Abstract

BackgroundAdipose tissue-derived stromal stem cells (ASCs) represent a promising regenerative resource for soft tissue reconstruction. Although autologous grafting of whole fat has long been practiced, a major clinical limitation of this technique is inconsistent long-term graft retention. To understand the changes in cell function during the transition of ASCs into fully mature fat cells, we compared the transcriptome profiles of cultured undifferentiated human primary ASCs under conditions leading to acquisition of a mature adipocyte phenotype.MethodsMicroarray analysis was performed on total RNA extracted from separate ACS isolates of six human adult females before and after 7 days (7 days: early stage) and 21 days (21 days: late stage) of adipocyte differentiation in vitro. Differential gene expression profiles were determined using Partek Genomics Suite Version 6.4 for analysis of variance (ANOVA) based on time in culture. We also performed unsupervised hierarchical clustering to test for gene expression patterns among the three cell populations. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis was used to determine biologically significant networks and canonical pathways relevant to adipogenesis.ResultsCells at each stage showed remarkable intra-group consistency of expression profiles while abundant differences were detected across stages and groups. More than 14,000 transcripts were significantly altered during differentiation while ~6000 transcripts were affected between 7 days and 21 days cultures. Setting a cutoff of +/-two-fold change, 1350 transcripts were elevated while 2929 genes were significantly decreased by 7 days. Comparison of early and late stage cultures revealed increased expression of 1107 transcripts while 606 genes showed significantly reduced expression. In addition to confirming differential expression of known markers of adipogenesis (e.g., FABP4, ADIPOQ, PLIN4), multiple genes and signaling pathways not previously known to be involved in regulating adipogenesis were identified (e.g. POSTN, PPP1R1A, FGF11) as potential novel mediators of adipogenesis. Quantitative RT-PCR validated the microarray results.ConclusionsASC maturation into an adipocyte phenotype proceeds from a gene expression program that involves thousands of genes. This is the first study to compare mRNA expression profiles during early and late stage adipogenesis using cultured human primary ASCs from multiple patients.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12920-015-0119-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Adipose tissue-derived stromal stem cells (ASCs) represent a promising regenerative resource for soft tissue reconstruction

  • It is hypothesized that Adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) potentiate the viability of mature adipocyte grafts both as a cell source for de novo adipogenesis and through production of local growth factors

  • While animal studies demonstrate improved tissue volumes after fat grafting enriched with ASCs [4, 5], definitive studies are lacking that show that graft supplementation with ASCs is superior to standard fat grafting in humans

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Summary

Introduction

Adipose tissue-derived stromal stem cells (ASCs) represent a promising regenerative resource for soft tissue reconstruction. Adipose-derived stem cells (ASCs) have become one of the most widely studied adult stem cell populations for soft tissue engineering and regenerative medicine applications since their isolation and characterization over a decade ago [1]. Several studies [8,9,10,11,12] have utilized this cell line for examination of gene expression changes during adipocyte development as these cells readily accumulate lipid upon differentiation. With the recent discovery of human ASCs [1, 15], these multi-potent stem cells have become the main focus for analyzing transcriptional and protein profile changes during differentiation [16,17,18,19]

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