by HOMER show high similarity to neural and NCSC-specific transcription factors motifs. (F) BAZ1B differentially bound regions according to its copy number (FDR < 0.1; n = 2). (G) Overlap between genes that are differentially expressed have their enhancers differentially marked concordantly (H3K27ac, H3K4me1, and H3K27me3) and are bound by BAZ1B at enhancers.

PCA shows a clear separation of the samples by BAZ1B copy number, with CTL and atWBS samples clustering more closely and WBS and 7dupASD samples clustering at opposing positions (Fig. 3B). To call NC-specific enhancer regions and promoter-enhancer associations, we exploited for chromatin annotation the unprecedented resolution afforded by the patients cohort with its underlying variability and proceeded to (i) select chromosomal regions featuring H3K4me1 and H3K27ac in at least two individuals; (ii) exclude regions marked with H3K4me3 in at least two individuals;(iii) eliminate regions bearing a transcription start site (TSS); and (iv) associate each putative enhancer to the closest TSS, identifying a total of 30,8470 putative enhancer regions. Notably, BAZ1B binds 75% of its targets at their enhancer regions (6747 genes), with the remaining 2297 targets bound at promoters (Fig. 3C). In addition, 40% of genes expressed in NC are bound by BAZ1B, either exclusively at enhancers (27.4%) or exclusively at promoters (3.5%) or at both regions (9%). This highlights its pervasiveness within the NC epigenome (Fig. 3C) and is also reflected in the key functional enrichments observed for the BAZ1B direct targets that are also expressed and that include axon guidance, tube development, dendrite development, outflow tract morphogenesis, odontogenesis, wound healing, and endochondral bone morphogenesis (Fig. 3D). Many of the phenomena captured by these GO categories (e.g., odontogenesis and endochondral bone morphogenesis) are linked to recent changes in the bone structure of modern (versus archaic) humans, with Homo sapiens having characteristically smaller teeth than its extinct relatives.

Last and consistent with the enrichments in NC-defining categories uncovered above, the analysis of BAZ1B bound regions revealed major convergence with the binding motifs of critical NC regulators, including two motifs similar to those of TFAP2A and NEUROG2, and one equally associated to TAL1, TCF12, AP4, and ASCL1 (Fig. 3E and text S1A). Thus, BAZ1B binding regions are enriched for target sites of major regulators of NC and its neural derivatives (38, 39), among which TFAP2A stands out given its core role in neural border formation and NC induction and differentiation (40) through the binding and stabilization of NC-specific enhancers, in concert with NR2F1, NR2F2, and EP300 (41).

Last, we identified 81 regions that are quantitatively bound by BAZ1B depending on its copy number (FDR < 0.1) (Fig. 3F), 153 regions differentially bound concordantly in WBS and 7dupASD compared to control and atWBS samples (FDR < 0.1) (fig. S4A), and 176 and 25 regions differentially bound preferentially in WBS (fig. S4B) and 7dupASD (FDR < 0.1) (fig. S4C), respectively.

Given the prominence of its binding to distal regulatory regions, we then set out to define the BAZ1B dosagedependent impact on NCSC-specific enhancers by integrating H3K27ac, H3K4me1, H3K27me3, and H3K4me3 profiles. We thus performed a regression analysis on BAZ1B levels for the distribution of the three histone marks in the aforementioned regions and found H3K27ac to be the most affected, with 7254 genes differentially acetylated at their enhancers, followed by a differential distribution of the H3K4me1 (4048) and H3K27me3 (2136) marks (fig. S4D). This enabled the overlay of epigenomic and transcriptomic profiles, uncovering that among the 1192 DEGs identified in the regression RNA-seq analysis, 21.3% (257 of 1192) are associated to enhancers that are both bound by BAZ1B and differentially H3K27-acetylated in a manner concordant with BAZ1B levels (fig. S4E), with a stronger overlap for genes whose expression is inversely correlated with BAZ1B levels (160 versus 97). The same held for DEGs that have a concordant differential distribution of H3K4me1 mark at enhancers (123 versus 55), underscoring the consistency of the impact of BAZ1B dosage on distal regulation (fig. S4F). In contrast, a lower number of genes (36) showed a concordant differential distribution of the H3K27me3 mark and, at the same time, were bound by BAZ1B at enhancers (fig. S4G), indicating that BAZ1B preferentially affects active chromatin. From this integrative analysis, we could thus lastly identify a core set of 30 bona fide direct targets of BAZ1B, which are genes whose expression tightly follows BAZ1B levels and whose enhancers are bound by BAZ1B and clearly differentially modified (Fig. 3G, fig. S4H, and text S1B). Together, this first dosage-faithful analysis of BAZ1B occupancy in a diverse cohort of human NCSCs establishes its pervasive and mostly distal targeting of the NC-specific epigenome, with a preferential activator role on the critical transcriptional circuits that define NC fate and function.

Mild NC deficits have been put forth as a unifying explanatory framework for the defining features of the so-called domestication syndrome, with BAZ1B listed among the putative underlying genes because of its previously reported role in the NC of model organisms (5, 10, 11). The recent observation that its expression is affected by domestication-related mobile element insertion methylation in gray wolves (12) further supported its role in domestication, offering an intriguing parallel to the paleogenomic results that had detected BAZ1B within the regions of the modern genome reflective of selective sweeps and found it enriched for putatively regulatory mutations in AMHs (15).

Having defined the molecular circuits through which BAZ1B regulates NC, and since NC changes have been implicated in the domestication syndrome (5), since craniofacial differences correlate with self-domestication (1), and since 7q11.23 dosage-related craniofacial differences in humans relate to the H. sapiens versus Neanderthal comparison (fig. S1A), we set out to test the role of BAZ1B dosage in the differences between modern and archaic humans. For this, we carried out a systematic integrative analysis of the overlaps between our empirically defined BAZ1B dosagesensitive genes (blue Venn in Fig. 4B) and a combination of uniquely informative datasets highlighting differences between modern humans and archaics (Neanderthals/Denisovans) (represented in Fig. 4A by skulls illustrating the more gracile and juvenile profile in AMH relative to Neanderthals visible in the overall shape of the neurocranium, reduced prognathism, brow ridges, and nasal projections) (1, 1315). Specifically, as shown in Fig. 4B, these datasets include (i) genes associated with signals of positive selection in the modern branch compared to archaic lineages (purple Venn) (13, 14); (ii) genes harboring (nearly) fixed mutations in moderns versus archaics (pink Venn); and (iii) genes associated with signals of positive selection in the four paradigmatic domesticated species dog, cat, cattle, and horse (1) (orange Venn), to reveal statistically significant overlaps between them and genes associated with signals of positive selection in the modern branch compared to archaic lineages. In turn, the list of genes harboring (nearly) fixed mutations in moderns versus archaics contains three classes: (i) genes harboring high-frequency changes (15), (ii) genes harboring high-frequency missense mutations (red barplot), and (iii) genes enriched for high-frequency mutations in regulatory regions (green barplot) [data based on (15)] (Fig. 4C). As shown in the barplots, the obviously very limited number of high-quality coverage archaic genomes available results in a much higher number of nearly fixed changes identified in archaics (left/negative side of the plot) versus modern humans (right side) (Fig. 4C), setting a comparatively much higher threshold for the identification of nearly fixed modern changes.

