scholarly journals TMOD-08. SERUM ESTABLISHED CANCER STEM CELL CULTURES REPRESENT UNIQUE MODELS OF GLIOBLASTOMA INTER-TUMOR HETEROGENEITY

2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (Supplement_6) ◽  
pp. vi264-vi264
Author(s):  
Nagaprathyusha Maturi ◽  
E-Jean Tan ◽  
Yuan Xie ◽  
Anders Sundström ◽  
Tobias Bergström ◽  
...  

Abstract Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most frequent primary malignant brain tumor. The invasive and heterogeneous nature of GBM stem cells (GSCs) provide the basis for extreme therapy resistance of GBM and the majority of patients survive less than one year from diagnosis. Relevant models of GBM are important for basic research and drug screening and development, and the current consensus in the field is that GSCs are most faithfully maintained under serum-free neural stem cell (NSC) conditions. We have used serum-free NSC media to explant 230 patient-derived GBM samples, and have in parallel also explanted the same samples in regular serum-containing media. We found, accordingly, that serum-free media was most effective in generating sustainable cultures (137/230, 60%), called serum-free (SF) cultures. Interestingly, we also found that that there was a subgroup of GBM specimens that could only be established in serum-containing media (31/230, 13%), called exclusive serum-containing (eSC) cultures. We characterized a number of the eSC cultures and found that they expressed typical GSC markers such as MSI-1, BMI-1, nestin, CD44 and SOX2. They also displayed all functional characteristics of GSCs, i.e. extended proliferation, sustained self-renewal and orthotopic tumor initiation. Molecular analyses showed that the eSC cultures were most closely related to but separated from mesenchymal subtype GBM. In summary we have established GSC cultures that would have evaded modeling under serum-free conditions, representing unique cell models of GBM inter-tumor heterogeneity. Key words: Glioblastoma, serum cultures, stem-like cells, GBM heterogeneity

Biomaterials ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 32 (26) ◽  
pp. 6006-6016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roz Alfred ◽  
Jaymi T. Taiani ◽  
Roman J. Krawetz ◽  
Akihiro Yamashita ◽  
Derrick E. Rancourt ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tade M Spranger

AbstractBoth the confidence of the international scientific community and the public hopes risen by stem cell technology were shaken one year ago by what is called the Korean stem cell scandal. The forgery conducted by one of Korea's major scientists led to several fundamental questions. Some of them refer to ethical aspects, while others concern legal facets: Are law and ethics really able to control scientific research in the field of biotechnology and biomedicine ? Which effects are exerted by the ”publish or perish” policy as well as the commercialisation of basic research on the quality of scientific work ? Is the practical relevance of stem cell research overestimated ? Has the relationship between principal researchers and their staff to be reviewed or even controlled according to tightened ethical and legal standards ?


2010 ◽  
Vol 36 (7) ◽  
pp. 1139-1144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thais Miyuki Hirata ◽  
Nikolay Ishkitiev ◽  
Ken Yaegaki ◽  
Bogdan Calenic ◽  
Hiroshi Ishikawa ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 171-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tiago G. Fernandes ◽  
Ana M. Fernandes-Platzgummer ◽  
Cláudia Lobato da Silva ◽  
Maria Margarida Diogo ◽  
Joaquim M. S. Cabral

2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (16) ◽  
pp. 3970 ◽  
Author(s):  
Souta Motoike ◽  
Mikihito Kajiya ◽  
Nao Komatsu ◽  
Susumu Horikoshi ◽  
Tomoya Ogawa ◽  
...  

Three-dimensional clumps of mesenchymal stem cell (MSC)/extracellular matrix (ECM) complexes (C-MSCs) consist of cells and self-produced ECM. We demonstrated previously that C-MSCs can be transplanted into bone defect regions with no artificial scaffold to induce bone regeneration. To apply C-MSCs in a clinical setting as a reliable bone regenerative therapy, the present study aimed to generate C-MSCs in xeno-free/serum-free conditions that can exert successful bone regenerative properties and to monitor interactions between grafted cells and host cells during bone healing processes. Human bone marrow-derived MSCs were cultured in xeno-free/serum-free medium. To obtain C-MSCs, confluent cells that had formed on the cellular sheet were scratched using a micropipette tip and then torn off. The sheet was rolled to make a round clump of cells. Then, C-MSCs were transplanted into an immunodeficient mouse calvarial defect model. Transplantation of C-MSCs induced bone regeneration in a time-dependent manner. Immunofluorescence staining showed that both donor human cells and host mice cells contributed to bone reconstruction. Decellularized C-MSCs implantation failed to induce bone regeneration, even though the host mice cells can infiltrate into the defect area. These findings suggested that C-MSCs generated in xeno-free/serum-free conditions can induce bone regeneration via direct and indirect osteogenesis.


