| Literature DB >> 27995034 |
Alice S Ferng1, Katherine M Marsh2, Jamie M Fleming3, Renee F Conway4, David Schipper5, Naing Bajaj5, Alana M Connell5, Tia Pilikian5, Kitsie Johnson5, Ray Runyan6, Stephen M Black7, John A Szivek4, Zain Khalpey8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adipose-derived stem/stromal cells (ASCs) isolated from the stromal vascular fraction are a source of mesenchymal stem cells that have been shown to be beneficial in many regenerative medicine applications. ASCs are an attractive source of stem cells in particular, due to their lack of immunogenicity. This study examines differences between mitochondrial bioenergetic profiles of ASCs isolated from adipose tissue of five peri-organ regions: pericardial, thymic, knee, shoulder, and abdomen.Entities:
Keywords: Adipose-derived stem/stromal cells; Bioenergetic profiling; Extracellular flux; Human adipose tissue; Mesenchymal stem cells; Mitochondrial bioenergetics; Stromal vascular fraction; Tissue engineering
Year: 2016 PMID: 27995034 PMCID: PMC5133220 DOI: 10.1186/s40064-016-3712-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Antibodies used for flow cytometry analysis
| Tube | Antibody | Flourochrome | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mouse anti-human CD90 | FITC | Compensation |
| 2 | Mouse anti-human CD44 | PE | Compensation |
| 3 | Mouse anti-human CD105 | PerCP | Compensation |
| 4 | Mouse anti-human CD73 | APC | Compensation |
| 5 | hMSC positive cocktail and hMSC negative cocktail | FITC (CD90), PerCP (CD015), APC (CD73), PE (CD34, CD11B, CD19, CD45, HLA-DR) | Evaluation of positive and negative MSC markers |
| 6 | Unstained | NA | Control |
| 7 | hMSC positive isotype control and PE hMSC negative isotype control | FITC (CD90), PerCP (CD015), APC (CD73), PE (CD34, CD11B, CD19, CD45, HLA-DR) | Negative staining control |
Fig. 1Flow cytometry characterization of isolated ASCs. Representative gating of P1 and singlet populations (a), and flow cytometry analysis for ASCs isolated from pericardium (b), thymus (c), shoulder (d), abdomen (e), and knee (f) (n = 3 for each location). The histogram for each tissue type depicts the negative lineage hematopoietic markers. For each respective anatomical location, the P1 population is positive for CD markers 90, 73, and 105. The histogram for each tissue type shows the negative lineage hematopoietic markers and HLA-DR, with the bars defined based on an unstained and isotype control. This characterization shows that the populations of isolated ASCs contain a majority of mesenchymal stem cells with limited contamination by hematopoietic cells
Fig. 2Mitochondrial stress test calculations. Values from each group of ASCs were averaged and then graphed together under the respective calculations made for: a basal respiration, b ATP production, c proton leak, d maximal respiration, e respiratory control ratio, and f coupling efficiency. Oxygen consumption rates (OCR) of shoulder ASCs were significantly higher than other ASC groups for both basal respiration and proton leak. Graphs are presented as mean ± SEM, with n = 4 for all organ specific adipose tissue types
Fig. 3Glycolysis stress test calculations. Values from each group of ASCs were averaged and then graphed together under the respective calculations made for: a glycolysis, b glycolytic capacity, and c glycolytic reserve. Extracellular acidification rates (ECAR) of shoulder ASCs were significantly higher than other ASC groups for glycolytic capacity. Graphs are presented as mean ± SEM, with n = 4 for all organ specific adipose tissue types
Fig. 4Non-mitochondrial respiration and non-glycolytic acidification calculations. No differences were appreciated in oxygen consumption rates (OCR) calculated for non-mitochondrial respiration (a). Abdominal extracellular acidification rates (ECAR) rates were lowest for ASCs under non-glycolytic acidification (b). Graphs are presented as mean ± SEM, with n = 4 for all organ specific adipose tissue types