| Literature DB >> 26893817 |
Somayeh Naderi1, Malihe Akbarzadeh Niaki1, Nasser Mahdavi Shahri2, Maryam Moghaddam Matin3, Masoud Fereidoni1, Fatemeh Naseri4.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the interactions between rat intestine decellularized scaffold and human adipose derived mesenchymal stem cells. Rat large intestine was dissected in fragments and decellularized by physicochemical methods. The scaffolds were loaded by human adipose derived mesenchymal stem cells expressing green fluorescent protein. Microscopic sections were prepared from the scaffolds after two weeks of culture with stem cells and studied by histological methods. The interactions of scaffolds with MSCs were also studied by electron microscopy. Histological and electron microscopy studies revealed human mesenchymal stem cell adhesion, migration, division and maintenance during the 14 days of culture in vitro. According to the results, scaffolds prepared from rat intestine matrix could be a suitable scaffold for studying in vitro cell behaviors such as division, migration and attachment. These various behaviors of cultured cells might be due to inductive effects of the extracellular matrix derived scaffold. However, more investigations are required to discover the exact effects of this scaffold and its interactions with mesenchymal stem cells.Entities:
Keywords: Extracellular matrix; Large Intestine; Mesenchymal stem cells; Rat; Scaffold
Year: 2015 PMID: 26893817 PMCID: PMC4611981
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res Forum ISSN: 2008-8140 Impact factor: 1.054
Fig. 1Transverse sections prepared from large intestine scaffold. A and B) after culture with AD-MSCs (arrows); C) control scaffold (H & E, A and C 40×; B 400×). AD-MSCs were spread on scaffold surface and migration took place inside the matrix. The morphology and attachment of seeded cells on the scaffold are illustrated
Fig. 2Transverse sections prepared from large intestine scaffold. GFP labeled AD-MSCs (arrows) are attached on the surface of the scaffold (200×).
Fig. 3SEM images of the decellularized large intestine tissue. SEM of scaffold demonstrated the collagen fibers (arrows) in decellularized scaffold.
Fig. 4A, B) SEM images of the decellularized large intestine scaffold after two weeks of culture with AD-MSCs. Cell attachments are obvious on the surface of the scaffold (arrows
Fig. 5TEM image of the decellularized large intestine scaffold after two weeks of culture with AD-MSCs. A, B) AD-MSCs are obvious in the scaffold. Cell division is indicated by arrow