| Literature DB >> 28757880 |
Nasim Salehi-Nik1, Maryam Rezai Rad2, Lida Kheiri3, Pantea Nazeman2, Nasser Nadjmi4, Arash Khojasteh1,5,6.
Abstract
Adipose tissues hold great promise in bone tissue engineering since they are available in large quantities as a waste material. The buccal fat pad (BFP) is a specialized adipose tissue that is easy to harvest and contains a rich blood supply, and its harvesting causes low complications for patients. This review focuses on the characteristics and osteogenic capability of stem cells derived from BFP as a valuable cell source for bone tissue engineering. An electronic search was performed on all in vitro and in vivo studies that used stem cells from BFP for the purpose of bone tissue engineering from 2010 until 2016. This review was organized according to the PRISMA statement. Adipose-derived stem cells derived from BFP (BFPSCs) were compared with adipose tissues from other parts of the body (AdSCs). Moreover, the osteogenic capability of dedifferentiated fat cells (DFAT) derived from BFP (BFP-DFAT) has been reported in comparison with BFPSCs. BFP is an easily accessible source of stem cells that can be obtained via the oral cavity without injury to the external body surface. Comparing BFPSCs with AdSCs indicated similar cell yield, morphology, and multilineage differentiation. However, BFPSCs proliferate faster and are more prone to producing colonies than AdSCs.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28757880 PMCID: PMC5516750 DOI: 10.1155/2017/8354640
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
In vitro studies.
| Authors | Study design | Cell source | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Farré-Guasch et al. (2010) [ | Comparison: | Human | (i) Similar phenotype and morphology (spindle shaped) |
| (i) BFPSCs | (ii) Able to differentiate into chondrogenic, adipogenic, and osteogenic lineages | ||
| (ii) SC-AdSCs | |||
| Broccaioli et al. (2013) [ | Comparison: | Human | (i) Amelogenin: early osteoinductive factor for BFPSCs, but not SC-AdSCs |
| (i) BFPSCs | (ii) Proliferation: both able to proliferate in presence of human serum and adhesion to scaffolds | ||
| (ii) SC-AdSCs | (iii) Surface markers: both have a typical MSC immunophenotype | ||
| (iv) Osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation: both show related markers (ALP activity, Coll deposition, and lipid vacuoles formation) | |||
| Niada et al. (2013) [ | Comparison: | Swine | (i) No difference in proliferation, viability, and clonogenicity |
| (i) BFPSCs | (ii) Differentiation: both have the ability to differentiate towards the osteoblast-like and adipocyte-like cells and also similar in size and granularity | ||
| (ii) SC-AdSCs (cultured on titanium disks and silicon carbide-plasma) | (iii) Chondrogenic and osteogenic induction: both cells able to increase GAGs production over time and when osteoinduced on synthetic biomaterials, significantly increased amount of calcified ECM | ||
| (iv) Seeded on titanium: increased amount of calcified ECM of about 46% and 37% for SC-AdSCs and BFPSCs, respectively | |||
| (v) Seeded on silicon carbide: increased ECM deposition of 90% and 200% for SC-AdSCs and BFPSCs, respectively | |||
| Kishimoto et al. (2014) [ | Comparison: | Human | (i) Surface markers: similar cell surface antigens of BFPSCs and BFP-DFAT cells |
| (i) BFPSCs | (ii) Differentiation: osteoblastic differentiation ability of BFP-DFAT cells is higher than that of BFPSCs (OCN, Ca deposition, and alizarin red) | ||
| (ii) BFP-DFAT cells | |||
| Kou et al. (2014) [ | Evaluation of BFP-DFAT cells | Human | (i) Differentiation: strong adipogenic but much weaker osteogenic capacity |
| (ii) Surface markers: no expression of endothelial markers under angiogenic induction (NO VWF) | |||
| (iii) Characteristics of BFP: similar to cells from abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue | |||
| (iv) Proliferation: no obvious decrease of proliferation or spontaneous differentiation up to the 25th passage | |||
| Tsurumachi et al. (2015) [ | Evaluation of BFP-DFAT cells: Cells were dissociated by collagenase and centrifuged: | Human | (i) S cells: higher capacity to dedifferentiate into DFAT cells and more osteogenic differentiation ability |
| (i) <40 | (ii) S- and L-DFAT cells had distinct characteristics | ||
| (ii) 40–100 | (iii) High proportion of S-adipocytes in BFP | ||
| (iv) S-adipocytes: more advantageous for inducing dedifferentiation into DFAT cells | |||
| Ardeshirylajimi et al. (2015) [ | Comparison: | Human | (i) Proliferation: higher proliferation level in cells on PLLA-Bio but with no significant difference between stem cells |
| (i) BFPSCs | (ii) BMSCs on PLLA-Bio: greatest ALP activity and mineralization (next close results: BFPSCs) | ||
| (ii) BMSCs | (iii) Lowest ALP activity: AdSCs | ||
| (iii) AdSCs | (iv) BFP: same osteogenic capacity as three other stem cells (S-spindle-shaped cells) | ||
| (iv) USSCs | (v) Enzyme activities of BMSCs and BFPSCs: better on PLLA-Bio and PLLA | ||
| (vi) Highest Ca deposition: PLLA-Bio | |||
| (vii) Greater intracellular concentration: BMSCs | |||
| (viii) Gene expression evaluation: highest expression of three bone-related genes: bioceramic-coated nanofibrous scaffolds |
SC-AdSC: subcutaneous adipose stem cell; BFPSCs: buccal fat pad stem cells; MSCs: mesenchymal stem cells; ALP: alkaline phosphate; Coll.: collagen; GAG: glycosaminoglycan; ECM: extracellular matrix; DFAT: dedifferentiated fat; OCN: osteocalcin; Ca: calcium; VWF: von Willebrand factor; S: small; L: large; PLLA: poly L-lactic acid; BMSCs: bone marrow stem cells; USSCs: unrestricted somatic stem cells.
