Research News

Feb 27, 2025

  • Veterinary Science

Pioneering work generates feline embryonic stem cells in boon for cats

Advancement in veterinary regenerative medicine can help domestic and endangered wild cats alike

Embryonic stem cells from felines


New advancements in veterinary regenerative medicine plausible with these pluripotent cells.

Credit: Osaka Metropolitan University

 

As different as they may seem, humans and cats have similar ailments, but in terms of health care, veterinary regenerative medicine is not as advanced.

A possible solution rests in embryonic stem cells, which can differentiate into various types of cells and be transplanted to restore internal damage. Further, they are characterized by their near-natural state similar to induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. Recent research has successfully generated feline iPS cells, but not embryonic stem cells, so research on these cell lines is essential to improve the quality of iPS cells.

Osaka Metropolitan University Professor Shingo Hatoya led a Graduate School of Veterinary Science team in pioneering the generation of feline embryonic stem cells using lab-grown blastocysts. The team performed in vitro fertilization of sperm and oocytes taken from discarded reproductive organs during feline sterilization surgeries.

Through the isolation of inner cell mass from blastocyst stage embryos and culturing them, the researchers succeeded in generating high-quality feline embryonic stem cells. These can be maintained in an undifferentiated state and can differentiate into the three germ layers endoderm, ectoderm, and mesoderm.

“Embryonic stem cells are pluripotent cells, so we believe that comparative studies with iPS cells will further promote veterinary regenerative medicine research,” stated Professor Hatoya. “The successful establishment of feline ES cells in this study can advance veterinary regenerative medicine by enabling comparative studies with feline iPS cells. Moreover, the potential to derive sperm and oocytes from feline ES cells could contribute to the conservation of endangered wild cat species.”

The findings were published in Regenerative Therapy.

Funding

This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI (grant number 22H02525), JST SPRING (grant number JPMJSP2139) and the Sasakawa Scientific Research Grant from The Japan Science Society (grant number 2022-4070).

Paper information

Journal: Regenerative Therapy
Title: Establishment of feline embryonic stem cells from inner cell mass of blastocyst produced in vitro
DOI: 10.1016/j.reth.2024.11.010
Authors:  Takumi Yoshida, Masaya Tsukamoto, Kazuto Kimura, Miyuu Tanaka, Mitsuru Kuwamura, Shingo Hatoya
Published:  2 December 2024
URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.reth.2024.11.010

Contact

Shingo Hatoya
Graduate School of Veterinary Science
Email: hatoya[at]omu.ac.jp

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