Abstract

BackgroundThe stimulation to differentiate into specific cell types for somatic stem cells is largely due to a series of internal and external signals coming from the microenvironment that surrounds the stem cell. Even though intensive research has been made, the basic mechanisms of plasticity and/or the molecules regulating stem cells proliferation and differentiation are not completely determined. Potential answers concerning the problems could be derived from the studies of stem cells in culture.Methodology/Principle FindingsWe combine a new procedure (using the matrigel biopolymer supplemented with a selected cytokine/growth factor) with classic techniques such as light, confocal and electron microscopy, immunohistochemistry and cell culture, to perform an analysis on stem cells involved in the leech (Hirudo medicinalis) repair tissues. The leech has a relative anatomical simplicity and is a reliable model for studying a variety of basic events, such as tissue repair, which has a striking similarity with vertebrate responses. Our data demonstrate that the injection of an appropriate combination of the matrigel biopolymer supplemented with a selected cytokine/growth factor in the leech Hirudo medicinalis is a remarkably effective tool for isolating a specific cell population in vivo. A comparative analysis of biopolymer in vivo sorted stem cells indicates that VEGF recruited cells of a hematopoietic/endothelial phenotype whereas MCP-1/CCL2 isolated cells that were of an early myeloid lineage.ConclusionOur paper describes, for the first time, a method allowing not only the isolation of a specific cell population in relation to the cytokine utilized but also the possibility to culture a precise cell type whose isolation is otherwise quite difficult. This approach could be broadly applied to isolate stem cells of diverse origins based on the recruitment stimuli employed.

Highlights

  • All adult multicellular organisms with either simple or complex body plans harbor somatic stem cells

  • The stimulation to differentiate into a specific cell type for somatic stem cells appears to largely be a series of internal and external signals, which can include chemical and molecular signals such as cytokine and growth factor secretion within a predetermined microenvironment that surrounds the stem cell and provides determinant clues [5]

  • Few migrating cells were seen in control Matrigel specimens lacking growth factors, whereas Matrigel specimens containing either vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) or Monocyte chemoactractant protein-1 (MCP-1/ CCL2) were ‘‘colonized’’ by an increased number of cells in relation to the time elapsed from the injection of the supplemented biomatrix (Fig.1 A–F)

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Summary

Introduction

All adult multicellular organisms with either simple or complex body plans harbor somatic stem cells. The possible sources of somatic stem cells, their percentage in various tissues and often their origins are as yet not well defined and the basic mechanisms of plasticity and/or the molecules regulating the proliferation and the differentiation are not completely determined. Potential answers concerning these problems could be derived from studies of somatic stem cells in culture. Even though intensive research has been made, the basic mechanisms of plasticity and/or the molecules regulating stem cells proliferation and differentiation are not completely determined. Potential answers concerning the problems could be derived from the studies of stem cells in culture

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Results
Conclusion

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