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research article

Plasticity of fetal cartilaginous cells

Quintin, Aurelie
•
Schizas, Constantin
•
Scaletta, Corinne
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2010
Cell Transplantation

Tissue-specific stem cells found in adult tissues can participate to the repair process following injury. However adult tissues, such as articular cartilage and intervertebral disc, have low regeneration capacity, whereas fetal tissues, such as articular cartilage, show high regeneration ability. The presence of fetal stem cells in fetal cartilaginous tissues and their involvement in the regeneration of fetal cartilage is unknown. The aim of the study was to assess the chondrogenic differentiation and the plasticity of fetal cartilaginous cells. We compared the TGF-β3 induced chondrogenic differentiation of human fetal cells isolated from spine and cartilage tissues to that of human bone marrow stromal cells (BMSC). Stem cell surface markers, adipogenic and osteogenic plasticity of the 2 fetal cell types was also assessed. TGF-β3 stimulation of fetal cells cultured in high cell density led to the production of aggrecan, type I and II collagens and variable levels of type X collagen. Although fetal cells showed the same pattern of surface stem cell markers as BMSCs, both type of fetal cells had lower adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation capacity than BMSCs. Fetal cells from femoral head showed higher adipogenic differentiation than fetal cells from spine. These results show that fetal cells are already differentiated cells and may be a good compromise between stem cells and adult tissue cells for a cell-based therapy

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Type
research article
DOI
10.3727/096368910X506854
Web of Science ID

WOS:000285442700011

Author(s)
Quintin, Aurelie
Schizas, Constantin
Scaletta, Corinne
Jaccoud, Sandra
Applegate, Lee Ann  
Pioletti, Dominique P.  
Date Issued

2010

Published in
Cell Transplantation
Volume

19

Start page

1349

End page

1357

Subjects

stem cells

•

fetal cells

•

chondrogenesis

•

plasticity

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LBO  
Available on Infoscience
March 10, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/47994
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