| Literature DB >> 24593914 |
Anastasia Gabrielyan, Sven Knaak, Michael Gelinsky, Stefan Arnhold, Angela Rösen-Wolff1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In vivo tissue regeneration depends on migration of stem cells into injured areas, their differentiation into specific cell types, and their interaction with other cells that are necessary to generate new tissue. Human mesenchymal stem cells, a subset of bone marrow stromal cells (BMSCs), can migrate and differentiate into osteoblasts in bone tissue. This can be facilitated by recombinant growth factors and cytokines. In many animal species, the availability of genomic sequences, recombinant proteins, and/or antibodies is limited so that new approaches are needed to generate resources that facilitate migration of stem cells into tissue defect areas. Here we used bone marrow stromal cells of human, ovine, equine, and canine origin to generate hypoxia-conditioned media (HCM) in order to attract BMSCs of the respective species in migration assays.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24593914 PMCID: PMC3974005 DOI: 10.1186/1746-6148-10-56
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Figure 1Alignment of human [GenBank: AY047581.1], ovine [GenBank: AF071015.1], equine [NCBI Reference Sequence: NM_001081821.1] and canine [NCBI Reference Sequence: NM_001003175.2] VEGF amino acid sequences. Differences to the human VEGF sequence are marked in yellow (ovine), green (equine), or blue (canine).
Concentrations of VEGF-A in human, ovine, equine, and canine HCM determined by ELISA
| VEGF-A | 1990 | 1428 | 40 | 1960 |
| HMGB1 | 8077 | 12747 | 13676 | 25151 |
Figure 2Migration (in%) of human, ovine, equine, and canine BMSCs towards recombinant VEFG-A or HCM. HUVECs served as positive control. Differences between migration of BMSCs attracted by control media or HCM were calculated using T test. p values <0.05 were statistically significant.