(A) Archaic (Neanderthal) and modern skulls, illustrating the target domesticated phenotype that was captured by our analysis. Skull images were derived from work under a CC BY-SA 2.0 license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/deed.en) by hairymuseummatt. (B) Overlap between BAZ1B levelsensitive genes and datasets, which bring out differences between AMHs and archaics, as well as genes under positive selection in modern humans and domesticates. (C) Barplots showing the occurrence of high-frequency changes, missense mutations, and mutations in regulatory regions in genes from the AMH (nearly) fixed mutation dataset (pink Venn in B). (D) Heat map representing the amount of overlaps for each list selected from (B). Gene overlaps and detailed list descriptions are reported in table S2. (E) Rendering of a typical WBS face (left) against the background of a typical modern face (right). Red segments indicate areas of the lower face where the two faces most sharply depart (nose, philtrum, and lower front of the mandible). The lower midface region is most often associated with mutations in genes figuring prominently in our intersections, as discussed in the text and table S3.

These analyses are visualized in Fig. 4D (and detailed in tables S2 and S3) through a matrix that intersects all BAZ1B dosagedependent genes (partitioned in the two categories of directly and inversely correlated and ordered across the full range of biological significance and regulatory proximity, from simply DEGs to bona fide direct targets) with the evolutionary changes underlying domestication and self-domestication, yielding the following key insights (color coded for degree of overlap and marked for significance in hypergeometric tests). First, the most significant pattern was obtains at the intersection with the top 10% genes showing an excess of (nearly) fixed mutations in the regulatory regions of modern humans compared to archaics, across both directly and inversely BAZ1B leveldependent genes (table S2). This same category of nearly fixed modern regulatory changes is also the only one that returns a statistically significant overlap with the most stringent core of BAZ1B dosagedependent targets (i.e., DEGs whose enhancers are both directly bound by BAZ1B and differentially marked upon its decrease), demonstrating that BAZ1B directly controls, in an exquisitely dosage-dependent manner, this coherent and particularly relevant set of genes that underwent regulatory changes in human evolution. Second, the overall strongest overlaps map to the class of genes that are inversely correlated to BAZ1B levels, which we found to be strongly and specifically enriched for head morphogenesis and NC categories (Fig. 2C), thereby confirming craniofacial morphogenesis as the key domain of functionally relevant overlap between BAZ1B dosage and (self-) domestication changes relevant to the evolution of AMHs. Third, despite the spuriously inflated number of apparently fixed mutations in archaics (15), the overall extent of overlap between genes affected by BAZ1B dosage and our modern and archaic sets does not reveal significantly more hits for archaics. Globally, we found consistently more overlapping genes between the BAZ1B targets and the modern human data and even no statistically significant overlap for any list of the archaic-specific mutations when crossed against genes directly correlated to BAZ1B level. We find this noteworthy, given the evidence that the Neanderthal face also displays derived characteristics (42) that could be the result of modifications of genes that could overlap with those highlighted in this work. Last, the (lower) midface emerges as a particularly salient area of functionally relevant overlap (as illustrated in Fig. 4E and detailed in table S3), given the specific genes that our analysis unearthed: (i) COL11A1, one of the few craniofacial genes highlighted across domestication studies (dog, house sparrow, and pig breeds), which lies in a region of the human genome that resisted archaic introgression (13) and is associated with Marshall syndrome; (ii) XYLT1, one of the five genes (along with ACAN, SOX9, COL2A1, and NFIX) that affect lower and midfacial protrusion, are among the top differentially methylated genes compared to archaics and were also highlighted in a recent study on regulatory changes that shaped the modern human facial and vocal anatomy (tables S1 and S3) (43); and (iii) NFIB, which belongs to the same gene family as NFIX and shares some of its functions. In sum, the direct and dosage-sensitive control by BAZ1B of genes that underwent regulatory changes in human evolution and whose altered expression underlies neurocristopathic facial dysmorphisms is consistent with the hypothesis of mild neurocristopathy as the mechanistic core selected in the self-domestication of the modern human face.

As recently reconstructed (3), the idea of human self-domestication dates back, at least in terms of scientific record, to Johann Friedrich Blumenbach at the onset of the 19th century. Following on his seminal account of domestication systematized in Variations of Animals and Plants under Domestication (44), Charles Darwin also considered the analogy between modern humans and domesticated species in The Descent of Man (45), yet his emphasis on controlled breeding as a key aspect of domestication led him to frame domestication and self-domestication as distinct phenomena and thereby leave Blumenbachs intuition largely undeveloped (46). Since then, the possibility that the anatomical and cognitive-behavioral hallmarks of AMHs could result from an evolutionary process bearing such significant similarities to the domestication of animals as to share the same underlying cause has been refined into the full-fledged self-domestication hypothesis (1, 2). As recently argued (1, 3), convergent lines of evidence also indicate that self-domestication is temporally aligned with the emergence of AMH, although the process may have acquired further momentum with the gradual expansion of our species (1, 3). However, despite spurring considerable interest, the self-domestication hypothesis has thus far failed to marshal conclusive evidence largely because of two factors: (i) the lack of a coherent explanation, even at a theoretical level, of what developmental and genetic mechanisms could underlie domestication in general and (ii) the absence of suitable experimental systems in which those mechanisms could be specifically tested in the case of human self-domestication. The first problem was tackled by the recent proposition of mild NC deficits as a central and unifying functional layer underlying domestication (5). This constituted a major conceptual advance, particularly because it generated the testable hypothesis of an altered NC gene expression program in domesticated species relative to their wild-type ancestors. For humans, given the obvious lack of gene expression data from archaic hominins, we reasoned that this hypothesis could be verified by examining the genetic changes between archaic and modern humans in light of the gene regulatory networks directly inferred from human neurocristopathies. We thus set out to test whether specific human neurodevelopmental disorders, carefully selected on the basis of both craniofacial and cognitive-behavioral traits relevant to domestication, could illuminate the regulatory circuits shaping the modern human face and hence be harnessed for an empirical validation of the self-domestication hypothesis. Specifically, we reasoned that WBS and 7dupASD, through their uniquely informative set of symmetrically opposite phenotypes at the level of face morphology (fig. S1A) and sociality, constituted a paradigmatic test case to probe the heuristic potential of neurodevelopmental disease modeling for the experimental understanding of human evolution. The following key insights confirm the validity of this approach.

