| Literature DB >> 29333166 |
E Oliveira1,2, R C Assunção-Silva1,2, O Ziv-Polat3, E D Gomes1,2, F G Teixeira1,2, N A Silva1,2, A Shahar3, A J Salgado1,2.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been proposed for spinal cord injury (SCI) applications due to their capacity to secrete growth factors and vesicles-secretome-that impacts important phenomena in SCI regeneration. To improve MSC survival into SCI sites, hydrogels have been used as transplantation vehicles. Herein, we hypothesized if different hydrogels could interact differently with adipose tissue-derived MSCs (ASCs). The efficacy of three natural hydrogels, gellan gum (functionalized with a fibronectin peptide), collagen, and a hydrogel rich in laminin epitopes (NVR-gel) in promoting neuritogenesis (alone and cocultured with ASCs), was evaluated in the present study. Their impact on ASC survival, metabolic activity, and gene expression was also evaluated. Our results indicated that all hydrogels supported ASC survival and viability, being this more evident for the functionalized GG hydrogels. Moreover, the presence of different ECM-derived biological cues within the hydrogels appears to differently affect the mRNA levels of growth factors involved in neuronal survival, differentiation, and axonal outgrowth. All the hydrogel-based systems supported axonal growth mediated by ASCs, but this effect was more robust in functionalized GG. The data herein presented highlights the importance of biological cues within hydrogel-based biomaterials as possible modulators of ASC secretome and its effects for SCI applications.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29333166 PMCID: PMC5733162 DOI: 10.1155/2017/6319129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
PCR primers used to detect gene expression in ASCs, upon seeding in the three hydrogels.
| Gene | Primer sequence | Amplicon length |
|---|---|---|
| HMBS | Forward 5′-CCTGGCCCACAGCATACAT-3′ | 155 bp |
| GDNF | Forward 5′-AGCCGCTGCAGTACCTAAAA-3′ | 150 bp |
| VEGF | Forward 5′-TTTCTTGCGCTTTCGTTTTT-3′ | 133 bp |
| NGF | Forward 5′-GTCTGTGGCGGTGGTCTTAT-3′ | 115 bp |
| BDNF | Forward 5′-AGAAGAGGAGGCTCCAAAGG-3′ | 145 bp |
Figure 1ASC encapsulation within the three matrices. ASC morphology was analyzed in (a) 2D cultures, (b) GG-GRGDS, (c) NVR-gel, and (d) collagen. Moreover, (e) cell density and (f) the ratio cell density/metabolic activity were also assessed in serum-containing α-MEM. Immunostaining for phalloidin (red) and DAPI (blue). Mean ± SD; n = 4 per condition; p < 0.05. Scale bar: 200 μm.
Figure 2mRNA levels of BDNF, VEGF, NGF, and GDNF expression in ASCs cultured in GG-GRGDS, NVR-gel, and collagen after 7 days of cell culture. HMBS was the house-keeping gene herein used. Mean ± SD; n = 3.
Figure 3Coculture of ASC and DRG explants in serum-free conditions on GRGDS-GG (b), NVR-gel (d), and collagen (f). DRG monoculture on GG (a), NVR-gel (c), and collagen (e) was used as control. Immunostaining for neurofilament (green), phalloidin (red), and DAPI (blue). Scale bar: 200 μm.
Figure 4Quantification of the neurite outgrowth promoted by (a) hydrogels alone, (b) hydrogels plus ASCs, and (c) hydrogels plus ASCs regarding the respective controls. The mean area occupied by neurites (μm2) was calculated using Neurite J plugin for ImageJ (NIH) software. Results presented as mean ± SD; n = 4 per condition.