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A tag-less method of sorting stem cells from clinical specimens and separating mesenchymal from epithelial progenitor cells

Authors :
Roberta Costa
Pierluigi Reschiglian
Andrea Zattoni
Arianna Di Carlo
Michele Franchina
Francesco Alviano
Barbara Roda
Gian Paolo Bagnara
Giacomo Lanzoni
Laura Bonsi
Cosetta Marchionni
Roda B
Reschiglian P
Zattoni A
Alviano F
Lanzoni G
Costa R
Di Carlo A
Marchionni C
Franchina M
Bonsi L
Bagnara GP.
Source :
Cytometry Part B: Clinical Cytometry. :285-290
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Wiley, 2009.

Abstract

Background: The interest in stem cell (SC) isolation from easily accessible clinical specimens is booming. The lack of homogeneity in pluri/multipotent SC preparation blurs standardization, which however is recommended for successful applications. Multipotent mesenchymal SCs (MSCs) in fact express a broad panel of surface antigens, which limit the possibility of sorting homogeneous preparations by using an immunotag-based method. Methods: We present a tag-less, flow-assisted method to purify, distinguish, and sort pluri/multipotent SCs obtained from clinical specimens, based on differences in the biophysical properties that cells acquire when in suspension under fluidic conditions. A suspension of cells in a transport fluid is injected into a ribbon-like capillary device by continuous flow. In a relatively short time (about 30 min), sorted cells are collected. Results: We obtained baseline separation between MSCs and epithelial cells, which are important contaminants of isolated MSCs. The extent of separation is evaluated by flow cytometry through detection of a specific epithelial antigen. MSCs from various human sources also prove to have different, characteristic, highly-reproducible fractionation profiles. Finally, we evaluated the dissimilar differentiation potential among cell fractions obtained from sorting a single MSC source. After differentiation induction, a fraction displayed a differentiation yield close to 100%, whereas unfractionated cells contained only 40% of responding cells. Conclusions: The results demonstrate that the method presented is able to obtain selected and well-characterized living MSCs with an increased differentiation yield. Its reduced cost, full biocompatibility, and scale-up potential could make this method an effective procedure for stem cell selection. © 2009 Clinical Cytometry Society

Details

ISSN :
15524957 and 15524949
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cytometry Part B: Clinical Cytometry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e395c1bbe0fec05f4e101060a156e3fe