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Phenotype, donor age and gender affect function of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells
Georg Siegel, Torsten Kluba, Ursula Hermanutz‐Klein, Karen Bieback, Hinnak Northoff, Richard Schäfer
BMC Medicine · 2013 · ▲ 501 citations
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are attractive for cell-based therapies ranging from regenerative medicine and tissue engineering to immunomodulation. However, clinical efficacy is variable and it is unclear how the phenotypes defining bone marrow (BM)-derived MSCs as well as donor characteristics affect their functional properties. METHODS: BM-MSCs were isolated from 53 (25 female, 28 male; age: 13 to 80 years) donors and analyzed by: (1) phenotype using flow cytometry and cell size measurement; (2) in vitro growth kinetics using population doubling time; (3) colony formation capacity and telomerase activity; and (4) function by in vitro differentiation capacity, suppression of T cell proliferation, cytokines and trophic factors secretion, and hormone and growth factor receptor expression. Additionally, expression of Oct4, Nanog, Prdm14 and SOX2 mRNA was compared to pluripotent stem cells. RESULTS: BM-MSCs from younger donors showed increased expression of MCAM, VCAM-1, ALCAM, PDGFRβ, PDL-1, Thy1 and CD71, and led to lower IL-6 production when co-cultured with activated T cells. Female BM-MSCs showed increased expression of IFN-γR1 and IL-6β, and were more potent in T cell proliferation suppression. High-clonogenic BM-MSCs were smaller, divided more rapidly and were more frequent in BM-MSC preparations from younger female donors. CD10, β1integrin, HCAM, CD71, VCAM-1, IFN-γR1, MCAM, ALCAM, LNGFR and HLA ABC were correlated to BM-MSC preparations with high clonogenic potential and expression of IFN-γR1, MCAM and HLA ABC was associated with rapid growth of BM-MSCs. The mesodermal differentiation capacity of BM-MSCs was unaffected by donor age or gender but was affected by phenotype (CD10, IFN-γR1, GD2). BM-MSCs from female and male donors expressed androgen receptor and FGFR3, and secreted VEGF-A, HGF, LIF, Angiopoietin-1, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and NGFB. HGF secretion correlated negatively to the expression of CD71, CD140b and Galectin 1. The expression of Oct4, Nanog and Prdm14 mRNA in BM-MSCs was much lower compared to pluripotent stem cells and was not related to donor age or gender. Prdm14 mRNA expression correlated positively to the clonogenic potential of BM-MSCs. CONCLUSIONS: By identifying donor-related effects and assigning phenotypes of BM-MSC preparations to functional properties, we provide useful tools for assay development and production for clinical applications of BM-MSC preparations.
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- 10.1186/1741-7015-11-146
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APA
Siegel, G., Kluba, T., Hermanutz‐Klein, U., Bieback, K., Northoff, H., & Schäfer, R. (2013). Phenotype, donor age and gender affect function of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells. <em>BMC Medicine</em>. https://doi.org/10.1186/1741-7015-11-146
Vancouver
Siegel G, Kluba T, Hermanutz‐Klein U, Bieback K, Northoff H, Schäfer R. Phenotype, donor age and gender affect function of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells. BMC Medicine. 2013. doi:10.1186/1741-7015-11-146.
BibTeX
@article{georg2013Phenot,
title = {Phenotype, donor age and gender affect function of human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells},
author = {Georg Siegel and Torsten Kluba and Ursula Hermanutz‐Klein and Karen Bieback and Hinnak Northoff and Richard Schäfer},
journal = {BMC Medicine},
year = {2013},
doi = {10.1186/1741-7015-11-146},
}
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