Abstract
Adult mesenchymal stem cells have self-renewal and multiple differentiation potentials, and play important roles in regenerative medicine. However, their use may be limited by senescence or age of the donor, leading to changes in stem cell functionality. We investigated morphological, molecular and functional differences between bone marrow-derived (MSC) and adipose-derived (ASC) stem cells isolated from neonatal, young and old rats compared to Schwann cells from the same animals. Immunocytochemistry, RT-PCR, proliferation assays, western blotting and transmission electron microscopy were used to investigate expression of senescence markers. Undifferentiated and differentiated ASC and MSC from animals of different ages expressed Notch-2 at similar levels; protein-38 and protein-53 were present in all groups of cells with a trend towards increased levels in cells from older animals compared to those from neonatal and young rats. Following co-culture with adult neuronal cells, dMSC and dASC from animals of all ages elicited robust neurite outgrowth. Mitotracker ® staining was consistent with ultrastructural changes seen in the mitochondria of cells from old rats, indicative of senescence. In conclusion, this study showed that although the cells from aged animals expressed markers of senescence, aged MSC and ASC differentiated into SC-like cells still retain potential to support axon regeneration. © 2012.
Original language | English |
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Pages | 2034-2048 |
Number of pages | 14 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Oct 2012 |
Event | British Neuroscience Association, Manchester - Manchester Duration: 1 Jan 1824 → … |
Conference
Conference | British Neuroscience Association, Manchester |
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City | Manchester |
Period | 1/01/24 → … |
Keywords
- Aging
- Mitochondria
- Notch
- P38
- P53
- Senescence
- Stro1