| Literature DB >> 18005405 |
Xiaolong Meng1, Thomas E Ichim, Jie Zhong, Andrea Rogers, Zhenglian Yin, James Jackson, Hao Wang, Wei Ge, Vladimir Bogin, Kyle W Chan, Bernard Thébaud, Neil H Riordan.
Abstract
Angiogenesis is a critical component of the proliferative endometrial phase of the menstrual cycle. Thus, we hypothesized that a stem cell-like population exist and can be isolated from menstrual blood. Mononuclear cells collected from the menstrual blood contained a subpopulation of adherent cells which could be maintained in tissue culture for >68 doublings and retained expression of the markers CD9, CD29, CD41a, CD44, CD59, CD73, CD90 and CD105, without karyotypic abnormalities. Proliferative rate of the cells was significantly higher than control umbilical cord derived mesenchymal stem cells, with doubling occurring every 19.4 hours. These cells, which we termed "Endometrial Regenerative Cells" (ERC) were capable of differentiating into 9 lineages: cardiomyocytic, respiratory epithelial, neurocytic, myocytic, endothelial, pancreatic, hepatic, adipocytic, and osteogenic. Additionally, ERC produced MMP3, MMP10, GM-CSF, angiopoietin-2 and PDGF-BB at 10-100,000 fold higher levels than two control cord blood derived mesenchymal stem cell lines. Given the ease of extraction and pluripotency of this cell population, we propose ERC as a novel alternative to current stem cells sources.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 18005405 PMCID: PMC2212625 DOI: 10.1186/1479-5876-5-57
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Figure 1Morphology of Cultured ERC. A) Morphology of freshly isolated menstrual blood mononuclear cells. B) Fibroblast-like morphology of menstrual blood mononuclear cells after 2-week cell culture. C) Clonal population of menstrual cells after plating in 96 well plate 1 week after cloning. D) The same population 2 weeks after cloning.
Phenotypic Characterization of ERC
| CD14 | Monocyte marker | Negative |
| CD34 | Hematopoietic stem cell marker | Negative |
| CD38 | Differentiating hematopoietic stem cell marker | Negative |
| CD45 | Pan-leukocyte marker | Negative |
| CD133 | Hematopoietic/angioblast marker | Negative |
| STRO-1 | MSC marker | Negative |
| SSEA-4 | Embryonic stem cell marker | Negative |
| Nanog | Embryonic stem cell marker | Negative |
| CD9 | MSC marker, associated with angiogenesis1 | Positive |
| CD29 | Adhesion molecule on mesenchymal and hepatic stem cells2 | Positive |
| CD59 | Complement inhibitor protein found on MSC3 and bone marrow side population CD34-stem cells4 | Positive |
| CD73 | Ecto-5'-nucleotidase, involved in migration of MSC | Positive |
| CD41a | Receptor for fibrinogen and vWF, found on MSC and platelets | Positive |
| CD44 | Hyaluronic acid receptor found on tissue stem cells and MSC | Positive |
| CD90 | Marker of T cells, hematopoietic and MSC | Positive |
| CD105 | Marker of tissue and MSC | Positive |
| hTERT | Telomerase reverse transcriptase | Positive |
| Oct-4 | Embryonic stem cell marker | Positive |
1 Kim YJ, Yu JM, Joo HJ, Kim HK, Cho HH, Bae YC, Jung JS. Role of CD9 in proliferation and proangiogenic action of human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells. Pflugers Arch. 2007 Aug 1.
2 Chiba T, Zheng YW, Kita K, Yokosuka O, Saisho H, Onodera M, Miyoshi H, Nakano M, Zen Y, Nakanuma Y, Nakauchi H, Iwama A, Taniguchi H. Enhanced Self-Renewal Capability in Hepatic Stem/Progenitor Cells Drives Cancer Initiation. Gastroenterology. 2007 Jun 20;
3 Izadpanah R, Joswig T, Tsien F, Dufour J, Kirijan JC, Bunnell BA. Characterization of multipotent mesenchymal stem cells from the bone marrow of rhesus macaques. Stem Cells Dev. 2005 Aug;14(4):440–51.
4 Preffer FI, Dombkowski D, Sykes M, Scadden D, Yang YG. Lineage-negative side-population (SP) cells with restricted hematopoietic capacity circulate in normal human adult blood: immunophenotypic and functional characterization. Stem Cells. 2002;20(5):417–27.
Proteomic Characterization of ERC Secreted Proteins
| MMP3 | 05 | 0 | ||
| MMP10 | 0 | 0 | ||
| GM-CSF | 0 | |||
| PDGF-BB | 0 | 0 | ||
| ANG-2 | 0 | 0 |
5 all concentrations expressed as (pg/million cells).
Figure 2Pluripotent Differentiation. ERC were cultured under appropriate differentiation media as described in Materials and Methods and assessed for differentiation using the indicated staining methods. A) Adipocytic differentiation, yellow indicates lipid vacuoles stained by AdipoRed. B) Osteocytic differentiation, red indicates calcium stained by Alizarin Red. C) Myocytic differentiation, green indicates alpha actinin stain. D) Skeletal muscle differentiation, green indicates skeletal myosin stain. E) Endothelial differentiation, green indicates CD34 stain. F) Endothelial differentiation, green indicates CD62 stain. G) Hepatocytic differentiation, morphology resembles hepatic body. H) Hepatocytic differentiation, green indicates albumin stain. I) Pancreatic differentiation, green indicates insulin stain. J) Neuronal differentiation, green indicates Nestin stain. K) Neuronal differentiation, green indicates GFAP stain. L) Respiratory epithelial differentiation, green indicates Prosurfactant protein C stain. M) Cardiogenic differentiation, green indicates Troponin I stain.
Figure 3Normality of Karyotype. ERC were cultured for the indicated cell passage numbers and assessed for lack of karyotypic abnormalities. A. ERC at Passage 10 (38 doublings). B. ERC at Passage 18 (68 doublings). Both detailed analyses shows normal karyotypes of 46, XX.