First, we identified the 7q11.23 region BAZ1B gene as a master regulator of the modern human face on the basis of a molecular and functional dissection in the thus far largest cohort of WBS patient and 7dupASD patientspecific NCSCs and across an exhaustive range of BAZ1B dosages. Notably, our cohort also included NCSCs from a patient with rare WBS featuring a much milder WBS gestalt and harboring an atypical, BAZ1B-sparing deletion that served as a particularly informative control, as confirmed by the clustering of atypical NCSC lines with controls when probed for BAZ1B occupancy. In particular, exploiting the fine-grained resolution of BAZ1B dosages recapitulated in our cohort, we could couple classical pairwise comparisons with a more sophisticated regression analysis on BAZ1B levels, thereby revealing major BAZ1B dosagedependent transcriptional alterations pivoting around clusters of pathways that are crucial for NC development and maintenance, as well as for its downstream skeletal and cardiac outputs.

Second, we repurposed the versatility of CRISPR-Cas9 to generate an allelic series of endogenously tagged BAZ1B across 7q11.23 dosages (including the BAZ1B-sparing atypical patient as uniquely relevant control) to define its dosage-dependent genome-wide occupancy. Taking advantage of previous extensive work on the NCSC chromatin landscape (41, 4749), we were able to define a pivotal role for BAZ1B in NCSC enhancer regulation, consistent with its preferential binding of distal regulatory regions, and to partition its dosage-dependent regulation into bona fide direct and indirect targets. The overall balance between the numbers of genes up- or down-regulated upon BAZ1B KDtogether with the greater overlap, sheer size, and significance of enrichments in chromatin remodeling categories over other domains of transcription regulationfurther corroborates the inclusion of BAZ1B among the factors acting upstream of enhancer and promoter modulations to enable or reinforce rather than specify their net outcome. Last, this molecular readout was translated to the functional level with the definition of an impairment in both NCSC migration and outgrowth from EBs upon decrease in BAZ1B, providing the first validation of BAZ1B involvement in key functions of the developing human NC.

Third, our investigation provides the first experimental evidence for the neurocristopathic hypothesis that had been put forth to explain the domestication syndrome and had pointed to BAZ1B as one of the candidates underlying this syndrome (5). Among the key NC hubs affected by BAZ1B dosage, we uncovered three additional critical genesEDN3, MAGOH, and ZEB2that had also been predicted in the same model because they are associated with behavioral changes found in domesticates, thereby defining a regulatory hierarchy for this coherent set of genes underlying domestication.

Last, the empirical determination of BAZ1B dosagesensitive genes in NC models from AMHs with accentuated domestication-relevant traits allowed us to expose, in a functionally relevant manner, the genetic differences between modern versus archaic. This brought to the fore the significant convergence between BAZ1B-dependent circuits and genes harboring regulatory changes in the human lineage, reinforcing the notion that regulatory regions contain some of the most significant changes relevant for the modern lineage. This is also reinforced by the recent identification of AMH-specific hypermethylation in the regulatory region of BAZ1B itself (43).

Last, it is noteworthy that genes implicated in NC development also play significant roles in the establishment of brain circuits that are critical for cognitive processes like language or theory of mind prominently affected in 7q11.23 syndromes. Among the genes downstream of BAZ1B that we uncovered in this study, FOXP2, ROBO1, and ROBO2 have long been implicated in brain wiring processes critical for vocal learning in several species (50, 51), including humans, and will warrant further mechanistic dissection in light of the distinctive linguistic profile of WBS individuals. In conclusion, our findings establish the heuristic power of neurodevelopmental disease modeling for the study of human evolution.

Ethics approvals were reported in the study that established the original iPSC cohort (16) and also apply to the additional samples included in this study (7dupASD3 and CTL4R).

WBS1, WBS2, WBS3, WBS4, 7dupASD1, atWBS1, and CTL2 fibroblasts were reprogrammed using the mRNA Reprogramming Kit (Stemgent), while the 7dupASD2 and CTL1R lines were reprogrammed with the microRNA Booster Kit (Stemgent). The CTL3 line was reprogrammed by transfection with the STEMCCA polycistronic lentiviral vector followed by Cre-mediated excision of the integrated polycistron. 7dupASD3 and CTL4R fibroblasts were reprogrammed using the Simplicon RNA Reprogramming Kit (Millipore).

Before differentiation, iPSC lines were cultured on Matrigel hESC-qualified Matrix (BD Biosciences)coated plates, diluted 1:40 in Dulbeccos minimum essential medium/F-12, and grown in mTeSR 1 medium (STEMCELL Technologies). They were passaged upon treatment with Accutase (Sigma-Aldrich) and then plated in mTeSR 1 medium supplemented with 5 M Y-27632 (Sigma-Aldrich).

Differentiation into NCSCs was performed as previously described (52), with the exception of NCSCs used in the experiment reported in Fig. 1 (D and E) (19).

NCSCs were detached using Accutase and counted, and 1 106 cells per experimental condition were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde and then blocked in 10% bovine serum albumin. Cells were incubated for 1 hour with primary antibodies conjugated to fluorophores (HNK1fluorescein isothiocyanate and nerve growth factor receptorAlex Fluor 647; BD Biosciences). Analyses were performed on a FACSCalibur instrument (BD Biosciences), and data were analyzed with FCS express software (Tree Star). Fluorescence-activated cell sorting characterization for 7dupASD3 and CTL4R lines is reported in fig. S1B; for all the other lines, see (16).

BAZ1B KD was performed using validated pLKO.1 TRC vector TRCN0000013338 (referred to as sh1) and TRCN0000013341 (referred to as sh2). A pLKO.1 TRC vector containing a scrambled short hairpin sequence was used as a negative control.

Second generation lentiviral vectors were produced through calcium phosphate transfection of human embryonic kidney 293T cells and ultracentrifugation (2 hours, 20C, 20,000 rpm).

NCSCs (3 to 4 105) were infected upon splitting and then selected by adding puromycin (1 g/ml) to the medium.

RNA was extracted using the RNeasy Micro Plus Kit (QIAGEN) according to the manufacturers instructions. Retrotranscribed cDNA was obtained from 0.5 to 1 g of total RNA using the SuperScript VILO retrotranscription kit (Thermo Fisher Scientific).

Real-time qPCR was performed on a 7500 Fast Real-Time PCR system (Applied Biosystems) using SYBR Green Master Mix (Applied Biosystems) as the detecting reagent. A total cDNA amount corresponding to 15 ng of starting RNA was used for each reaction. Each sample was analyzed in triplicate and normalized to GAPDH. Relative mRNA quantity was calculated by the comparative cycle threshold (Ct) method using the formula 2Ct [BAZ1B, CCTCGCAGTAAGAAAGCAAAC (forward) and ACTCATCCAGCTCCTTTTGAC (reverse); GAPDH, GCACCGTCAAGGCTGAGAAC (forward) and AGGGATCTCGCTCCTGGAA (reverse); NR2F1, AGAAGCTCAAGGCGCTACAC (forward) and GGGTACTGGCTCCTCACGTA (reverse); NR2F2, GCAAGTGGAGAAGCTCAAGG (forward) and GCTTTCCACATGGGCTACAT (reverse); TFAP2A, GCCTCTCGCTCCTCAGCTCC (forward) and CGTTGGCAGCTTTACGTCTCCC (reverse); and SOX9, AGTACCCGCACTTGCACAAC (forward) and GTAATCCGGGTGGTCCTTCT (reverse)].

