| Literature DB >> 26552890 |
Caroline E Gargett1, Kjiana E Schwab2, James A Deane3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The existence of stem/progenitor cells in the endometrium was postulated many years ago, but the first functional evidence was only published in 2004. The identification of rare epithelial and stromal populations of clonogenic cells in human endometrium has opened an active area of research on endometrial stem/progenitor cells in the subsequent 10 years.Entities:
Keywords: adenomyosis; endometrial stem cells; endometriosis; endometrium; epithelial progenitor cells; immunomodulation; menstrual blood; mesenchymal stem cells; regenerative medicine; sushi domain containing-2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26552890 PMCID: PMC4755439 DOI: 10.1093/humupd/dmv051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Reprod Update ISSN: 1355-4786 Impact factor: 15.610
Figure 1Localization of human endometrial mesenchymal stem cells. (A–C) Immunofluorescence images of human endometrium showing perivascular identity of human eMSCs. (A) Co-localization (white arrows) of CD146 and platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta (PDGF-Rβ) in pericytes of venules and possibly capillaries in the functionalis stroma. The x/z and y/z planes are shown on the far right and underneath the merged images demonstrating co-localization of the two surface markers. (B) Perivascular SUSD2 expression (white arrows). (C) ATP-binding cassette, subfamily G member 2 (ABCG2) and αSMA co-staining showing perivascular and endothelial identity of SP cells. The white dotted lines indicate the junction between the endometrium (en) and myometrium (my) and yellow dotted line indicates the luminal surface (lu) of the uterine epithelium. (D) Schematic showing location of stem/progenitor cells identified in the human endometrium. Epithelial progenitor cells are postulated to be a subpopulation of cells located in the base of the glands in the basalis, identified by SSEA-1. Sushi domain containing-2+ (SUSD2+) eMSCs are perivascular cells. eMSC co-expressing CD146 and PDGFRβ/CD140b are most likely pericytes, as they are located adjacent to endothelial cells in vessels (v) in both the basalis and the functionalis. SP cells are a heterogeneous population comprising CD31+ endothelial cells and CD140b+CD146+ pericytes. Scale bar in (A) = 50 µm. (A) Reprinted with permissions from Schwab and Gargett (2007). (C) Reprinted with permissions from Masuda . (D) Adapted from Gurung .
Glossary of cell types.
| Cell type | Definition |
|---|---|
| Bone marrow mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (bmMSCs) | Multipotent, highly proliferative, self-renewing adult stromal stem cells found in the bone marrow that display immunomodulatory properties. Plastic adherent cultures are heterogeneous and contain perivascular cells and stromal fibroblasts |
| Endometrial MSCs (eMSCs) | Multipotent, highly proliferative, self-renewing adult stromal stem cells found in a perivascular location in the endometrium and distinct from endometrial stromal fibroblasts |
| Endometrial regenerative cell (ERC) | A collective term for MSC and stromal cells isolated from menstrual blood that are highly proliferative and multipotent (see Table |
| Human embryonic stem (hES) cells | Pluripotent stem cells derived from the inner cell mass of a blastocyst, able to differentiate into cells of all three germ layers |
| Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) | Multipotent, self-renewing non-plastic adherent stem cells that reside in the bone marrow and are responsible for producing all blood cell types |
| Induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells | A pluripotent stem cell produced from an adult cell through reprogramming by introduction of pluripotency genes or transcription factors |
| Label retaining cells (LRCs) | A quiescent stem-like cell that retains a DNA label over a longer period of time than more mature cells |
| Multipotent mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) | A stromal cell that exhibits characteristics of clonogenicity, multipotency and self-renewal and is responsible for tissue maintenance |
| Main population (MP) cells | A cell that does not efflux the Hoechst dye or a non-SP cell. Differentiated cells likely derived from an SP cell |
| Progenitor or transit-amplifying cells | A cell that has less potential than a stem cell, i.e. undergoes less differentiation and reduced proliferative capacity |
| Side population (SP) cells | A cell that is able to efflux the Hoechst dye, through expression of the ABCG2 transporter that pumps organic molecules out of the cell. A property of stem cells |
| Stem cell niche | The microenvironment in which stem cells are found, comprising niche cells and extracellular matrix, which directly or indirectly interact with the stem cells to control cell fate decisions regarding proliferation, self-renewal and differentiation |
| Stromal fibroblasts (fibroblasts) | Main component of stromal or connective tissue. A non-stem cell which lacks clonogenicity but can differentiate into mesodermal lineages and expresses common phenotypic cell surface markers. Gene profiling and RNA sequencing show that endometrial stromal fibroblasts are closely related but distinct from endometrial MSCs |
| SUSD2 (W5C5) | A cell surface marker that enriches for endometrial and bone marrow MSCs, also known as W5C5 and detected by the W5C5 antibody |
Surface marker phenotype of human endometrial marker-enriched mesenchymal stem cells and stromal cell populations.
