Abstract

BackgroundMesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are considered to be an effective tool for regenerative medicine with promising applications for clinical therapy. However, incongruent data has been reported partially owing to their functional heterogeneity. To provide sufficient and suitable clinical seed cells derived from the placenta for MSC therapy, we compared the various current isolation methods, as well as the biological characteristics, of different human placenta mesenchymal stem cells (hPMSCs).MethodsWe selected placentas from 35 informed donors and exploited three commonly used methods. MSCs were isolated from different parts of placental tissue including umbilical cord (UC), amniotic membrane (AM), chorionic membrane (CM), chorionic villi (CV), and deciduae (DC). The appropriate isolation methods for each type of hPMSCs were first assessed. The resulting five MSC types from the same individuals were identified based on their surface marker expression, proliferation capacity, transcriptome, differentiation, multipotency and karyotype.ResultsAll three methods successfully isolated the five hPMSC types from placental tissues. However, the UC-MSCs were most effectively separated via the tissue explant method, while the enzymatic digestion method was found to be more suitable for separating CV-MSCs, owing to its higher output efficiency compared to the other methods. Alternatively, the perfusion method was complicated and exhibited the lowest efficiency for cell isolation and uniformity. Furthermore, we determined that UC-MSCs and CV-MSCs express a higher level of paracrine cytokines and display much stronger proliferative capacity as well as superior extraction efficiency. Finally, karyotype analysis revealed that DC-MSCs are derived from the mother, while the other cell types are derived from the fetus. Moreover, the different hPMSCs exhibited unique gene expression profiles, which may prove advantageous in treatment of a broad range of diseases.ConclusionshPMSCs from different sources are similar yet also unique. Our results describe the biological characteristics of five hPMSCs and provide insights to aide in the selection process of candidates for MSCs treatment. Overall, UC- and CV-MSCs appear to be ideal sources of primary MSCs for clinical treatment and future research.

Highlights

  • Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are considered to be an effective tool for regenerative medicine with promising applications for clinical therapy

  • We selected MSCs from the same individuals for biological characteristics analysis to avoid individual differences

  • We found that mRNA expression among the human placental MSCs from the four different sources differed significantly in terms of mitosis, regulation of hormone level hormone metabolism, angiogenesis of embryonic organs, binding of cytokine activity to tubulin, and activity of chemokine activity (Fig. 5d)

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Summary

Introduction

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are considered to be an effective tool for regenerative medicine with promising applications for clinical therapy. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are ubiquitous throughout various tissues and possess self-renewal properties as well as multipotency and immunomodulatory functions. Due to these diverse properties, MSCs could serve as seed cells or gene therapy vectors, which offer promising application prospects in cell therapy and tissue engineering [1, 2]. MSCs derived from fetal tissues show strong proliferative and differentiation capabilities, controversy over ethical issues limits its clinical application [4, 5]. It is, important to identify improved and sustainable MSC sources, while determining the optima MSC yields for clinical application

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