Library preparation for RNA-seq was performed according to the TruSeq Total RNA sample preparation protocol (Illumina), starting from 250 ng to 1 g of total RNA. cDNA library quality was assessed in an Agilent 2100 Bioanalyzer using the High Sensitivity DNA Kit. Libraries were sequenced with the Illumina HiSeq machine at a read length of 50base pair (bp) paired end and a coverage of 35 million of reads per sample.

NCSCs were lysed in radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer [10 mM tris (pH 8.0), 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS, 140 mM NaCl, and 1 mM EDTA] supplemented with protease inhibitor cocktail (Sigma-Aldrich) and 0.5 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (Sigma-Aldrich) for 1 hour at 4C.

Protein extracts (30 to 50 g per sample) were supplemented with NuPAGE LDS sample buffer (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and 50 mM dithiothreitol (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and denatured at 95C for 3 min. Then, extracts were run on a precast NuPAGE 4 to 12% bis-tris Gel (Thermo Fisher Scientific) in NuPAGE MOPS SDS Running Buffer (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and transferred to a 0.45-m nitrocellulose membrane (GE Healthcare) for 1 hour at 100 V in a buffer containing 20% absolute ethanol and 10% 0.25 M tris base and 1.9 M glycine. The membranes were blocked in TBST [50 mM tris (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, and 0.1% Tween 20] and 5% milk for 1 hour, incubated with primary antibodies overnight at 4C and with secondary antibodies for 1 hour at room temperature. Primary [BAZ1B (Abcam) and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH; Millipore)] and secondary antibodies were diluted in TBST and 5% milk. Blots were detected with the ECL Prime Western Blotting Detection Reagents (Sigma-Aldrich) and scanned using the ChemiDoc system (Bio-Rad).

Cells (5 104 to 7 104) were plated in each of the two Matrigel-coated wells of silicone culture-inserts (Ibidi) attached to six-well culture plates. After 24 hours, the insert was removed, medium was changed to remove dead cells, and time lapse was performed for 24 hours at the rate of one image every 10 min at 10 magnification; each condition was analyzed in duplicate. Images were acquired with the BX61 upright microscope equipped with a motorized stage from Olympus or the Nikon Eclipse Ti inverted microscope equipped with a motorized stage from Nikon and analyzed with ImageJ.

iPSCs were pretreated with 10 M rho kinase inhibitor for 4 hours, and then 2 106 cells were electroporated using the Neon system with the Cas9/single-guide RNA ribonucleoprotein complex and the donor plasmid (synthesized by GeneArt). The donor plasmid contained three FLAG tags followed by a self-cleaving peptide (P2A) and a hygromycin resistance (HygroR). The 3xFLAG-P2A-HygroR cassette was flanked by BAZ1B-specific homology arms (5 HA and 3 HA) to promote homologous recombination and then subcloned into a bacterial backbone (Fig. 3A).

After 48 hours, iPSC medium was supplemented with hygromycin B (50 g/l), and selection medium was maintained for 15 days. Fifteen to 20 clones per iPSC line were then subjected to PCR to (i) evaluate the presence of the cassette and the insertion in the correct genomic locus and (ii) distinguish heterozygously tagged from homozygously tagged clones (fig. S3A). We could isolate a clone with a homozygous integration from the CTL, the atWBS, and the typical WBS but not from the 7dupASD line. In the 7dupASD clone, the FLAG tag was present in two of three copies, as shown by a digital PCR analysis (fig. S3B).

DNA (60 ng) was amplified in a reaction volume containing the following reagents: QuantStudio 3D Digital PCR Master Mix v2 (Thermo Fisher Scientific), Custom TaqMan Copy Number Assays SM 20 FAM labeled (Thermo Fisher Scientific), and TaqMan Copy Number Reference Assay 20 (Thermo Fisher Scientific) VIC labeled (Thermo Fisher Scientific). The mix was loaded on a chip using the QuantStudio 3D Digital PCR Chip Loader. The chips were then loaded on the ProFlex PCR System (Thermo Fisher Scientific), and data were analyzed using the QuantStudio 3D AnalysisSuite Cloud Software. The entire process was performed by the qPCR Service at Cogentech, Milano [Custom (FLAG) TaqMan Copy Number Assays: forward primer, TGGACAGTCCAGAGGACGAA; reverse primer, CACCCTTGTCGTCATCGTCTT; and probe, FAMACAGAAGAAGGACTACAAAGACG and TaqMan Copy Number Reference Assay: TERT (VIC) (catalog number 4403316)].

Approximately 2 105 cells were used (~100 g of chromatin) for histone mark IP, and 1 mg of chromatin was used for BAZ1B-FLAG IP. Cells were fixed with phosphate-buffered saline, containing 1% formaldehyde (Sigma-Aldrich), for 10 min to cross-link proteins and DNA, when the reaction was then stopped by adding 125 mM glycine for 5 min. Cells were lysed with SDS buffer containing 100 mM NaCl, 50 mM tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 5 mM EDTA (pH 8.0), and 10% SDS, at which point chromatin pellets were resuspended in IP buffer containing 1 volume of SDS buffer and 0.5 volume of Triton dilution buffer [100 mM tris-HCl (pH 8.5), 5 mM EDTA (pH 8.0), and 5% Triton X-100]. Chromatin was then sonicated using the S220 Focused-ultrasonicator (Covaris) to generate <300 bp DNA fragments (for histone mark IPs) or the Branson Digital Sonifier to generate 500 to 800 bp DNA fragments (for BAZ1B-FLAG IP).

Sonicated chromatin was incubated overnight at 4C with primary antibodies [H3K27ac (Abcam), H3K4me1 (Abcam), H3K4me3 (Abcam), H3K27me3 (Cell Signaling Technology), and FLAG (Sigma-Aldrich)] and then for 3 hours with Dynabeads Protein G (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Beads were washed three times with low-salt wash buffer [0.1% SDS, 1% Triton X-100, 2 mM EDTA, 20 mM tris-HCl (pH 8.0), and 150 mM NaCl] and once with high-salt wash buffer [0.1% SDS, 1% Triton X-100, 2 mM EDTA, 20 mM tris-HCl (pH 8.0), and 500 mM NaCl]. Immunocomplexes were eluted in decross-linking buffer (1% SDS and 100 mM NaHCO3) at 65C for 2 hours. DNA was purified using QIAquick PCR columns (QIAGEN) and quantified with a Qubit dsDNA HS assay kit (Thermo Fisher Scientific). DNA libraries were prepared by the sequencing facility at European Institute of Oncology according to the protocol described by Blecher-Gonen and colleagues (53), and DNA was sequenced on the Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform. For the FLAG ChIP, samples were run in duplicate.

