Abstract

Transplacental passage of circulating first-trimester fetal mesenchymal stem cells (fMSC) raises the prospect of harvesting fetal cells in maternal blood. Despite high sensitivity in model systems, negative selection and culture strategies yield fMSC only rarely in post-termination maternal blood. The different adhesion molecule profile of fMSC to competitor maternal cell types suggests that improved positive selection strategies may facilitate non-invasive prenatal diagnosis. We aimed to identify surface antigens specific to fMSC and not maternal peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL), using genome-wide analysis of actively expressed transcripts. Maternal PBL and fMSC cultured from first-trimester blood, liver and bone marrow were assessed for global gene expression by Affymetrix U133Plus2.0 arrays. Data were analysed using Affymetrix GCOS01.2. Transcripts present in all fMSC (n = 9) but absent in all PBL samples (n = 3) were selected for further analysis of cell-surface membrane molecules by RT-PCR and immunocytochemistry. Of 1544 genes expressed in fMSC and not maternal PBL, filtering for cell-surface molecules yielded 159 genes. Of these, 29 had a mean expression ratio of >300 (P < 0.001), which represented 18 unique genes, and their positive expression in all fMSC samples was confirmed by RT-PCR. Candidates for non-invasive prenatal diagnosis were chosen for further analysis by immunocytochemistry. Surface expression of OSMR and COL1 proteins on all fMSC, but no maternal PBL was confirmed. Identification of novel surface antigens on circulating human fMSC and not maternal PBL facilitates positive selection strategies for isolating fMSC for non-invasive prenatal diagnosis.

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