Abstract
BackgroundDegenerative diseases are a major public health concern for the aging population and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have great potential for treating many of these diseases. However, the quantity and quality of MSCs declines with aging, limiting the potential efficacy of autologous MSCs for treating the elderly population.MethodsHuman bone marrow (BM)-derived MSCs from young and elderly donors were obtained and characterized using standard cell surface marker criteria (CD73, CD90, CD105) as recommended by the International Society for Cellular Therapy (ISCT). The elderly MSC population was isolated into four subpopulations based on size and stage-specific embryonic antigen-4 (SSEA-4) expression using fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), and subpopulations were compared to the unfractionated young and elderly MSCs using assays that evaluate MSC proliferation, quality, morphology, intracellular reactive oxygen species, β-galactosidase expression, and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) content.ResultsThe ISCT-recommended cell surface markers failed to detect any differences between young and elderly MSCs. Here, we report that elderly MSCs were larger in size and displayed substantially higher concentrations of intracellular reactive oxygen species and β-galactosidase expression and lower amounts of ATP and SSEA-4 expression. Based on these findings, cell size and SSEA-4 expression were used to separate the elderly MSCs into four subpopulations by FACS. The original populations (young and elderly MSCs), as well as the four subpopulations, were then characterized before and after culture on tissue culture plastic and BM-derived extracellular matrix (BM-ECM). The small SSEA-4-positive subpopulation representing ~ 8% of the original elderly MSC population exhibited a “youthful” phenotype that was similar to that of young MSCs. The biological activity of this elderly subpopulation was inhibited by senescence-associated factors produced by the unfractionated parent population. After these “youthful” cells were isolated and expanded (three passages) on a “young microenvironment” (i.e., BM-ECM produced by BM cells from young donors), the number of cells increased ≈ 17,000-fold to 3 × 109 cells and retained their “youthful” phenotype.ConclusionsThese results suggest that it is feasible to obtain large numbers of high-quality autologous MSCs from the elderly population and establish personal stem cell banks that will allow serial infusions of “rejuvenated” MSCs for treating age-related diseases.
Highlights
Degenerative diseases are a major public health concern for the aging population and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have great potential for treating many of these diseases
We demonstrated that culture on bone marrow (BM)-derived extracellular matrix (BM-ECM), produced by young mouse stromal cells, restores youthful replication and osteogenic potential of MSCs obtained from elderly mice [15]
We propose that the relative ratio of “youthful” to elderly (“aged”) cells in the Bone marrowderived mesenchymal stem cell (BM-MSC) population reverses with aging and that old MSCs lose their self-renewal and differentiation capacity, and release harmful factors that suppress the youthful subpopulation of elderly MSCs
Summary
Degenerative diseases are a major public health concern for the aging population and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have great potential for treating many of these diseases. Our view of how stem cell behavior is regulated must include the combined effects of both extrinsic factors (e.g., growth factors, extracellular matrix (ECM), and immune cells) and various intrinsic properties of the stem cells themselves [8,9,10]. These considerations are especially important when developing stem cell-based therapies for age-related degenerative diseases because the cells must be able to function in a predictable manner while residing in a microenvironment damaged by aging or disease [11, 12]
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