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Aldehyde dehydrogenase activity helps identify a subpopulation of murine adipose-derived stem cells with enhanced adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation potential

Authors :
Shotaro Eto
Yasuho Taura
Munekazu Nakaichi
Tomoya Haraguchi
Masato Hiyama
Yu Arikawa
Shimpei Nishikawa
Yoshiki Itoh
Toshie Iseri
Yusuke Sakai
Kazuhito Itamoto
Kenji Tani
Harumichi Itoh
Source :
World Journal of Stem Cells
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Baishideng Publishing Group Inc., 2017.

Abstract

AIM To identify and characterize functionally distinct subpopulation of adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs). METHODS ADSCs cultured from mouse subcutaneous adipose tissue were sorted fluorescence-activated cell sorter based on aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) activity, a widely used stem cell marker. Differentiation potentials were analyzed by utilizing immunocytofluorescece and its quantitative analysis. RESULTS Approximately 15% of bulk ADSCs showed high ALDH activity in flow cytometric analysis. Although significant difference was not seen in proliferation capacity, the adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation capacity was higher in ALDHHi subpopulations than in ALDHLo. Gene set enrichment analysis revealed that ribosome-related gene sets were enriched in the ALDHHi subpopulation. CONCLUSION High ALDH activity is a useful marker for identifying functionally different subpopulations in murine ADSCs. Additionally, we suggested the importance of ribosome for differentiation of ADSCs by gene set enrichment analysis.

Details

ISSN :
19480210
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
World Journal of Stem Cells
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....42138499449028f2826a6a19dc1b5eb3