| Literature DB >> 28646900 |
Yingxian Jia1,2, Xiaohan Shi1,2, Yidong Xie1,2, Xiaochuan Xie3, Yan Wang1,2, Shangwei Li4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To reduce young female fertility loss, the in-vitro culture of cryopreserved ovarian cortical tissues (OCTs) is considered an effective approach without delaying treatment and undergoing stimulation medicine. However, ischemic damage and follicular loss during the in-vitro culture of OCTs are major technical challenges. Human umbilical cord stem cells (HUMSCs) and their conditioned medium (HUMSC-CM) have been considered to be potential resources for regeneration medicine because they secrete cytokines and enhance cell survival and function. The aim of this study was to determine whether HUMSC-CM improves the development of frozen-thawed in-vitro cultured ovarian tissues compared with a serum-free culture medium (SF-CM).Entities:
Keywords: Frozen-thawed; Human ovarian tissues; Human umbilical cord stem cells; In vitro culture; NIV
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28646900 PMCID: PMC5482969 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-017-0604-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
The patients from whom human ovarian tissues were collected
| Case | Age (years) | Diagnosis | Treated side | Size (cm) | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sisi Guo | 29 | Teratoma | Left | 4.8 × 3.7 × 4.2 | 22 August 2016 |
| Defang Pu | 30 | Endometriosis | Right | 6.9 × 3.8 × 6.7 | 22 August 2016 |
| YI Wang | 34 | Endometriosis | Right | 3.5 × 2.8 × 4.7 | 18 October 2016 |
| Luxi Feng | 37 | Endometriosis | Left | 3.5 × 4.7 × 3.7 | 21 November 2016 |
| XiaoPing He | 34 | Endometriosis | Left | 3.5 × 3.7 × 3.7 | 24 November 2016 |
|
| 32.8 | – | – | 4.26 | – |
Fig. 1Isolation and cultivation of HUMSCs. a Representative image of HUMSC third passages (day 2) (original magnification × 100, scale bar = 400 μm). b Representative image of the differentiation of the osteoblasts (ALP activity staining) on day 4 after the osteogenic induction. c Representative image of the mineralized cell nodules (Alizarin Red S staining) 3 weeks after the osteogenic induction. d Representative image of lipid droplets (stained with Oil Red O) 3 weeks after the adipogenic induction (original magnification × 100, scale bar = 400 μm)
Fig. 2Identification of HUMSCs. Second-passage HUMSCs were identified using monoclonal antibodies. Cell surface markers were identified through flow cytometric analysis
Fig. 3Histological analysis of the thawed OTs. a The morphologically normal primordial follicles (*), primary follicles (thin arrow), and secondary follicles (thick arrow) stained with H&E in the thawed OTs in groups A (a, b), B (c, d) and C (e, f) (original magnification × 400, scale bar = 100 μm). b Sum of PF as evaluated by H&E staining over 8 days between groups B and C. c Percentage of PF as evaluated by H&E staining before and after the in-vitro culture at nine time points in the three groups. *p < 0.05, versus group C
Fig. 4HUMSC-CM promoted neoangiogenesis as detected by CD34 immunohistochemistry over 8 days. a Representative images of CD34 immunohistochemistry staining of OTs in groups B (left) (a, c, and e) and C (right) (b, d, and f) on days 1, 4, and 8 (original magnification × 100, scale bar = 400 μm). b MVD evaluated by CD34-positive staining over 8 consecutive days is shown in the two groups. *p < 0.05, versus group C
Fig. 5HUMSC-CM inhibited follicular apoptosis as detected by active caspase-3 (AC-3) immunohistochemistry over 8 days. a Representative images of the AC-3 immunohistochemistry staining of the follicles. a and b: Apoptosis was observed in the morphologically normal PF (*); c and d: Follicular apoptosis was not observed (×100 (c), ×200 (a, d), ×400 (d), scale bar = 400 μm). b Percentage of AC-3 positively stained follicles over 8 consecutive days is shown in the two groups. *p < 0.05, versus group B