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Characterization of Different Sources of Human MSCs Expanded in Serum-Free Conditions with Quantification of Chondrogenic Induction in 3D

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) represent alternative candidates to chondrocytes for cartilage engineering. However, it remains difficult to identify the ideal source of MSCs for cartilage repair since conditions supporting chondrogenic induction are diverse among published works. In this study, we ch...

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Autores principales: Fabre, Hugo, Ducret, Maxime, Degoul, Olivier, Rodriguez, Jonathan, Perrier-Groult, Emeline, Aubert-Foucher, Elisabeth, Pasdeloup, Marielle, Auxenfans, Céline, McGuckin, Colin, Forraz, Nico, Mallein-Gerin, Frédéric
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6610765/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31320905
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/2186728
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author Fabre, Hugo
Ducret, Maxime
Degoul, Olivier
Rodriguez, Jonathan
Perrier-Groult, Emeline
Aubert-Foucher, Elisabeth
Pasdeloup, Marielle
Auxenfans, Céline
McGuckin, Colin
Forraz, Nico
Mallein-Gerin, Frédéric
author_facet Fabre, Hugo
Ducret, Maxime
Degoul, Olivier
Rodriguez, Jonathan
Perrier-Groult, Emeline
Aubert-Foucher, Elisabeth
Pasdeloup, Marielle
Auxenfans, Céline
McGuckin, Colin
Forraz, Nico
Mallein-Gerin, Frédéric
author_sort Fabre, Hugo
collection PubMed
description Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) represent alternative candidates to chondrocytes for cartilage engineering. However, it remains difficult to identify the ideal source of MSCs for cartilage repair since conditions supporting chondrogenic induction are diverse among published works. In this study, we characterized and evaluated the chondrogenic potential of MSCs from bone marrow (BM), Wharton's jelly (WJ), dental pulp (DP), and adipose tissue (AT) isolated and cultivated under serum-free conditions. BM-, WJ-, DP-, and AT-MSCs did not differ in terms of viability, clonogenicity, and proliferation. By an extensive polychromatic flow cytometry analysis, we found notable differences in markers of the osteochondrogenic lineage between the 4 MSC sources. We then evaluated their chondrogenic potential in a micromass culture model, and only BM-MSCs showed chondrogenic conversion. This chondrogenic differentiation was specifically ascertained by the production of procollagen IIB, the only type II collagen isoform synthesized by well-differentiated chondrocytes. As a pilot study toward cartilage engineering, we encapsulated BM-MSCs in hydrogel and developed an original method to evaluate their chondrogenic conversion by flow cytometry analysis, after release of the cells from the hydrogel. This allowed the simultaneous quantification of procollagen IIB and α10, a subunit of a type II collagen receptor crucial for proper cartilage development. This work represents the first comparison of detailed immunophenotypic analysis and chondrogenic differentiation potential of human BM-, WJ-, DP-, and AT-MSCs performed under the same serum-free conditions, from their isolation to their induction. Our study, achieved in conditions compliant with clinical applications, highlights that BM-MSCs are good candidates for cartilage engineering.
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spelling pubmed-66107652019-07-18 Characterization of Different Sources of Human MSCs Expanded in Serum-Free Conditions with Quantification of Chondrogenic Induction in 3D Fabre, Hugo Ducret, Maxime Degoul, Olivier Rodriguez, Jonathan Perrier-Groult, Emeline Aubert-Foucher, Elisabeth Pasdeloup, Marielle Auxenfans, Céline McGuckin, Colin Forraz, Nico Mallein-Gerin, Frédéric Stem Cells Int Research Article Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) represent alternative candidates to chondrocytes for cartilage engineering. However, it remains difficult to identify the ideal source of MSCs for cartilage repair since conditions supporting chondrogenic induction are diverse among published works. In this study, we characterized and evaluated the chondrogenic potential of MSCs from bone marrow (BM), Wharton's jelly (WJ), dental pulp (DP), and adipose tissue (AT) isolated and cultivated under serum-free conditions. BM-, WJ-, DP-, and AT-MSCs did not differ in terms of viability, clonogenicity, and proliferation. By an extensive polychromatic flow cytometry analysis, we found notable differences in markers of the osteochondrogenic lineage between the 4 MSC sources. We then evaluated their chondrogenic potential in a micromass culture model, and only BM-MSCs showed chondrogenic conversion. This chondrogenic differentiation was specifically ascertained by the production of procollagen IIB, the only type II collagen isoform synthesized by well-differentiated chondrocytes. As a pilot study toward cartilage engineering, we encapsulated BM-MSCs in hydrogel and developed an original method to evaluate their chondrogenic conversion by flow cytometry analysis, after release of the cells from the hydrogel. This allowed the simultaneous quantification of procollagen IIB and α10, a subunit of a type II collagen receptor crucial for proper cartilage development. This work represents the first comparison of detailed immunophenotypic analysis and chondrogenic differentiation potential of human BM-, WJ-, DP-, and AT-MSCs performed under the same serum-free conditions, from their isolation to their induction. Our study, achieved in conditions compliant with clinical applications, highlights that BM-MSCs are good candidates for cartilage engineering. Hindawi 2019-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6610765/ /pubmed/31320905 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/2186728 Text en Copyright © 2019 Hugo Fabre et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fabre, Hugo
Ducret, Maxime
Degoul, Olivier
Rodriguez, Jonathan
Perrier-Groult, Emeline
Aubert-Foucher, Elisabeth
Pasdeloup, Marielle
Auxenfans, Céline
McGuckin, Colin
Forraz, Nico
Mallein-Gerin, Frédéric
Characterization of Different Sources of Human MSCs Expanded in Serum-Free Conditions with Quantification of Chondrogenic Induction in 3D
title Characterization of Different Sources of Human MSCs Expanded in Serum-Free Conditions with Quantification of Chondrogenic Induction in 3D
title_full Characterization of Different Sources of Human MSCs Expanded in Serum-Free Conditions with Quantification of Chondrogenic Induction in 3D
title_fullStr Characterization of Different Sources of Human MSCs Expanded in Serum-Free Conditions with Quantification of Chondrogenic Induction in 3D
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of Different Sources of Human MSCs Expanded in Serum-Free Conditions with Quantification of Chondrogenic Induction in 3D
title_short Characterization of Different Sources of Human MSCs Expanded in Serum-Free Conditions with Quantification of Chondrogenic Induction in 3D
title_sort characterization of different sources of human mscs expanded in serum-free conditions with quantification of chondrogenic induction in 3d
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6610765/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31320905
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/2186728
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