RNA-seq data were quantified using Salmon 0.91 to calculate read counts and transcripts per million in a transcript- and gene-wise fashion, using the quasi-mapping offline algorithm (54) on the GRCh38 (National Center for Biotechnology Information) database. edgeR was used for differential gene expression analysis (DEA), using generalized linear regression methods, to identify pattern of differential expression following two different schemes:

1) A factorial analysis based on the definition of one group of scrambled and one group of KD samples to identify genes dysregulated similarly across short hairpins characterized by different efficiencies.

2) A numerical analysis in which log-normalized [Trimmed Mean of M-values (TMM)] BAZ1B levels, as quantified by RNA-seq, was used as independent variable.

All analyses were performed dropping individual variations (~individual+KD or ~individual+BAZ1B) to account for the genetic background of each individual. In particular, this design is expected to permit the identification of genes, which change expression level upon KD even in situations in which genotype-specific makeups would lead BAZ1B-dependent genes to have unique expression levels in scramble lines. In the factorial analysis, DEGs were identified and characterized by filtering for fold change (FC) > 1.25 and FDR < 0.05 unless explicitly indicated.

To our knowledge, performing a regression analysis at a gene-specific level has never been performed. We were able to do this because of the availability of a large set of samples (11 individuals) and because of the two short hairpins robustly respectively reducing BAZ1B expression levels, respectively by ~40 and ~70% in all individuals lines. To validate the quality of our numerical differential expression analysis, we took advantage of HipSci data (55, 56) and iPSCpoweR tools (29). We took 50 of 105 possible combinations of 13 random individual RNA-seq data from the healthy HipSci cohort, representing both sexes and having at least two technical replicates per individual. Unfortunately, HipSci does not contain at least 13 individuals with three clones per individual. Thus, we performed four alternative DEAs with edgeR (table S4) on the 50 different random combinations of 13 individuals identified (200 DEAs in total, on 22 samples, two clones per individual), using the same model matrix used for the regression analysis (~individual+BAZ1B) and using BAZ1B levels of scramble and sh2 lines. All analyses identified very low number of spurious DEGs (fig. S2E). Thus, we used the Edg2 pipeline (table S4) because it does not discard genes with higher variability (Edg2 and Edg4 versus Edg1 and Edg3), and it is based on a better suited algorithm (Edg2 versus Edg4). With our model matrix, filtering by P < 0.01 (and FDR < 0.25), using Edg2 on a random HipSci data, we obtained an average of 93.32 DEGs (on average) with a median equal to 43 (table S5). GO enrichments were performed using topGO R package version 2.28.0.

Master regulatory analysis was performed via hypergeometric test by measuring gene set enrichments in lists of transcription factor targets provided by the TFBS tools database (57). Both GO and transcription factor enrichment analyses were performed considering background genes expressed in at least two samples in our NCSC cohort.

ChIP-seq experiments were analyzed both qualitatively and quantitatively. Reads were trimmed with the FASTX-Toolkit (-Q33 -t 20 -l 22), aligned with Bowtie 1.0 (-v 2 -m 1) on the Human hg38 reference genome, and peaks were called using MACS 2.1.1. H3K4me1, H3K27ac, H3K4me3, and H3K27me3 peaks were called with --broad using default parameters and q < 0.05.

Qualitative analysis, including intersection and comparison of bed files, was performed using BedTools version 2.23.

To define enhancer regions, we intersected those marked by H3K4me1 and H3K27ac in at least two samples, discarded regions with H3K4me3 in at least two samples, and discarded regions overlapping with TSS. Motif enrichment was performed by using HOMER v4.10.

Quantification of reads per region was performed with DeepTools 3.0.2. Differential mark deposition was conducted by means of edgeR 3.24.1 inside R 3.3.3. To define mark deposition following BAZ1B levels, we used the same design as for RNA-seq data (~individual+BAZ1B).

To identify BAZ1B bound regions and to avoid losing identification of lowly covered regions, we resorted to (i) aggregation of all sample aligned reads and (ii) peak calling with MACS2 using extsize 800 and q < 0.25. BAZ1B binding coverage was calculated with DeepTools, with the same parameters used for histone marks, on the identified peak regions. Differentially bound regions were identified with edgeR.

The archaic/modern lists were generated from the material presented in (15). We used high-coverage genotypes for three archaic individuals: one Denisovan (58), one Neanderthal from the Denisova cave in Altai mountains (59), and another Neanderthal from Vindija cave, Croatia (60). The data are publicly available at http://cdna.eva.mpg.de/neandertal/Vindija/VCF/, with the human genome version hg19 as reference. High-frequency (HF) differences were defined as positions where more than 90% of present-day humans carry a derived allele, while at least the Denisovan and one Neanderthal carry the ancestral allele. High-frequency changes in archaics were defined as occurring at less than 1% in present-day humans, while at least two archaic individuals carry the derived allele. The HF lists used here were examined as presented in (15), with the exception of the HF lists in regulatory regions, which were extracted from the same dataset but not presented as such in the original paper.

Supplementary material for this article is available at http://advances.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/5/12/eaaw7908/DC1

Fig. S1. BAZ1B KD validation in iPSC-derived NCSCs and evaluation of its impact on NCSC migration.

Fig. S2. BAZ1B KD affects the transcriptome of iPSC-derived NCSCs.

Fig. S3. Generation of BAZ1B-FLAG iPSC lines and differentiation to NCSCs.

Fig. S4. BAZ1B KD induces a significant chromatin remodeling at distal regions.

Text S1A. Detailed description of HOMER motif enrichments performed on BAZ1B ChIP-seq data.

Text S1B. List of key direct targets of BAZ1B involved in neural- and NC-related development and relevant associated literature.

Table S1. Genes relevant for NC and NC-derived features whose expression follows BAZ1B levels.

Table S2A. Significant genes in human evolution.

Table S2B. Regulatory excess in archaic humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2C. Mutation excess in archaic humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2D. Regulatory changes (exclusive) in archaic humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2E. Missense mutations in archaic humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2F. Mutation excess in archaic humans corrected for length, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2G. Regulatory excess in modern humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2H. Mutation excess in modern humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2I. Regulatory changes (exclusive) in modern humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2J. Missense mutations in modern humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2K. Mutation excess in modern humans corrected for length, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2L. Genes under positive selection in domesticated animals, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2M. Genes under positive selection from Peyrgne et al. (13) in modern humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S2N. Genes under positive selection from Racimo (14) in modern humans, overlap with BAZ1B targets.

Table S3. Crucial genes identified in the overlap between BAZ1B datasets and archaic versus modern human datasets reported in this study.

Table S4. Alternative differential expression analysis functions tested with iPSCpower to assess the efficacy of our design matrix (~individual+BAZ1B). R code provided.

Table S5. Number of genes differentially expressed following BAZ1B data in our numerical analysis compared to an analysis conducted on randomized HipSci data, using Edg2 function (see table S4).

