| Literature DB >> 26678612 |
C J Janmaat1, K E de Rooij2,3, H Locher1, S C de Groot1, J C M J de Groot1, J H M Frijns1, M A Huisman1.
Abstract
In stem cell cultures from adult human tissue, undesirable contamination with fibroblasts is frequently present. The presence of fibroblasts obscures the actual number of stem cells and may result in extracellular matrix production after transplantation. Identification of fibroblasts is difficult because of the lack of specific fibroblast markers. In our laboratory, we isolate and expand neural-crest-derived stem cells from human hair follicle bulges and investigate their potential to differentiate into neural cells. To establish cellular identities, we perform immunohistochemistry with antibodies specific for glial and neuronal markers, and use fibroblasts as negative control. We frequently observe that human adult dermal fibroblasts also express some glial and neuronal markers. In this study, we have sought to determine whether our observations represent actual expression of these markers or result from cross-reactivity. Immunohistochemistry was performed on human adult dermal fibroblasts using acknowledged glial and neuronal antibodies followed by verification of the data using RT-qPCR. Human adult dermal fibroblasts showed expression of the glia-specific markers SOX9, glial fibrillary acidic protein and EGR2 (KROX20) as well as for the neuron-specific marker class III β-tubulin, both at the protein and mRNA level. Furthermore, human adult dermal fibroblasts showed false-positive immunostaining for S100β and GAP43 and to a lower extent for OCT6. Our results indicate that immunophenotyping as a tool to determine cellular identity is not as reliable as generally assumed, especially since human adult dermal fibroblasts may be mistaken for neural cells, indicating that the ultimate proof of glial or neuronal identity can only be provided by their functionality.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26678612 PMCID: PMC4683011 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0145235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Primary antibodies used in this study.
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| Dilution | Company | Catalog number | Positive control |
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| Class III β-tubulin (TUJ1, rabbit monoclonal) | 1:500 | Covance, Princeton, NJ, USA | MRB-435P | Mouse sciatic nerve |
| Class III β-tubulin (2G10, mouse monoclonal) | 1:200 | Abcam, Cambridge, UK | ab78078 | Mouse sciatic nerve |
| Class III β-tubulin (TUBB3, rabbit polyclonal) | 1:200 | Abcam, Cambridge, UK | ab18207 | Mouse sciatic nerve |
| Growth associated protein 43 (GAP43, rabbit polyclonal) | 1:500 | Novus Biologicals, Ontario, Canada | NB300-143 | RT4-D6P2T |
| Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP, rabbit polyclonal) | 1:500 | DAKO, Glostrup, Denmark | Z0334 | RT4-D6P2T |
| Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP, mouse monoclonal) | 1:100 | Abcam, Cambridge, UK | ab10062 | Human astrocytes |
| EGR2 (rabbit polyclonal) | 1:100 | Covance, Princeton, NJ, USA | PRB-236P | RT4-D6P2T |
| Nestin (clone 4D11, mouse monoclonal) | 1:200 | Biosensis, Thebarton, Australia | M-1385-100 | RT4-D6P2T |
| Neurofilament heavy chain (NEFH, mouse monoclonal) | 1:200 | Abcam, Cambridge, UK | Ab19386 | Mouse sciatic nerve |
| Neurofilament medium chain (NEFM, mouse monoclonal) | 1:200 | DSHB, Iowa City, IA, USA | 2H3 | Mouse sciatic nerve |
| OCT6 (POU3f, goat polyclonal) | 1:50 | Santa-Cruz Biotechnology, Dallas, TX, USA | sc-11661 | RT4-D6P2T |
| p75NTR (rabbit polyclonal) | 1:200 | Merck Millipore, Darmstadt, Germany | 07–476 | RT4-D6P2T |
| S100β (mouse monoclonal) | 1:500 | Sigma-Aldrich, Saint-Louis, MO, USA | S2532 | RT4-D6P2T |
| S100β (rabbit monoclonal) | 1:200 | Abcam, Cambridge, UK | ab52642 | RT4-D6P2T |
| SOX9 (rabbit polyclonal) | 1:200 | Merck Millipore, Darmstadt, Germany | AB5535 | RT4-D6P2T |
| SOX10 (goat polyclonal) | 1:50 | Santa-Cruz Biotechnology, Dallas, TX, USA | sc-17342 | RT4-D6P2T |
Secondary antibodies used in this study.