| Cell type investigated | Marker expression | Other markers investigated | References | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD29 | CD44 | CD73 | CD90 | CD105 | PDGFRβ | CD146 | CD31 | CD34 | CD45 | |||
| CD146+ PDGFRβ+ endometrial stromal cells | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | STRO-1− | ||||
| SUSD2+ endometrial stromal cells | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | CD117+ STRO-1+ | ||
| PMP SUSD2+ endometrial stromal cells | + | + | + | + | + | + | ||||||
| Briefly cultured endometrial SP cells | − | − | CD9− CD13− | |||||||||
| Endometrial SP cells | + | + | + | + | CD13+ CD49f+ EMA+ | |||||||
| Endometrial stromal SP cells | + | + | − | − | − | CD9+ VM+ CD133− STRO-1− ESR1− PR− | ||||||
| Endometrial SP cells | + | + | + | + | + | CD10+ CD144+ CD326+ CD133− SUSD2+ | ||||||
| Endometrial stromal colonies | + | + | + | − | − | CD14− CD19− CD56/16− HLA-DR− | ||||||
| Endometrial stromal colonies | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | − | ||
| Endometrial stromal colonies | + | + | + | CD81+ | ||||||||
| Endometrial stromal colonies | + | + | + | + | − | CD14− | ||||||
| Endometrial stromal colonies | + | + | + | − | − | − | ||||||
| Endometrial large stromal colonies | + | + | + | − | − | VM+ CK− | ||||||
| Passaged endometrial stromal cells | + | + | + | + | − | − | − | CD133− | ||||
| Passaged endometrial stromal cells | + | + | + | − | − | |||||||
| Passaged endometrial stromal cells | + | + | + | − | − | αSMA+(5%) | ||||||
| Passaged endometrial stromal cells | + | + | − | − | CK− | |||||||
PDGFRβ+, platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta; αSMA, alpha smooth muscle actin; CK, cytokeratin; EMA, epithelial membrane antigen; ESR1, estrogen receptor alpha; PMP, postmenopausal; PR, progesterone receptor; VM, vimentin.
In vitro and in vivo differentiation of human endometrial marker-enriched mesenchymal stem cells and stromal cell populations.