References (6189)

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Dosage analysis of the 7q11.23 Williams region identifies BAZ1B as a major human gene patterning the modern human face and underlying...

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Global Stem Cell Banking Market: Growth Drivers

Development of improved facilities for storage of stem cells has played an integral role in driving market demand. Furthermore, the unprecedented demand for improved analysis of regenerative medications has also created new opportunities within the global stem cell banking market. Medical research has attracted investments from global investors and stakeholders. The tremendous level of resilience shown by biological researchers to develop stem cell samples has aided market growth. Henceforth, the total volume of revenues within the global stem cell banking market is slated to multiply.

Commercialization of stem cell banks has emerged as matter of concern for the healthcare industry. However, this trend has also helped in easy storage and procurement of cells stored during the yester years of children. Presence of sound procedures to register at stem cell banks, and the safety offered by these entities, has generated fresh demand within the global market. New regional territories are opening to the idea of stem cell banking. Several factors are responsible for the growth of this trend. Primarily, improvements in stem cell banking can have favourable impact on the growth of the healthcare industry. Moreover, the opportunities for revenue generation associated with the development of functional stem cell banks has aided regional market growth.

The global stem cell banking market is segmented on the basis of:

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Stem Cell Banking Market expected to Witness a Sustainable Growth over 2028 - VaporBlash

Stem Cell Media Market 2019 Global Industry Insights, Innovations, Key Players Analysis, Growth Strategies and Forecast Analysis 2019 & 2026|…

This new research report that entirely centers Global Stem Cell Media Market 2019 is an exhaustive analysis of driving forces, risks, challenges, threats, and business opportunities, involved in the Stem Cell Media market. It offers conclusive specks of the market such as major leading players, market size over the forecast period of eight years, segmentation analysis, market share, current market trends, movements and major geographical regions involved. The report includes a comprehensive market study and competitors landscape with the addition of a SWOT study of the leading vendors.

This report analysis also studies the product and business strategy of some of the key vendors in the market. Considering the segmentation in the Stem Cell Media market, key vendors in the market are highlighting mergers and collaborations and advancing their supply chains.

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Stem Cell Media market regional Analysis

The global Stem Cell Media market is fragmented across the globe which not only includes the market of North America but covers the other regions such as Europe, the Asia Pacific, South America, and the Middle East.

North American countries, especially the U.S. and Canada represent noteworthy growth in this market. Similarly, Western European regions are also ahead in influencing the global markets.

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Stem Cell Media Market 2019 Global Industry Insights, Innovations, Key Players Analysis, Growth Strategies and Forecast Analysis 2019 & 2026|...

Adult Stem Cells- Global Healthcare Research and Survey with Key Participants Celyad, Cytori Therapeutics Inc. – Planet InfoWar

Market Research Explorepublished an explanatory study on theGlobal Adult Stem Cells Marketto illuminate the structure of the market, the performance of rival firms, and segment that approaches Adult Stem Cells buyers in a wiser way. The report precisely evaluates the market size, share, revenue, profitability, and development rate over the last five years and provides reliable forecasts to prompt clients to operate their Adult Stem Cells business accordingly. An intense study of the historical, present, and forthcoming status of the market made the report more eloquent and prudent.

Increased spending and utilization of the Adult Stem Cells across the world are boosting the market to exhibit a growing CAGR during the forecast period. Similarly, rising disposable incomes, product awareness, technological advancements, product innovations, and market stability also generate profitability in the global Adult Stem Cells market. The market has been performing with a growing development rate over the last decade. It is expected to grow even better in the near future.

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Adult Stem Cells manufacturers are also executing superior activities in the market to gain a considerable revenue share. They are performing several tasks such as product research, innovation, developments, and technology adoptions to deliver more effective products/services in the industry. The report further highlights their business strategies including mergers, acquisitions, partnerships, as well as product launches, and brand promotions that help clients to gain extensive comprehension of market positions, strengths, and weaknesses of their rivals.

Leading companies operating in the Global Adult Stem Cells Market are:

Cellular Dynamics International, Celyad, Cytori Therapeutics Inc., Intellicell Biosciences Inc., International Stem Cell Corp., Gamida Cell Ltd., Biotime Inc., Juventas Therapeutics Inc., Caladrius Biosciences Inc., Brainstorm Cell Therapeutics Inc., Mesoblast Ltd., Beike Biotechnology Co. Ltd., Cellerix Sa

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Adult Stem Cells types, applications, regions, and technologies are leading segments of the global Adult Stem Cells industry. The report enfolds detailed delineation of these segments based on their revenue, development prospects, production, demand, and market size. The referred segmentation analysis also covers extensive regional analysis considering major regions such as North America, Europe, Middle East & Africa, South America, Asia, and significant countries from the rest of the world.

Get detailed explanation with TOC:https://www.marketresearchexplore.com/report/global-adult-stem-cells-industry-market-research-report/173055#toc

Moreover, the report highlights current and forthcoming market opportunities and challenges and prompts clients to convert them into lucrative business gains. Potential market threats, risks, obstacles, and uncertainties were also discovered in the report in order to help market players in lowering possible losses. The global Adult Stem Cells industry environment is also illuminated in the report alongside a profound evaluation of provincial market regulations, policies, trade frameworks, international trade disputes as well as social, political, financial, and atmospheric concerns that may harm Adult Stem Cells market profitability.

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Adult Stem Cells- Global Healthcare Research and Survey with Key Participants Celyad, Cytori Therapeutics Inc. - Planet InfoWar

Stem Cell Source Market 2019, Trend, CAGR Status, Growth, Analysis and Forecast to 2024 – VaporBlash

As per the Researchunt market industry research Global Stem Cell Source market, global industry analysis, trend, size, share, growth in the database. This industrial research report presents all the valuable information related to the particular product for the Stem Cell Source market with highly enlightening format.

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The Report gives an idea about market rate, size at the global level. The experts use the various methodology and analytical technique such as SWOT analysis to guess market growth, Global Stem Cell Source market report also focuses on different rules and policies introduced by the administration, Global Stem Cell Source market report present the market regarding information like the technology used, consumer application part, etc.

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The key manufacturing in the Stem Cell Source:-

Market size split by type:-

Market size split by application:-

Market size split by regions:-

Abstract

Research goal:

To split the breakdown data by type, organization, and application

To analyze the challenging developments like agreements, new product launches.

To research the Global Stem Cell Source status and future forecast in the US, china involving value, sale, and growth rate.

Global Stem Cell Source market value and volume data for each segment.

Global Stem Cell Source market report mentions key financial information, recent development, SWOT analysis by the major market players.

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Stem Cell Source Market 2019, Trend, CAGR Status, Growth, Analysis and Forecast to 2024 - VaporBlash

Global Stem Cell Therapy Contract Manufacturing Market Research 2019-2030: Source of Stem Cells, Types of Stem Cells, Size of Contract Service…

DUBLIN, Dec. 3, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- The "Stem Cell Therapy Contract Manufacturing Market, 2019-2030" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The Stem Cell Therapies Contract Manufacturing Market, 2019 - 2030 report features an extensive study on contract service providers engaged in the development and manufacturing of stem cell therapies. The study features in-depth analyses, highlighting the capabilities of various stem cell therapy CMOs.