In vivo studies.
| Author | Study design | Cell source | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shiraishi et al. (2012) [ | An efficient method of generating bone from BFPSCs using rhBMP-2 | Human | (i) BFPSCs can differentiate in vitro towards the osteoblastic lineage by addition of rhBMP-2 regardless of presence of osteoinductive reagents (ALP activity, calcification, and gene expression) |
| (ii) Adipogenic genes were detectable only in cultures with rhBMP-2 and OSR. | |||
| (iii) BFPSCs: formed engineered bone when pretreated with rhBMP-2 for inducing mature osteoblastic differentiation | |||
| (iv) BFPSCs: had characteristic spindle shape and formed a monolayer | |||
| Nagasaki et al. (2015) [ | Combination of LIPUS & NHA as scaffold for BFPSCs (transplantation in calvarial bone defects of nude mice) | Human | (i) Significantly increased the osteogenic differentiation of BFPSCs in vitro and in vivo |
| (ii) Enhanced new bone formation of margin of defects | |||
| (iii) Synergistic effects of LIPUS and NHA: capable of effectively inducing differentiation of BFPSCs into osteoblasts | |||
| Khojasteh and Sadeghi (2015) [ | Preliminary: BFPSCs with autogenous iliac bone graft in treatment of maxillomandibular extreme jaw atrophy | Human | (i) Mean bone width change at the graft site: greater in the test group than in the control group (3.94–1.62 mm versus 3.01–0.89 mm) |
| (ii) New bone formation: 65.32% in the test group versus 49.21% in the control group | |||
| (iii) Increased amount of new bone formation & decreased secondary bone resorption in extensively atrophic jaws |
BFPSCs: buccal fat pad stem cells; ALP: alkaline phosphate; NHA: nanohydroxyapatite; rhBMP2: recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein, LIPUS: low-intensity pulsed ultrasound; OSR: osteoinductive reagents.
Figure 1Search strategy flowchart.
Comparison between BFPSCs and SC-AdSCs.
| Source | SC-AdSCs | BFPSCs | Ref | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Volume of harvested adipose tissue | Human | 37 ml | 0.8 ml | [ |
| Number of cells isolated form adipose tissue | Human | 1.15 × 105 (cells/ml) | 1.1 × 105 (cells/ml) | [ |
| Human | 513 × 103 (cells/gram) after 1 week of culture | 253 × 103 (cells/gram) after 1 week of culture | [ | |
| Number of cells | Human | 1.3 × 106 after 21 days, starting from 6 × 104 AdSCs | 5.9 × 105 after 21 days, starting from 6 × 104 AdSCs | [ |
| Doubling time (h) | Human | 73.5 | 126.5 | [ |
| Swine | 82.9 | 72.5 | [ | |
| Morphology and size | Human | Fibroblast-like shape | Slightly smaller and rounder compared with SC-AdSCs | [ |
| Human | Fibroblast-like shape | Fibroblast-like shape | [ | |
| Swine | Spindle-shaped morphology after seeding and fibroblast-like morphology after 7 days of culture | Similar to SC-AdSCs | [ | |
| Clonogenicity expressed as the percentage of cells able to produce CFU-F from passages 1 to 4 | Human | — | 9.2% | [ |
| Human | 10.1% | 8.9% | [ | |
| Expression of specific MSC markers | Human | CD73+, CD90+, and CD105+; CD14−, CD31−, and CD34− | Similar to SC-AdSCs | [ |
| Swine | (i) CD146+CD29+ was observed in initial passaged BFPSCs, but not SC-AdSCs | [ | ||
| (ii) CD34 was much higher in BFPSCs than in SC-AdSCs | ||||
| (iii) CD105 was not observed in BFPSCs at first but increased by passaging the cells | ||||
| Collagen level increase by osteodifferentiated cells after 14 days of culture | Human | 137.5% | 74.5% | [ |
| Swine | 87% | 254% | [ | |
| ALP activity increase by osteodifferentiated cells after 14 days of culture | Human | 553% | 419% | [ |
| Swine | 126% | 201% | [ | |
| Adipogenic differentiation capacity after 14 days of culture | Human | No difference | No difference | [ |
| GAGs content increase in chondrogenic-differentiated porcine cells after 21 days | Swine | 184% | 149% | [ |
CFU: colony-forming units; MSCs: mesenchymal stem cells; SC-AdSC: subcutaneous adipose stem cell; ALP: alkaline phosphate; GAG: glycosaminoglycan.
Figure 2(a) Buccal fat pad anatomic location; permission granted from Muresan and Matarasso [92]. (b) Harvesting buccal fat pad with minimal discomfort for patients; permission granted from Khojasteh and Sadeghi [11].