| Cell type investigated | Adi | Ost | Chon | Myo | Neu | Functional differentiation studies | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD146+ PDGF-Rβ+ endometrial stromal cells | H, R | H, R | H, R | I, R | |||
| CD146+ PDGFRβ+ endometrial stromal cells | H | ||||||
| SUSD2+ endometrial stromal cells | H, R | H, R | H, R | I, R | |||
| SUSD2+ endometrial stromal cells | H, I | ||||||
| PMP SUSD2+ endometrial stromal cells | H | H | H | I | |||
| Briefly cultured endometrial SP cells | |||||||
| SP endometrial cells | |||||||
| SP endometrial stromal and epithelial cells | H, R | I, R | |||||
| SP endometrial cells | |||||||
| Passaged endometrial stromal colonies | H | ||||||
| Endometrial stromal and epithelial colonies | H, R | H, R | H, R | I, R | |||
| Endometrial stromal colonies | H, R | H, R | H, R | I, R | |||
| Endometrial stromal colonies | H, R | H | |||||
| Endometrial stromal colonies | H, R | ||||||
| Passaged endometrial large stromal colonies | H | H | |||||
| First passage endometrial stromal cells | H, I | ||||||
| Passaged endometrial stromal cells | |||||||
| Passaged endometrial stromal cells | I | ||||||
| Passaged endometrial stromal cells | |||||||
| Passaged endometrial stromal cells | I |
Adi, adipocyte; Ost, osteocyte; Chon, chondrocyte; Myo, smooth muscle myocyte; Neu, neural; AFP, alpha-fetoprotein; CFU, colony-forming unit; CK, cytokeratin; COL-1, collagen 1; EMP, endometrial main population cells; ESP, endometrial side population cells; GLUT1, glucose transporter 1; H, histology stain; I, immunohistochemistry; INS, insulin; NSG/NOG, NOD/SCID/IL-2Rγchainnull; OVX, ovariectomized; PA+G, polyamide and gelatin-composite meshes; PAS, periodic acid-Schiff; PD, 1-methyl 4-phenyl 1,2,3,6-tetrahydro pyridine-induced animal model of Parkinson's disease; PAX4, paired box 4; PDX1, pancreatic and duodenal homeobox 1; PMP, postmenopausal; R, mRNA expression; RedFluc, red-emitting firefly luciferase; SP, side population; STZ, streptozotocin; TdTom, Tandem Tomato; TH, tyrosine hydroxylase; Tn-C, tenascin-C; VM, vimentin.
Surface marker phenotype of human menstrual blood stem/progenitor cell and stromal cell populations.
| Menstrual blood stem cell name | Acronym | Cell type investigated | Marker expression | Other markers investigated | References | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD29 | CD44 | CD73 | CD90 | CD105 | OCT4 | CD34 | CD45 | |||||
| Endometrial decidual tissue MSC | EDT-MSC | Adherent MB cells | + | + | CD146+ SSEA-4+ (1–19.4%) | |||||||
| Endometrial regenerative cells | ERC | Created ERC cell lines from MB | + | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | CD59+ hTERT+ MMPs+ CD133− NANOG− SSEA-4− STRO-1− | |
| Menstrual blood MSC | mbMSC | Adherent MB cells | + | + | + | − | − | |||||
| Menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal cells | MMC | Adherent MB cells | + | + | + | CD55+ CD59+ CD166+ | ||||||
| Passaged adherent MB cells | − | + | + | + | − | − | CD13+ CD54+ CD146+ CD166+ CD14− CD16− CD19− HLA-DR− | |||||
| Menstrual blood progenitor cells | MBPC | Adherent MB cells | + | CD117− SSEA-4− | ||||||||
| Menstrual blood-derived (stem) cells | Passaged (P6–P9) adherent MB cells | + | CXCR4+ NANOG+ SSEA+ | |||||||||
| Menstrual stromal stem cells | MenSC | P5 adherent MB cells selected for C-KIT | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | CD9+ CD49f+ CD166+ C-KIT+ CXCR4+ MHC -I+ SSEA-4+ CD38− CD133− MHC-II− LIN− | ||
| From S-Evans Biosciences (China) | + | + | + | − | CD14− CD19− CD35− HLA-DR− | |||||||
| Passaged adherent MB cells | + | + | + | + | + | − | − | CD9+ CD10+ CD146+ CD38− CD133− C-KIT− STRO-1− | ||||
MB, menstrual blood; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase.
In vitro and in vivo differentiation of human menstrual blood stem/progenitor cells and stromal cell populations.
| Cell type investigated | Adi | Ost | Cho | Myo | Neu | Functional differentiation studies | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adherent MB cells | |||||||
| Created ERC cell lines from MB | I | H | I | I | |||
| Adherent MB cells | |||||||
| Adherent MB cells | H | H | |||||
| P5 adherent MB cells selected for C-KIT | H | H | H | I, R | |||
| Passaged adherent MB cells | |||||||
| Passaged adherent MB cells | |||||||
| Passaged (P6–P9) adherent MB cells | |||||||
| Adherent MB cells | |||||||
| Passaged adherent MB cells | H, R | H, R | I | I, R | |||
| Adherent MB cells | H | H, R | H | ||||
| MenSCs from S-Evans Biosciences (Hangzhou, China) | |||||||
| Passaged adherent MB cells | |||||||
| Adherent MB cells | H | H | H |
ALB, albumin; ANP, atrial natriuretic peptide; AP, action potential; DMD, Duchenne muscular dystrophy; ECM, extracellular matrix; ERC, endometrial regenerative cells; H, histology stain; I, immunohistochemistry; IV, intravenous; Mef2C, myocyte enhancer factor 2C; MI, myocardial infarction; MMC/MenSC, menstrual blood stem cells; MS, multiple sclerosis; NP, nucleus pulposus; OGD, oxygen glucose deprivation; PAS, periodic acid-Schiff; proSP-C, ProSurfactant protein C; R, mRNA expression; sGAG, sulphated glycosaminoglycan; T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; TAT1, TAT amino acid transporter 1; Tx, transplantation.