Advances in the fields of cell biology and regenerative medicine have led to the development of a variety of stem cell-based therapies for many cardiovascular, oncological, metabolic and musculoskeletal disorders. Driven by the revenues generated from stem cell therapies, the regenerative medicine market is anticipated to generate revenues worth USD 100 billion by 2030. With a promising pipeline of over 200 stem cell therapy candidates, it has become essential for developers to scale up the production of such therapeutic interventions. Given that stem cell therapy manufacturing requires highly regulated, state-of-the-art technologies, it is difficult for stakeholders to establish in-house expertise for large-scale manufacturing of stem cell therapies.

As a result, stem cell therapy developers have begun outsourcing their manufacturing operations to contract manufacturing organizations (CMOs). Specifically, small and mid-sized players in this sector tend to outsource a substantial proportion of clinical and commercial-scale manufacturing processes to contract service providers. In addition, even big pharma players, with established in-house capabilities, are gradually entering into long-term business relationships with CMOs in order to optimize resource utilization and manage costs.

According to a recent Nice Insight CDMO survey, about 55% of 700 respondents claimed to have collaborated with a contract service provider for clinical and commercial-scale product development requirements. Considering the prevalent trends, we believe that the stem cell therapy manufacturing market is poised to grow at a steady pace, driven by a robust pipeline of therapy candidates and technological advances aimed at mitigating challenges posed by conventional methods of production. Amidst tough competition, the availability of cutting-edge tools and technologies has emerged as a differentiating factor and is likely to grant a competitive advantage to certain CMOs over other players in the industry.

One of the key objectives of the report was to estimate the future size of the market. Based on parameters, such as increase in number of clinical studies, target patient population, anticipated adoption of stem cell therapies and expected variation in manufacturing costs, we have provided an informed estimate of the likely evolution of the market in the mid to long term, for the period 2019-2030.

Amongst other elements, the report includes:

In order to provide a detailed future outlook, our projections have been segmented on the basis of:

Key Topics Covered:

1. Preface

2. Executive Summary

3. Introduction

4. Market Overview

5. Regulatory Landscape

6. Stem Cell Therapy Contract Manufacturers In North America

7. Stem Cell Therapy Contract Manufacturers In Europe And Asia-Pacific

8. Partnerships And Collaboration

9. Contract Manufacturing Opportunity Assessment

10. Capacity Analysis

11. Demand Analysis

12. Market Forecast

13. Key Performance Indicators

14. Concluding Remark

15. Executive Insights

16. Appendix 1: Tabulated Data

17. Appendix 2: List Of Companies And Organizations

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/jwfp7v

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New Stem Cell Research Could Make Cancer Treatments affordable and Effective for Hospitals and Patients – PRNewswire

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 2, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -INTELLiSTEM Technologies, a pioneering research company revolutionizing stem cell medicine, is helping to create an affordable future for cancer therapies. Currentcancer cell therapies likeCAR T Cells cost between$350k (USD) and $500k (USD.)INTELLiSTEM expects its Super SentinelCells(SSCs) treatment to be priced between$30-$50k USD. This represents a massive difference in price for hospitals and patients paying or co-paying for their own treatments.

"Older generations of cell therapies require harvesting the cells from the patients, processing them, manufacturing them and then injecting them back into the patient," said Dr. Riam Shammaa, MD Founder and CEO of INTELLiSTEM."Most of those cells can't be grown in large quantities and are very difficult to manufacture, driving the cost way up. Our solution is based on genetically engineering 'off-the-shelf cells 'ready to inject directly into patients. Our cells are easy to grow into billions of cells to treat multiple patients and this drops the cost substantially."

According to Shammaa, the highcurrent cost of cell therapies likeCAR T Cells and dendriticcellsis not only unsustainable(causinga heavy financialburdenfor hospitals acrossNorth America) but is also making life-saving cancer therapies financially inaccessible to millions of patients.

INTELLiSTEM Researchers have created genetically engineered Super Sentinel Cells(SSC's) to effectively target Cancer cells.The SSC's are showing an unprecedented 80% success rate in animal models.The current success rate for existing Cancer cell therapy treatments is 20-40%.

INTELLiSTEM is currently moving into phase one of human trials with the SSC's within the next 12 months.

"We could see practical cures for specific Cancers in as little as 5-7 years," added Shammaa.

See animated video of SSC'shere high-resolution Images also available.

How does the treatment work?

Cancer cells are very good at hiding from the immune system. Essentially, the Super Sentinel Cells are the next generation of antigen-presentingcells, theyshow the immune system where the Cancer cells are hiding in a host and allow the immune system to kick in and attack/kill them.

What Cancers could this effectively treat?

Super Sentinel Cells have the capacity to targethematological and solid cancersdue to their ability to learn the signals and antigens of each cancer. Due to the massive task at hand and to accelerate the progression of multiple Cancer cures, INTELLiSTEM started collaborating with cancer centers across the United States and is also looking to collaborate with research institutions around the world to accelerate the accessibility of the therapy to patients. The SSC's are expected to be effective on solid tumors such as Breast Cancer,Lung Cancer, Melanoma, Prostate Cancer and Lymphomas.

How many treatments are required?

Animal models are showing that 80% of the tested animals survive after one treatment compared to 20% using availablecell therapiesand 0% without treatment, but Shammaa believes that 100% can be achieved with a second injection/treatment of Super Sentinel Cells.

SOURCE INTELLiSTEM Technologies

https://www.intellistemtech.com/

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New Stem Cell Research Could Make Cancer Treatments affordable and Effective for Hospitals and Patients - PRNewswire

Fat grafting improves range of motion in limbs damaged by radiation therapy – Yahoo Finance

A new study released today in STEM CELLS outlines how fat grafting - which previous studies have shown can reduce and even reverse fibrosis (scar tissue) buildup - also improves the range of motion of the affected limb. The study, conducted by researchers at Stanford University School of Medicine, was conducted on mice.

DURHAM, N.C., Dec. 3, 2019 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ --A new study released today in STEM CELLS outlines how fat grafting which previous studies have shown can reduce and even reverse fibrosis (scar tissue) buildup also improves the range of motion of the affected limb. The study, conducted by researchers at Stanford University School of Medicine, was conducted on mice.

The tumor-destroying capabilities of radiation therapy can be a life saver for a person suffering from cancer. But it's a therapy that has several unwanted side effects, too, including causing substantial damage not just to cancerous cells, but any healthy tissue in its path. Over time, fibrosis builds up in the treated area which, in the case of an arm, shoulder, or leg, for example, can lead to painful contractures that significantly limit extensibility and negatively impact the person's quality of life.