2009 ◽  
Vol 24 (10) ◽  
pp. 2477-2489 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Mateizel ◽  
C. Spits ◽  
A. Verloes ◽  
A. Mertzanidou ◽  
I. Liebaers ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1663-1663
Author(s):  
Franck E. Nicolini ◽  
Bastien Laperoussaz ◽  
Sandrine Jeanpierre ◽  
Karen Sagorny ◽  
Bastien Kaniewski ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1663 The presence of inherently resistant Ph+ leukemic stem cells (LSC) to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) in chronic phase chronic myelogenous leukemia (CP CML) might be responsible for the long-term disease persistence, requiring the indefinite prolongation of TKI, and represent a reservoir for the initiation of an overt resistance. Despite quiescence, these Ph+ LSC maintain high level interactions with their microenvironment and might display some alterations to different pathways to survive, responsible for disease persistence. In this perspective, we studied some actors involved in the maintenance of the stem cell niche and normal hematopoiesis (Jeanpierre S. et al. Blood 2008), the bone morphogenetic proteins (BMP-2 and BMP-4) in a series of 45 CP CML patients harvested at diagnosis and compared the results to that of 15 normal bone marrow (BM) counterparts from healthy donors. BMPs are members of the TGF-b family, highly secreted by the normal BM stem cell niche, that regulate numerous cellular events such as proliferation, differentiation, migration, adhesion and apoptosis in various cellular systems including hematopiesis. The deregulation of these events is the hallmark of CP CML and they are all involved in the CML disease phenotype in CP. All CML and BM samples were CD34+ purified. RQ-PCRs on total cells, CD34− and CD34+ progenitors for the different members of the BMP pathway show specific alterations in CML: in the CD34+ primitive compartment, BMP-4 itself is downregulated as well as Bambi, Smad1, Smad5, and Runx2 while Smad6 is specifically upregulated. Interestingly, while analyzing the CD34+ and CD34− compartments from individual patients, we observed a differential expression of the signaling pathway inhibitors Smad6 and Follistatin (low levels in leukemic CD34−, high levels in leukemic CD34+ cells when compared to their normal purified counterparts), and BMP-2, BMP-4, and three of the BMP specific receptors (BMP-RIa, BMP-RIb and BMP-RII) are significantly and selectively downregulated in CD34+ CML progenitors. We further characterized the impact of 7-days in vitro exposure to BMP-2 and BMP-4 in 4GF (IL-6, SCF, IL-11, IL-3) serum-free conditions of CD34+ CML and normal BM progenitors using immunophenotypic, CFC and LTC-IC assays. The functional assays results suggest in responding patients, that BMP-4 is able to selectively amplify the genotyped Ph+ LTC-IC compartment (while BMP-2 partly maintains it, whereas TPO amplifies normal Ph− LTC-IC as well as Ph+ LTC-IC) as mentioned in figure 1. Figure 1: Total LTC-IC-derived week 5 colonies per 1000 seeded cells within the responding CML samples. Black bars are CML samples and white bars are normal BM counterparts, (*: p<0.05). Figure 1:. Total LTC-IC-derived week 5 colonies per 1000 seeded cells within the responding CML samples. Black bars are CML samples and white bars are normal BM counterparts, (*: p<0.05). The CFC compartment was highly amplified when exposed to either BMP-2 or BMP-4 (but not TPO) when compared to normal BM progenitors as controls. In addition, within responding patient samples, only BMP-4 significantly amplified the number of immature cells as compared to TPO or BMP-2 treated cells. Single cell experiments in serum-free conditions with sorted CD34+38− chronic phase CML cells from diagnosis, in parallel with normal BM cells, in the presence or not of BMP-2 & −4 have been performed. A high cloning efficiency was observed with CML cells (∼17%), compared to that with normal BM counterparts (3%) as usual, and in addition, BMP-2 seemed to promote erythroid commitment of primitive CML cells, while BMP-4 increased CFU-GM and CFU-GEMM output. In conclusion, these data provide some evidences that the BMP pathway is selectively altered in primitive CP CML progenitors at diagnosis, and its molecular and functional alterations might be involved in the disease phenotype. Whether this is a cause or a consequence of the disease and its involvement in stem cell persistence on TKI is currently under examination. Disclosures: Nicolini: Novartis: Research Funding. Sagorny:BMS: Research Funding. maguer-Satta:Novartis: Research Funding.


2010 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 133-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zara Hannoun ◽  
Judy Fletcher ◽  
Sebastian Greenhough ◽  
Claire Medine ◽  
Kay Samuel ◽  
...  

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