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Indirect Co-Culture with Tendons or Tenocytes Can Program Amniotic Epithelial Cells towards Stepwise Tenogenic Differentiation

BACKGROUND: Amniotic epithelial cells (AEC) have potential applications in cell-based therapy. Thus far their ability to differentiate into tenocytes has not been investigated although a cell source providing a large supply of tenocytes remains a priority target of regenerative medicine in order to...

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Autores principales: Barboni, Barbara, Curini, Valentina, Russo, Valentina, Mauro, Annunziata, Di Giacinto, Oriana, Marchisio, Marco, Alfonsi, Melissa, Mattioli, Mauro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3277591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22348033
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030974
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author Barboni, Barbara
Curini, Valentina
Russo, Valentina
Mauro, Annunziata
Di Giacinto, Oriana
Marchisio, Marco
Alfonsi, Melissa
Mattioli, Mauro
author_facet Barboni, Barbara
Curini, Valentina
Russo, Valentina
Mauro, Annunziata
Di Giacinto, Oriana
Marchisio, Marco
Alfonsi, Melissa
Mattioli, Mauro
author_sort Barboni, Barbara
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Amniotic epithelial cells (AEC) have potential applications in cell-based therapy. Thus far their ability to differentiate into tenocytes has not been investigated although a cell source providing a large supply of tenocytes remains a priority target of regenerative medicine in order to respond to the poor self-repair capability of adult tendons. Starting from this premise, the present research has been designed firstly to verify whether the co-culture with adult primary tenocytes could be exploited in order to induce tenogenic differentiation in AEC, as previously demonstrated in mesenchymal stem cells. Since the co-culture systems inducing cell differentiation takes advantage of specific soluble paracrine factors released by tenocytes, the research has been then addressed to study whether the co-culture could be improved by making use of the different cell populations present within tendon explants or of the high regenerative properties of fetal derived cell/tissue. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Freshly isolated AEC, obtained from ovine fetuses at mid-gestation, were co-incubated with explanted tendons or primary tenocytes obtained from fetal or adult calcaneal tendons. The morphological and functional analysis indicated that AEC possessed tenogenic differentiation potential. However, only AEC exposed to fetal-derived cell/tissues developed in vitro tendon-like three dimensional structures with an expression profile of matrix (COL1 and THSB4) and mesenchymal/tendon related genes (TNM, OCN and SCXB) similar to that recorded in native ovine tendons. The tendon-like structures displayed high levels of organization as documented by the cell morphology, the newly deposited matrix enriched in COL1 and widespread expression of gap junction proteins (Connexin 32 and 43). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The co-culture system improves its efficiency in promoting AEC differentiation by exploiting the inductive tenogenic soluble factors released by fetal tendon cells or explants. The co-cultural system can be proposed as a low cost and easy technique to engineer tendon for biological study and cell therapy approach.
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spelling pubmed-32775912012-02-17 Indirect Co-Culture with Tendons or Tenocytes Can Program Amniotic Epithelial Cells towards Stepwise Tenogenic Differentiation Barboni, Barbara Curini, Valentina Russo, Valentina Mauro, Annunziata Di Giacinto, Oriana Marchisio, Marco Alfonsi, Melissa Mattioli, Mauro PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Amniotic epithelial cells (AEC) have potential applications in cell-based therapy. Thus far their ability to differentiate into tenocytes has not been investigated although a cell source providing a large supply of tenocytes remains a priority target of regenerative medicine in order to respond to the poor self-repair capability of adult tendons. Starting from this premise, the present research has been designed firstly to verify whether the co-culture with adult primary tenocytes could be exploited in order to induce tenogenic differentiation in AEC, as previously demonstrated in mesenchymal stem cells. Since the co-culture systems inducing cell differentiation takes advantage of specific soluble paracrine factors released by tenocytes, the research has been then addressed to study whether the co-culture could be improved by making use of the different cell populations present within tendon explants or of the high regenerative properties of fetal derived cell/tissue. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Freshly isolated AEC, obtained from ovine fetuses at mid-gestation, were co-incubated with explanted tendons or primary tenocytes obtained from fetal or adult calcaneal tendons. The morphological and functional analysis indicated that AEC possessed tenogenic differentiation potential. However, only AEC exposed to fetal-derived cell/tissues developed in vitro tendon-like three dimensional structures with an expression profile of matrix (COL1 and THSB4) and mesenchymal/tendon related genes (TNM, OCN and SCXB) similar to that recorded in native ovine tendons. The tendon-like structures displayed high levels of organization as documented by the cell morphology, the newly deposited matrix enriched in COL1 and widespread expression of gap junction proteins (Connexin 32 and 43). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The co-culture system improves its efficiency in promoting AEC differentiation by exploiting the inductive tenogenic soluble factors released by fetal tendon cells or explants. The co-cultural system can be proposed as a low cost and easy technique to engineer tendon for biological study and cell therapy approach. Public Library of Science 2012-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3277591/ /pubmed/22348033 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030974 Text en Barboni et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Barboni, Barbara
Curini, Valentina
Russo, Valentina
Mauro, Annunziata
Di Giacinto, Oriana
Marchisio, Marco
Alfonsi, Melissa
Mattioli, Mauro
Indirect Co-Culture with Tendons or Tenocytes Can Program Amniotic Epithelial Cells towards Stepwise Tenogenic Differentiation
title Indirect Co-Culture with Tendons or Tenocytes Can Program Amniotic Epithelial Cells towards Stepwise Tenogenic Differentiation
title_full Indirect Co-Culture with Tendons or Tenocytes Can Program Amniotic Epithelial Cells towards Stepwise Tenogenic Differentiation
title_fullStr Indirect Co-Culture with Tendons or Tenocytes Can Program Amniotic Epithelial Cells towards Stepwise Tenogenic Differentiation
title_full_unstemmed Indirect Co-Culture with Tendons or Tenocytes Can Program Amniotic Epithelial Cells towards Stepwise Tenogenic Differentiation
title_short Indirect Co-Culture with Tendons or Tenocytes Can Program Amniotic Epithelial Cells towards Stepwise Tenogenic Differentiation
title_sort indirect co-culture with tendons or tenocytes can program amniotic epithelial cells towards stepwise tenogenic differentiation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3277591/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22348033
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0030974
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