The Stanford team irradiated the right hind legs of subject mice, which resulted in chronic fibrosis and limb contracture. Four weeks later, the irradiated limbs of one group of the mice were injected with fat enriched with stromal vascular cells (SVCs). These potent cells already naturally exist in fat, but supplementation of fat with additional SVCs enhances its regenerative capabilities. A second group was injected with fat only, a third group with saline and a fourth group received no injections, for comparison. The animals' ability to extend their limb was then measured at baseline and every two weeks for a 12-week period. At the end of the 12 weeks, the hind limb skin underwent histological analysis and biomechanical strength testing.

"Each animal showed significant reduction in its limb extension ability due to the radiation, but this was progressively rescued by fat grafting," reported corresponding author Derrick C. Wan, M.D., FACS. Fat grafting also reduced skin stiffness and reversed the radiation-induced histological changes in the skin.

"The greatest benefits were found in mice injected with fat enriched with SVCs," Dr. Wan added. "SVCs are easily obtained through liposuction and can be coaxed into different tissue types, where they can support neovascularization, replace cells and repair injured issue.

"Our study showed the ability of fat to improve mobility as well as vascularity and appearance," he continued. "We think this holds enormous clinical potential especially given that adipose tissue is abundant and can be easily collected from the patients themselves and underscores an attractive approach to address challenging soft tissue fibrosis in patients following radiation therapy."

Furthermore, said co-author and world-renowned breast reconstructive expert Arash Momeni, M.D., FACS, "Our observations are potentially translatable to a variety of challenging clinical scenarios. Being able to reverse radiation-induced effects holds promise to substantially improve clinical outcomes in implant-based as well as autologous breast reconstruction. The study findings are indeed encouraging as they could offer patients novel treatment modalities for debility clinical conditions.

"Excessive scarring is a challenging problem that is associated with a variety of clinical conditions, such as burn injuries, tendon lacerations, etc. The potential to improve outcomes based on treatment modalities derived from our research is indeed exciting," Dr. Momeni added.

"Skin and soft tissue scarring and fibrosis are well-established problems after radiation. The current study, showing that human fat grafting can normalize the collagen networks and improve tissue elasticity in immune deficient mice, provides molecular evidence for how fat grafting functions," said Dr. Jan Nolta, Editor-in-Chief of STEM CELLS. "The studies indicate that, with the appropriate regulatory approvals, autologous fat grafting could potentially also help human patients recover from radiation-induced tissue fibrosis."

The full article, "Fat grafting rescues radiation-induced joint contracture," can be accessed at https://stemcellsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/stem.3115.

Story continues

About the Journal: STEM CELLS, a peer reviewed journal published monthly, provides a forum for prompt publication of original investigative papers and concise reviews. The journal covers all aspects of stem cells: embryonic stem cells/induced pluripotent stem cells; tissue-specific stem cells; cancer stem cells; the stem cell niche; stem cell epigenetics, genomics and proteomics; and translational and clinical research. STEM CELLS is co-published by AlphaMed Press and Wiley.

About AlphaMed Press: Established in 1983, AlphaMed Press with offices in Durham, NC, San Francisco, CA, and Belfast, Northern Ireland, publishes three internationally renowned peer-reviewed journals with globally recognized editorial boards dedicated to advancing knowledge and education in their focused disciplines. STEM CELLS (http://www.StemCells.com) is the world's first journal devoted to this fast paced field of research. THE ONCOLOGIST (http://www.TheOncologist.com) is devoted to community and hospital-based oncologists and physicians entrusted with cancer patient care. STEM CELLS TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE (http://www.StemCellsTM.com) is dedicated to significantly advancing the clinical utilization of stem cell molecular and cellular biology. By bridging stem cell research and clinical trials, SCTM will help move applications of these critical investigations closer to accepted best practices.

About Wiley: Wiley, a global company, helps people and organizations develop the skills and knowledge they need to succeed. Our online scientific, technical, medical and scholarly journals, combined with our digital learning, assessment and certification solutions, help universities, learned societies, businesses, governments and individuals increase the academic and professional impact of their work. For more than 200 years, we have delivered consistent performance to our stakeholders. The company's website can be accessed at http://www.wiley.com.

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Fat grafting improves range of motion in limbs damaged by radiation therapy - Yahoo Finance

Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market To Register High Revenue Growthat 7% CAGR Throughout 2018 to 2026 – Kentucky Reports

The healthcare industry has been focusing on excessive research and development in the last couple of decades to ensure that the need to address issues related to the availability of drugs and treatments for certain chronic diseases is effectively met. Healthcare researchers and scientists at the Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine of the Hong Kong University have successfully demonstrated the utilization of human induced pluripotent stem cells or hiPSCs from the skin cells of the patient for testing therapeutic drugs.

The success of this research suggests that scientists have crossed one more hurdle towards using stem cells in precision medicine for the treatment of patients suffering from sporadic hereditary diseases. iPSCs are the new generation approach towards the prevention and treatment of diseases that takes into account patients on an individual basis considering their genetic makeup, lifestyle, and environment. Along with the capacity to transform into different body cell types and same genetic composition of the donors, hiPSCs have surfaced as a promising cell source to screen and test drugs.

In the present research, hiPSC was synthesized from patients suffering from a rare form of hereditary cardiomyopathy owing to the mutations in Lamin A/C related cardiomyopathy in their distinct families. The affected individuals suffer from sudden death, stroke, and heart failure at a very young age. As on date, there is no exact treatment available for this condition. This team in Hong Kong tested a drug named PTC124 to suppress specific genetic mutations in other genetic diseases into the iPSC transformed heart muscle cells. While this technology is being considered as a breakthrough in clinical stem cell research, the team at Hong Kong University is collaborating with drug companies regarding its clinical application.

The unique properties of iPS cells provides extensive potential to several biopharmaceutical applications. iPSCs are also used in toxicology testing, high throughput, disease modeling, and target identification. This type of stem cell has the potential to transform drug discovery by offering physiologically relevant cells for tool discovery, compound identification, and target validation. A new report by Persistence Market Research (PMR) states that the globalinduced pluripotent stem or iPS cell marketis expected to witness a strong CAGR of 7.0% from 2018 to 2026. In 2017, the market was worth US$ 1,254.0 Mn and is expected to reach US$ 2,299.5 Mn by the end of the forecast period in 2026.

Customization to be the Key Focus of Market Players

Due to the evolving needs of the research community, the demand for specialized cell lines have increased to a certain point where most vendors offering these products cannot depend solely on sales from catalog products. The quality of the products and lead time can determine the choices while requesting custom solutions at the same time. Companies usually focus on establishing a strong distribution network for enabling products to reach customers from the manufacturing units in a short time period.

Entry of Multiple Small Players to be Witnessed in the Coming Years

Several leading players have their presence in the global market; however, many specialized products and services are provided by small and regional vendors. By targeting their marketing strategies towards research institutes and small biotechnology companies, these new players have swiftly established their presence in the market.

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Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Market To Register High Revenue Growthat 7% CAGR Throughout 2018 to 2026 - Kentucky Reports