Identifying human perivascular stem cell subsets
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Abstract
Perivascular stem cells (PSCs) include pericytes and adventitial cells. PSCs present multiple properties. PSCs are involved in angiogenesis, immunoregulation, and haematopoiesis support and are multi-lineage progenitor cells. Therefore, PSCs are a heterogeneous group of cells. We investigated PSC subsets based on novel markers: CD10 and CD107a. We analysed whether the expression of CD10 or CD107a on PSCs from foetal muscle correlates with the capability of differentiation and fibroblast-colony forming unit (CFU-f) content.
The CD10-positive or CD107apositive PSCs were separated from CD10-negative or CD107a-negative PSCs by cell sorting. CFU-f was quantified. The differentiation of PSC subsets in culture was documented by cytochemistry. We confirmed that CD10 and CD107a PSCs subsets exist in multiple human tissues. CD10-positive and CD10-negative PSC subsets show similar ability for both CFU-f potential and osteogenesis in vitro.CD107anegative cells show higher CFU-f potential. However, CD107a-positive PSCs were associated with a higher osteogenic differentiation potential in human foetal muscle in vitro. Our study provides early evidence that CD107a-positive adventitial cells present a subset that is prone to differentiate into osteoblasts.
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