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Resistance to neoplastic transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress

The risk of malignant transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells (huMSCs) has been debated in the last years; however, the biosafety of these cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress has never been systematically investigated. We established an experi...

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Autores principales: Conforti, Antonella, Starc, Nadia, Biagini, Simone, Tomao, Luigi, Pitisci, Angela, Algeri, Mattia, Sirleto, Pietro, Novelli, Antonio, Grisendi, Giulia, Candini, Olivia, Carella, Cintia, Dominici, Massimo, Locatelli, Franco, Bernardo, Maria Ester
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5363595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27764806
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12678
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author Conforti, Antonella
Starc, Nadia
Biagini, Simone
Tomao, Luigi
Pitisci, Angela
Algeri, Mattia
Sirleto, Pietro
Novelli, Antonio
Grisendi, Giulia
Candini, Olivia
Carella, Cintia
Dominici, Massimo
Locatelli, Franco
Bernardo, Maria Ester
author_facet Conforti, Antonella
Starc, Nadia
Biagini, Simone
Tomao, Luigi
Pitisci, Angela
Algeri, Mattia
Sirleto, Pietro
Novelli, Antonio
Grisendi, Giulia
Candini, Olivia
Carella, Cintia
Dominici, Massimo
Locatelli, Franco
Bernardo, Maria Ester
author_sort Conforti, Antonella
collection PubMed
description The risk of malignant transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells (huMSCs) has been debated in the last years; however, the biosafety of these cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress has never been systematically investigated. We established an experimental in vitro model to induce supramaximal physical (ionizing radiation, IR) and chemical (starvation) stress on ex-vivo expanded bone marrow (BM)-derived huMSCs and investigated their propensity to undergo malignant transformation. To this aim, we examined MSC morphology, proliferative capacity, immune-phenotype, differentiation potential, immunomodulatory properties and genetic profile before and after stressor exposure. Furthermore, we investigated the cellular mechanisms underlying MSC response to stress. MSCs were isolated from 20 healthy BM donors and expanded in culture medium supplemented with 5% platelet lysate (PL) up to passage 2 (P2). At this stage, MSCs were exposed first to escalating doses of IR (30, 100, 200 Gy) and then to starvation culture conditions (1% PL). With escalating doses of radiation, MSCs lost their typical spindle-shaped morphology, their growth rate markedly decreased and eventually stopped (at P4-P6) by reaching early senescence. Irradiated and starved MSCs maintained their typical immune-phenotype, ability to differentiate into adipocytes/osteoblasts and to inhibit mitogen-induced T-cell proliferation. The study of the genetic profile of irradiated/starved MSCs did not show any alteration. While the induction of supramaximal stress triggered production of ROS and activation of DNA damage response pathway via multiple mechanisms, our data indicate that irradiated/starved MSCs, although presenting altered morphology/growth rate, do not display increased propensity for malignant transformation.
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spelling pubmed-53635952017-03-29 Resistance to neoplastic transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress Conforti, Antonella Starc, Nadia Biagini, Simone Tomao, Luigi Pitisci, Angela Algeri, Mattia Sirleto, Pietro Novelli, Antonio Grisendi, Giulia Candini, Olivia Carella, Cintia Dominici, Massimo Locatelli, Franco Bernardo, Maria Ester Oncotarget Research Paper The risk of malignant transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells (huMSCs) has been debated in the last years; however, the biosafety of these cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress has never been systematically investigated. We established an experimental in vitro model to induce supramaximal physical (ionizing radiation, IR) and chemical (starvation) stress on ex-vivo expanded bone marrow (BM)-derived huMSCs and investigated their propensity to undergo malignant transformation. To this aim, we examined MSC morphology, proliferative capacity, immune-phenotype, differentiation potential, immunomodulatory properties and genetic profile before and after stressor exposure. Furthermore, we investigated the cellular mechanisms underlying MSC response to stress. MSCs were isolated from 20 healthy BM donors and expanded in culture medium supplemented with 5% platelet lysate (PL) up to passage 2 (P2). At this stage, MSCs were exposed first to escalating doses of IR (30, 100, 200 Gy) and then to starvation culture conditions (1% PL). With escalating doses of radiation, MSCs lost their typical spindle-shaped morphology, their growth rate markedly decreased and eventually stopped (at P4-P6) by reaching early senescence. Irradiated and starved MSCs maintained their typical immune-phenotype, ability to differentiate into adipocytes/osteoblasts and to inhibit mitogen-induced T-cell proliferation. The study of the genetic profile of irradiated/starved MSCs did not show any alteration. While the induction of supramaximal stress triggered production of ROS and activation of DNA damage response pathway via multiple mechanisms, our data indicate that irradiated/starved MSCs, although presenting altered morphology/growth rate, do not display increased propensity for malignant transformation. Impact Journals LLC 2016-10-15 /pmc/articles/PMC5363595/ /pubmed/27764806 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12678 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Conforti et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ 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 credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Conforti, Antonella
Starc, Nadia
Biagini, Simone
Tomao, Luigi
Pitisci, Angela
Algeri, Mattia
Sirleto, Pietro
Novelli, Antonio
Grisendi, Giulia
Candini, Olivia
Carella, Cintia
Dominici, Massimo
Locatelli, Franco
Bernardo, Maria Ester
Resistance to neoplastic transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress
title Resistance to neoplastic transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress
title_full Resistance to neoplastic transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress
title_fullStr Resistance to neoplastic transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress
title_full_unstemmed Resistance to neoplastic transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress
title_short Resistance to neoplastic transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress
title_sort resistance to neoplastic transformation of ex-vivo expanded human mesenchymal stromal cells after exposure to supramaximal physical and chemical stress
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5363595/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27764806
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.12678
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