Human Adipose-Derived Stem Cells Exhibit Enhanced Proliferative Capacity and Retain Multipotency Longer than Donor-Matched Bone Marrow Mesenchymal Stem Cells during Expansion In Vitro

Joint Authors

Burrow, Kimberley L.
Hoyland, Judith A.
Richardson, Stephen M.

Source

Stem Cells International

Issue

Vol. 2017, Issue 2017 (31 Dec. 2017), pp.1-15, 15 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2017-05-03

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

15

Abstract EN

Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) and adipose-derived multipotent/mesenchymal stem cells (ASCs) have been proposed as the ideal cell types for a range of musculoskeletal tissue engineering and regenerative medicine therapies.

However, extensive in vitro expansion is required to generate sufficient cells for clinical application and previous studies have demonstrated differences in the proliferative capacity and the impact of expansion on differentiation capacity of both MSCs and ASCs.

Significantly, these studies routinely use cells from different donors, making direct comparisons difficult.

Importantly, this study directly compared the proliferative capacity and multipotency of human MSCs and ASCs from the same donors to determine how each cell type was affected by in vitro expansion.

The study identified that ASCs were able to proliferate faster and undergo greater population doublings than donor-matched MSCs and that senescence was primarily driven via telomere shortening and upregulation of p16ink4a.

Both donor-matched MSCs and ASCs were capable of trilineage differentiation early in cultures; however, while differentiation capacity diminished with time in culture, ASCs retained enhanced capacity compared to MSCs.

These findings suggest that ASCs may be the most appropriate cell type for musculoskeletal tissue engineering and regenerative medicine therapies due to their enhanced in vitro expansion capacity and limited loss of differentiation potential.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Burrow, Kimberley L.& Hoyland, Judith A.& Richardson, Stephen M.. 2017. Human Adipose-Derived Stem Cells Exhibit Enhanced Proliferative Capacity and Retain Multipotency Longer than Donor-Matched Bone Marrow Mesenchymal Stem Cells during Expansion In Vitro. Stem Cells International،Vol. 2017, no. 2017, pp.1-15.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1200998

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Burrow, Kimberley L.…[et al.]. Human Adipose-Derived Stem Cells Exhibit Enhanced Proliferative Capacity and Retain Multipotency Longer than Donor-Matched Bone Marrow Mesenchymal Stem Cells during Expansion In Vitro. Stem Cells International No. 2017 (2017), pp.1-15.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1200998

American Medical Association (AMA)

Burrow, Kimberley L.& Hoyland, Judith A.& Richardson, Stephen M.. Human Adipose-Derived Stem Cells Exhibit Enhanced Proliferative Capacity and Retain Multipotency Longer than Donor-Matched Bone Marrow Mesenchymal Stem Cells during Expansion In Vitro. Stem Cells International. 2017. Vol. 2017, no. 2017, pp.1-15.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1200998

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1200998