Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cell (MSC)-based therapies are expected to restore the fertility of infertile patients. In addition to MSC-derived paracrine effects to improve reproductive function, the differentiation of MSCs into germ cell (GC)-like cells is still a promising method to repair the injured reproductive system. The aim of this study was to examine the effect and potential mechanism of BMP4 in inducing umbilical cord MSC (UcMSC) transdifferentiation into GC-like cells. UcMSCs were isolated, cultured and identified by flow cytometry and multilineage differentiation assays. After induction with 12.5 ng/mL BMP4 for 21 days, UcMSCs were collected for further examination. Immunofluorescence was used to detect the expression of Prdm1 and Prdm14; RT-PCR and RNA sequencing were used to detect differential gene expression (DEGs). The morphology of UcMSCs became large and flat after treatment with BMP4; the expression of GC-related genes (OCT4, Prdm1, Ifitm3 and Stella) was significantly downregulated, and further immunofluorescence results also confirmed the significant downregulation of Prdm1 in UcMSCs with BMP4 induction, while the expression of Prdm14 was significantly upregulated. The results of RNA sequencing and further analysis revealed no explicit correlation between BMP4 induction and the differentiation of UcMSCs into GC-like cells based on the 662 screened DEGs in UcMSCs with or without BMP4 induction. The differentiation of MSCs into GC-like cells is rather complex, and BMP4 alone is insufficient to induce UcMSCs to differentiate into GC-like cells, regardless of protein level or gene expression level.
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