Abstract

Bone marrow-derived stem cells (BMCs) are able to differentiate into multilineage cells such as muscle, bone, cartilage, fat, and nerve cells. In the present study, we investigated the differentiation capability of chicken BMCs into germ cells by using retinoic acid (RA) and chicken testis extract (chTE). The chicken BMCs were isolated from fetal chicken femurs on post-fertilization day 20, cultured in vitro, and treated with RA and chTE, respectively. The cultured chicken BMCs displayed fibroblast-like morphology and were positive for mesenchymal-specific markers such as CD44, CD90, and CD105 at the mRNA level. RT-PCR and immunocytostaining revealed that both RA and chTE treatments induced the expression of early-germ-cell markers such as Stra8, Dazl and DDX4. The increase of germ cell-specific gene expression after chTE treatment indicates that testicular environment-derived proteins may induce in vitro germ-cells. In addition, we performed a microarray analysis to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in RA and chTE, respectively. A total of 1,629 DEGs were obtained and the chTE treatment showed very lower numbers of DEGs than the RA treatment. Collectively, our results indicate that chicken BMCs have the potential to differentiate to male germ cells in vitro with testis derived proteins.

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