AI Article Synopsis

  • Stromal vascular fraction (SVF) cells from human fat tissue have the ability to create bone grafts with blood vessel-forming capabilities, but traditional adipose-derived stromal/stem cells (ASC) struggle to form bone when implanted.
  • By culturing ASC within a self-produced extracellular matrix (ECM) for 28 days without passaging (Unpass-ASC), they showed greater growth and differentiation compared to ASC that were expanded with regular passaging.
  • When tested in vivo, Unpass-ASC successfully generated bone tissue, while passaged ASC primarily produced fibrous tissue, highlighting the importance of ECM and integrin signaling in maintaining the bone-forming potential of ASC during cell culture.

Article Abstract

Stromal vascular fraction (SVF) cells of human adipose tissue have the capacity to generate osteogenic grafts with intrinsic vasculogenic properties. However, adipose-derived stromal/stem cells (ASC), even after minimal monolayer expansion, display poor osteogenic capacity in vivo. We investigated whether ASC bone-forming capacity may be maintained by culture within a self-produced extracellular matrix (ECM) that recapitulates the native environment. SVF cells expanded without passaging up to 28 days (Unpass-ASC) deposited a fibronectin-rich extracellular matrix and displayed greater clonogenicity and differentiation potential in vitro compared to ASC expanded only for 6 days (P0-ASC) or for 28 days with regular passaging (Pass-ASC). When implanted subcutaneously, Unpass-ASC produced bone tissue similarly to SVF cells, in contrast to P0- and Pass-ASC, which mainly formed fibrous tissue. Interestingly, clonogenic progenitors from native SVF and Unpass-ASC expressed low levels of the fibronectin receptor α integrin (CD49e), which was instead upregulated in P0- and Pass-ASC. Mechanistically, induced activation of αβ integrin in Unpass-ASC led to a significant loss of bone formation in vivo. This study shows that ECM and regulation of αβ-integrin signaling preserve ASC progenitor properties, including bone tissue-forming capacity, during in vitro expansion.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5349595PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep44398DOI Listing

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