| Literature DB >> 35683035 |
Victor J Costela-Ruiz1,2, Lucía Melguizo-Rodríguez1,2, Chiara Bellotti3, Rebeca Illescas-Montes1,2, Deborah Stanco4, Carla Renata Arciola5,6,7, Enrico Lucarelli3.
Abstract
The success of regenerative medicine in various clinical applications depends on the appropriate selection of the source of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). Indeed, the source conditions, the quality and quantity of MSCs, have an influence on the growth factors, cytokines, extracellular vesicles, and secrete bioactive factors of the regenerative milieu, thus influencing the clinical result. Thus, optimal source selection should harmonize this complex setting and ensure a well-personalized and effective treatment. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can be obtained from several sources, including bone marrow and adipose tissue, already used in orthopedic regenerative applications. In this sense, for bone, dental, and oral injuries, MSCs could provide an innovative and effective therapy. The present review aims to compare the properties (proliferation, migration, clonogenicity, angiogenic capacity, differentiation potential, and secretome) of MSCs derived from bone marrow, adipose tissue, and dental tissue to enable clinicians to select the best source of MSCs for their clinical application in bone and oral tissue regeneration to delineate new translational perspectives. A review of the literature was conducted using the search engines Web of Science, Pubmed, Scopus, and Google Scholar. An analysis of different publications showed that all sources compared (bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (BM-MSCs), adipose tissue mesenchymal stem cells (AT-MSCs), and dental tissue mesenchymal stem cells (DT-MSCs)) are good options to promote proper migration and angiogenesis, and they turn out to be useful for gingival, dental pulp, bone, and periodontal regeneration. In particular, DT-MSCs have better proliferation rates and AT and G-MSC sources showed higher clonogenicity. MSCs from bone marrow, widely used in orthopedic regenerative medicine, are preferable for their differentiation ability. Considering all the properties among sources, BM-MSCs, AT-MSCs, and DT-MSCs present as potential candidates for oral and dental regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: adipose tissue; bone; bone marrow; dental tissue; mesenchymal stem cells; orthopedics; regenerative medicine; tissue engineering
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35683035 PMCID: PMC9181542 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23116356
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Bone marrow, adipose, and dental tissue as sources of stem cells.
MSC markers reported in literature.
| MSC Type | Markers | References |
|---|---|---|
| BM-MSCs | CD73, THY1/CD90, CD105, CD146/MCAM, | Dominici et al., Samsonraj et al. [ |
| AT-MSCs | DPP4/CD26, PDGFRa, CD29, CD34, SCA1, CD55, | Merrick et al. [ |
| DPSCs | CD44, CD90, CD105, CD73, STRO-1 | Mattei et al. [ |
Key findings of the MSC Properties in relation to the source.
| MSC Source | MSC Property | Key Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| BM-MSCs | Proliferation | BM-MSCs have the potential to double in a 24–72 h period. | Riekstina et al. [ |
| Migration capacity | The migration capacity of BM-MSCs and AT-MSCs is similar. | Jeon et al. [ | |
| Clonogenicity | The CFU capacity of BM-MSCs does not remain stable, entering senescence after passage 3–4. | Dmitrieva et al. [ | |
| The CFU of BM-MSCs is lower than that of AT-MSCs. | Hayashi et al. [ | ||
| Angiogenic capacity | VEGF expression has increased alongside differentiation of BM-MSCs | Waldner et al. [ | |
| Differentiation potential | BM-MSCs are able to constitutively express alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity with no necessity of induction of differentiation. | Riekstina et al. [ | |
| BM-MSCs extracted from human mandibles showed calcium deposition in the extracellular matrix after 7 days of osteogenic induction and mineralization nodes after 21 days of induction. | Zong et al. [ | ||
| BM-MSCs showed higher osteogenic capacity compared to PL-MSCs and DF-MSCs. | Zhang et al. [ | ||
| BM-MSCs carried a higher expression of osteogenic markers than subcutaneous AT-MSCs. | Waldner et al. [ | ||
| The ability of BM-MSCs (fetal and adult) to differentiate into chondrocytes, adipocytes, and osteoblasts was found to decrease over the passages. | Bernardo et al. [ | ||
| The osteogenic differentiation capacity of BM-MSCs decreased along the passages. | Stanko et al. [ | ||
| AT-MSCs | Proliferation | AT-MSCs have the potential to double in a 24–48 h period. | Riekstina et al. [ |
| The proliferation rate of human AT-MSCs increases up to passage 10, finding a 32% reduction in proliferation at passage 30. | Danisovic et al. [ | ||
| There is no significant difference between the proliferation rate of BM-MSCs obtained from lipoaspirate compared to PAT-MSCs. | Hakki et al. [ | ||
| Clonogenicity | The CFU capacity of AT-MSCs remains stable along the passages. | Dmitrieva et al. [ | |
| Angiogenic capacity | VEGF expression has increased alongside differentiation of AT-MSCs (subcutaneous and omental). | Waldner et al. [ | |
| Differentiation potential | AT-MSCs are able to constitutively express alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity with no necessity of induction of differentiation. | Riekstina et al. [ | |
| ALP expression was revealed to be higher in PAT-MSCs than in MSCs derived from lipoaspiration. | Hakki et al. [ | ||
| AT-MSCs showed higher osteogenic capacity than PL-MSCs and DF-MSCs. | Zhang et al. [ | ||
| AT-MSCs from omental tissue had higher expression of osteogenic markers than subcutaneous AT-MSCs. | Waldner et al. [ | ||
| The osteogenic differentiation capacity of AT-MSCs decreased along the passages. | Stanko et al. [ | ||
| DT-MSCs | Proliferation | TP-MSCs can be expanded and maintained for almost 60 doubling populations with a high rate of proliferation. | Pandula et al. [ |
| DT-MSCs proliferated faster than BM-MSCs and AT-MSCs | Zhang et al. [ | ||
| DT-MSCs have a high cell proliferative potential. | Stanko et al. [ | ||
| G-MSCs showed higher proliferation rates compared to DP-MSCs. | Angelopoulos et al. [ | ||
| Migration capacity | The migration capacity of G-MSCs is higher than that of DP-MSCs. | Angelopoulos et al. [ | |
| Clonogenicity | CFU was higher in G-MSCs compared to DP-MSCs. | Angelopoulos et al. [ | |
| Angiogenic capacity | MSCs obtained from gingival tissue showed higher angiogenic capacity than cells from DP. | Angelopoulos et al. [ | |
| Differentiation potential | The osteogenic differentiation capacity of DP-MSCs increased along the passages. | Stanko et al. [ | |
| PL-MSCs showed increased expression of ALP, calcium deposits, and an early expression of differentiation genes (ALP and COL1A1) compared to SHEDs and DP-MSCs. | Winning et al. [ |
BM-MSCs: Bone marrow stromal cells; AT-MSCs: Adipose tissue derived stem cells; DT-MSCs: Dental tissue-derived stem cells; CFU: colony-forming unit; PAT-MSCs: Palatal adipose tissue stem cells; VEGF: Vascular endothelial growth factor; TP-MSCs: Tooth germ progenitor cells; G-MSCs: Gingival mesenchymal stem cells; DP-MSCs: Dental pulp stem cells; SHEDs: stem cells from the pulp of exfoliated deciduous teeth; PL-MSCs: Periodontal ligament stem cells.
Figure 2PRISMA flow diagram showing the study selection process.