| Literature DB >> 32894205 |
Na Li1, Jinfang Gao1, Liangyu Mi1, Gailian Zhang2, Liyun Zhang2, Na Zhang2, Rongxiu Huo1, Junping Hu1, Ke Xu3.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can be isolated from not only bone marrow, but also various adult mesenchymal tissues such as periosteum, skeletal muscle, and adipose tissue. MSCs from different tissue sources have different molecular phenotypes and differentiation potential. Synovial membrane (SM) is an important and highly specific component of synovial joints. Previous studies have suggested that the synovium is a structure with a few cell layers thick and consists mainly of fibroblast-like synoviocytes (FLS), which forms a layer that lining the synovial membrane on the joint cavity and synovial fluid through cell-cell contact. In recent years, studies have found that there are also mesenchymal stem cells in the synovium, and as an important part of the mesenchymal stem cell family, it has strong capabilities of cartilage forming and tissue repairing. This article reviews the sources, surface markers, subtypes, influencing factors, and applications in inflammatory joints of synovial membrane mesenchymal stem cells (SM-MSCs) in recent years, aiming to clarify the research status and existing problems of SM-MSCs.Entities:
Keywords: Cartilage repair; Cell subpopulation; Chondrogenic potential; Immunophenotype; Synovium mesenchymal stem cells
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32894205 PMCID: PMC7487958 DOI: 10.1186/s13287-020-01885-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cell Res Ther ISSN: 1757-6512 Impact factor: 6.832
Fig. 1The possible origin and differentiation potential of synovial membrane mesenchymal stem cells (SM-MSCs)
Fig. 2Possible clinical applications of synovial membrane mesenchymal stem cells (SM-MSCs)
The detailed information of cell subpopulation in various research
| Subpopulation | Outcome | Material sources | Donor age | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD9+CD90+CD166+ | The potential for osteochondral differentiation | Patients with end-stage OA who underwent total knee joint replacement | 55–82 | Fickert et al. [ |
| CD271+CD90+ | The potential for chondrogenic differentiation | Patients with total knee arthroplasty surgery | N/A | Ogata et al. [ |
| CD73+CD90−/CD73+CD90+ | CD73+CD90− cells can form cartilage only under the stimulation of TGFβ-1; the CD73+CD90+ MSCs subgroup needs to be stimulated by BMP2 and TGFβ-1 | Patients with advanced clinical OA who underwent total knee replacement | 50–80 | Sivasubramaniyan et al. [ |
| SM-MSCs in surface, interstitial and perivascular area | Higher proliferation and chondrogenic potential of MSCs in perivascular area | The knees of patients with osteoarthritis during total knee arthroplasty | 59–85 | Mizuno et al. [ |
| SM-MSCs in the paralabral synovium and the cotyloid fossa synovium | MSCs from the cotyloid fossa synovium have higher proliferation and differentiation potential than do those from the paralabral synovium | Patients with femoroacetabular impingement syndrome but excluded osteoarthritis and inflammatory diseases | 19–64 | Murata et al. [ |
| SM-MSCs in the cotyloid fossa area from the knee and hip | Adipogenesis and osteogenesis potentials of MSCs from the knees are superior to those of MSCs from the hips in the same donor | Patients underwent knee and hip arthroscopic surgeries | 25–64 | Hatakeyama et al. [ |
N/A not applicable