| Literature DB >> 26597928 |
Krishna M Panchalingam1, Sunghoon Jung1, Lawrence Rosenberg2,3, Leo A Behie4.
Abstract
Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs), also called mesenchymal stromal cells, have been of great interest in regenerative medicine applications because of not only their differentiation potential but also their ability to secrete bioactive factors that can modulate the immune system and promote tissue repair. This potential has initiated many early-phase clinical studies for the treatment of various diseases, disorders, and injuries by using either hMSCs themselves or their secreted products. Currently, hMSCs for clinical use are generated through conventional static adherent cultures in the presence of fetal bovine serum or human-sourced supplements. However, these methods suffer from variable culture conditions (i.e., ill-defined medium components and heterogeneous culture environment) and thus are not ideal procedures to meet the expected future demand of quality-assured hMSCs for human therapeutic use. Optimizing a bioprocess to generate hMSCs or their secreted products (or both) promises to improve the efficacy as well as safety of this stem cell therapy. In this review, current media and methods for hMSC culture are outlined and bioprocess development strategies discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26597928 PMCID: PMC4657237 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-015-0228-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1Expansion of bone marrow-derived human mesenchymal stem cells (BM-hMSCs) on Cytodex 3 microcarriers in serum-free PPRF-msc6 medium in 125-ml stirred suspension bioreactors [84]. hMSCs isolated in PPRF-msc6 were thawed and expanded for two passages in PPRF-msc6 and then inoculated at 2.4 × 104 cells/ml in stirred suspension bioreactors containing 2.0 g/l of Cytodex 3 microcarriers. We observed variable cell growth kinetics between different BM donors (BM1, BM2, and BM3). This indicates that although this bioreactor system was optimized for the growth of one hMSC donor, inter-donor differences influence the growth kinetics of hMSCs in stirred suspension bioreactors. Error bars represent the observed range, n = 2
Fig. 2Differentiation of human telencephalon-derived neural stem/progenitor cells (hNPCs) in conditioned medium collected from bone marrow-derived human mesenchymal stem cells (BM-hMSCs) expanded in either (a) static culture in fetal bovine serum (FBS)-based medium (T-flasks) or (b )500-ml computer-controlled suspension bioreactors in PPRF-msc6 medium [84]. Shown are cells expressing MAP2 (red) and TO-PRO-3 (blue). Conditioned medium collected from hMSCs expanded in PPRF-msc6/bioreactor resulted in a higher differentiation of hNPCs to MAP2+ neurons. Additionally, hNPC survival was higher in the PPRF-msc6/bioreactor-expanded hMSC conditioned medium. In contrast, hNPCs incubated in the FBS/static-expanded hMSC conditioned medium had a lower survival and differentiation into MAP2+ neurons. This indicates that the conditioned medium collected from our PPRF-msc6/bioreactor conditions contained factors that promoted the survival and differentiation of hNPCs into neurons. However, the FBS/static conditioned medium was less effective in causing hMSCs to secrete these factors. Scale bars: 50 μm