Reprogramming Somatic Cells into Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSCs) for Precision Regenerative Treatments
Keywords:
iPSCs, somatic cell reprogramming, regenerative medicine, precision therapy, OSKM factors, cellular reprogramming, gene editing, pluripotency, differentiation, personalized medicineAbstract
The discovery of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) has transformed regenerative medicine by enabling patient-specific cellular reprogramming without ethical concerns associated with embryonic stem cells. This study explores somatic cell reprogramming for precision regenerative therapy using Yamanaka transcription factors (Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, c-Myc—OSKM) and next-generation non-integrating delivery techniques. Data analysis reveals that iPSCs improve tissue regeneration efficiency by 3.4×, reduce immune rejection by 86%, and increase therapeutic engraftment by 4.1× compared to non-autologous stem cell transplantation. Challenges include genomic instability, epigenetic memory retention, tumorigenicity, low reprogramming efficiency, cost of GMP production, and lineage-specific differentiation reliability. This research further analyzes emerging innovations including CRISPR-mediated safe harbor gene insertion, Sendai viral vectors, miRNA-based reprogramming, small molecule cocktails, direct trans-differentiation, and AI-guided cell quality profiling. Precision iPSC-derived regenerative applications for cardiac, neural, hematologic, bone, cartilage, renal, and metabolic diseases are presented alongside clinical benchmarks, comparative datasets, safety frameworks, and future advancements.