Summary of label retention papers published 2006–2014.
| Label | Pulse | Chase | LRC present after chase | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BrdU | PND 3–5P | Up to 12 weeks | L, G, S | Epithelial LRCs are Esr1− | |
| BrdU | PND 3–5 | 8–10 weeks | S | Some LRCs express Oct-4 and c-Kit | |
| BrdU | Adult, model of menstrual breakdown and repair | 4.5–8.5 days | L, G | Glandular epithelial LRCs proliferate following epithelial repair | |
| BrdU | PND 3–5 | 4 and 8 weeks | L, S | Epithelial LRCs proliferate after estrogen | |
| BrdU | PND 19–22 | Up to 11 weeks | L, S | Luminal epithelial LRCs at 5 weeks chase | |
| H2B-GFP | Adult cycling | Up to 47 weeks | G, S | Endometrial epithelial LRCs lost within 4 weeks | |
| H2B-GFP | ED 13.5–PND 21 | Up to 47 weeks | L, G, S | Endometrial LRCs are short-lived (<5 weeks) |
ED, embryonic day; PND, postnatal day; L, luminal epithelial; G, glandular epithelial; S, stromal.
aAbout16% stromal LRCs are Esr1+ and 84% Esr1−.
Endometrial diseases in which endometrial stem/progenitor cells may play a role.
| Endometrial disease | Description |
|---|---|
| Adenomyosis | A benign disease involving extensive growth and invasion of basalis endometrial tissue into the uterine myometrium with associated smooth muscle hyperplasia, resulting in an enlarged uterus and painful, heavy or prolonged periods |
| Asherman's syndrome and intrauterine adhesions (IUAs) | An acquired uterine condition characterized by complete obliteration of the endometrium with fibrotic intrauterine adhesions (IUAs) causing amenorrhea and infertility. IUA is a less severe condition involving partial replacement of the endometrium with fibrous tissue, causing hypomenorrhea, infertility and pregnancy loss. It results from trauma to the basalis endometrium following dilation and curettage (D&C) due to miscarriage, abortion or retained placenta in a setting of low estrogen and/or infection |
| Endometriosis | A benign disease affecting reproductive aged women in whom endometrial tissue grows outside the uterine cavity, most often in the pelvic cavity, around/on the ovaries and in the rectovaginal septum, resulting in inflammation, infertility and severe pelvic pain |
| Thin dysfunctional endometrium | Endometrial tissue that does not respond to estrogen stimulation and fails to reach at least 7 mm in thickness necessary for embryo implantation and maintenance of an ongoing pregnancy |
Figure 2Schematic describing the hypothesis that endometrial stem/progenitor cells shed in neonatal uterine bleeding may play a role in early onset endometriosis. Neonatal uterine bleeding occurs in 5% of neonates. It is hypothesized that retrograde neonatal bleeding occurs because thick mucus obstructs the long neonatal cervix. Fragments of shed endometrial tissue are postulated to contain an endometrial epithelial progenitor cell (pink) and a perivascular MSC (pink) together with niche cells. These rapidly adhere to the neonatal mesothelium, invade and/or become contiguous with the mesothelial lining where they remain quiescent for ∼10 years. Rising estrogen (E2) levels associated with thelarche and menarche reactivate the stem/progenitor cells to initiate growth of endometriosis lesions on the surface of or below the peritoneal mesothelium, resulting in early onset endometriosis. Reprinted with permissions from Gargett .