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| Goat anti-rabbit IgG/Alexa Fluor 555 conjugate | 1:200 | Life Technologies Carlsbad, CA, USA | A21428 |
| Goat anti-mouse IgG/Alexa Fluor 488 conjugate | 1:200 | Life Technologies Carlsbad, CA, USA | A11001 |
| Donkey anti-goat IgG/Alexa Fluor 488 conjugate | 1:200 | Life Technologies Carlsbad, CA, USA | A11055 |
List of primers used in RT-qPCR.
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Primers were used with the appropriate annealing temperature for RT-qPCR.
Fig 1Immunostaining of HDF-a for nestin, p75NTR, SOX9 and SOX10.
Human adult dermal fibroblasts do not immunostain for nestin (A,) but very few cells immunostain faintly for p75NTR (B). Human adult dermal fibroblasts show positive immunostaining for the nuclear marker SOX9 (C), but not for SOX10 (D). Inserts: rat schwannoma cell line as positive control. Cell nuclei are stained blue with DAPI. Scale bar = 100 μm.
Fig 2Immunostaining of HDF-a for S100β and GFAP.
Human adult dermal fibroblasts express S100β Sigma (A), S100β Abcam (B) and polyclonal GFAP (DAKO; C) but do not immunostain for monoclonal GFAP (Abcam; D). Inserts: rat schwannoma cell line (A-C) and human astrocytes (D) as positive controls. Cell nuclei are stained blue with DAPI. Scale bar = 100 μm (A- C) and 50 μm (D).
Fig 3Immunostaining of HDF-a for OCT6, EGR2 and GAP43.
Human adult dermal fibroblasts do not express OCT6 (A) and express EGR2 and GAP43 (B,C). Inserts: rat schwannoma cell line (A-C) as positive controls. Cell nuclei are stained blue with DAPI. Scale bar = 100 μm (A, C) and 50 μm (B).
Fig 4Immunostaining of HDF-a for TUBB3.
Human adult dermal fibroblasts express clone TUJ (A), 2G10 (B) and polyclonal TUBB3 (C). Inserts: mouse sciatic nerve as positive control. Cell nuclei are stained blue with DAPI. Scale bar = 50 μm (A) and 100 μm (B-C).
Fig 5Immunostaining of HDF-a for NEFM and NEFH.
Human adult dermal fibroblasts do not immunostain for NEFM (A) and NEFH (B). Inserts: mouse sciatic nerve (A-B), used as positive control. Cell nuclei are stained blue with DAPI. Scale bar = 50 μm (A) and 100 μm (B).
Fig 6Quantitative reverse transcription PCR analysis of neural-crest, glial and neuronal markers in HDF-a compared to positive controls.
RT-qPCR analysis was performed to determine the gene expression levels of neural-crest markers nestin and SOX9 (top), glial markers GFAP and EGR2 (middle) and neuronal markers TUBB3, NEFM and NEFH (bottom) in samples of HDF-a. Expression levels of neural-crest and glial markers were compared to expression in human astrocytes and human vestibular schwannoma respectively, using the 2-ΔΔCt method, while expression of neuronal markers was compared to human vestibular schwannoma samples. HDF-a = human adult dermal fibroblasts; HA = human astrocytes; Schw = human vestibular schwannoma; TUBB3 = class III β-tubulin; NEFM = neurofilament medium chain; NEFH = neurofilament heavy chain. * p<0.05; ** p<0.01; *** p<0.001.