| Literature DB >> 31383013 |
Justyna Czapla1,2, Sybilla Matuszczak1,2, Klaudia Kulik1,2, Ewa Wiśniewska2, Ewelina Pilny1, Magdalena Jarosz-Biej1,2, Ryszard Smolarczyk1,2, Tomasz Sirek3, Michał Oskar Zembala4, Marian Zembala4,5, Stanisław Szala1,2, Tomasz Cichoń6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (ASCs) have been shown to exhibit some promising properties of their use in regenerative medicine as advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMP). However, different sources of their origin, methods of isolation, and expansion procedures cause the laboratory and clinical results difficult to compare.Entities:
Keywords: Adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stromal cells; Advanced therapy medicinal products; Human platelet lysate; Interleukin-6
Year: 2019 PMID: 31383013 PMCID: PMC6683465 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-019-1331-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1ASCs surface markers expression. The plots show the phenotype of ASCs obtained directly after ASCs isolation (before seeding on plates) and in the subsequent passages. Passage “0” indicates cells seeded after isolation that were trypsinizated when obtained 80–90% confluency. The cell phenotype stabilizes from passage 2 (expression of surface markers according to the guidelines of ISCT). The graphs summarized the surface marker expression on cells obtained from six isolation from different donors (n = 6)
Fig. 2The morphology of ASCs cultured in three different medium formulations. a Phase-contrast images of ASCs at passage 1 (40% of confluency, 3–5 days of culture) parallel cultivated in either FBS- or hPL-supplemented basal medium. b Slight differences in the morphology between ASCs cultured in three different medium formulations were confirmed by flow cytometry gating of forward vs side scatter (FSC vs SSC). ASCs cultured in media supplemented with hPL were smaller and exhibited less complexity (granularity)
Fig. 3Differentiation analysis of ASCs. ASCs cultured in three different media were harvested and plated in differentiation media. ASCs differentiated in vitro into adipocytes (FABP4, green, n = 4, magnification × 10), osteoblasts (Alizarin Red, red, n = 4, magnification × 4), and chondroblasts (Safranin O, dark red, n = 4, magnification × 20)
Fig. 4Clonogenic potential of ASCs. ASCs cultured in three different medium formulations exhibit similar clonogenic potential (n = 4). However statistically insignificant, more clones were obtained from single cells cultured on αMEM+10% hPL medium
Fig. 5Secretome of ASCs. a During 48 h culture, ASCs secreted into the culture medium mainly IL-6 and small amounts of RANTES, osteoprotegerin, MCP-1, and GRO particles. The graph shows an averaged level of secreted cytokines by ASCs (n = 3). b The secretion of the most abundant cytokine—IL-6—was donor-specific, and the medium formulation did not influence its secretion. The amount of secreted IL-6 based on the ELISA assay (n = 4) performed in respective cell culture
Fig. 6The evaluated number of cells that may be obtained in three different culture conditions. The highest yield of seeded cells may be achieved in cell culture carried out in αMEM supplemented with 10% hPL. After approximately 4 weeks, from 1 million of isolated ASCs, almost 50 million of cells may be obtained