Artículos de revistas
Adipose Tissue-Derived Stem Cells from Humans and Mice Differ in Proliferative Capacity and Genome Stability in Long-Term Cultures
Fecha
2011Registro en:
STEM CELLS AND DEVELOPMENT, v.20, n.4, p.661-670, 2011
1547-3287
10.1089/scd.2010.0231
Autor
DANOVIZ, Maria Elena
BASSANEZE, Vinicius
NAKAMUTA, Juliana Sanajotti
SANTOS-JUNIOR, Gabriel Ribeiro dos
SAINT-CLAIR, Danilo
BAJGELMAN, Marcio Chaim
FAE, Kellen Cristhina
KALIL, Jorge
MIYAKAWA, Ayumi Aurea
KRIEGER, Jose Eduardo
Institución
Resumen
Adipose tissue-derived stem cells (ASCs) are among the more attractive adult stem cell options for potential therapeutic applications. Here, we studied and compared the basic biological characteristics of ASCs isolated from humans (hASCs) and mice (mASCs) and maintained in identical culture conditions, which must be examined prior to considering further potential clinical applications. hASCs and mASCs were compared for immunophenotype, differentiation potential, cell growth characteristics, senescence, nuclear morphology, and DNA content. Although both strains of ASCs displayed a similar immunophenotype, the percentage of CD73(+) cells was markedly lower and CD31(+) was higher in mASC than in hASC cultures. The mean population doubling time was 98.08 +/- 6.15 h for hASCs and 52.58 +/- 3.74 h for mASCs. The frequency of nuclear aberrations was noticeably lower in hASCs than in mASCs regardless of the passage number. Moreover, as the cells went through several in vitro passages, mASCs showed changes in DNA content and cell cycle kinetics (frequency of hypodiploid, G0/G1, G2/M, and hyperdiploid cells), whereas all of these parameters remained constant in hASCs. Collectively, these results suggest that mASCs display higher proliferative capacity and are more unstable than hASCs in long-term cultures. These results underscore the need to consider specificities among model systems that may influence outcomes when designing potential human applications.