3 resultados para Embryonic Fibroblasts
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
La ricerca sulle cellule staminali apre nuove prospettive per approcci di terapia cellulare. Molta attenzione è concentrata sulle cellule staminali isolate da membrane fetali, per la facilità di recupero del materiale di partenza, le limitate implicazioni etiche e le caratteristiche delle popolazioni di cellule staminali residenti. In particolare a livello dell’epitelio amniotico si concentra una popolazione di cellule (hAECs) con interessanti caratteristiche di staminalità, pluripotenza e immunomodulazione. Restano però una serie di limiti prima di arrivare ad un’applicazione clinica: l’uso di siero di origine animale nei terreni di coltura e le limitate conoscenze legate alla reazione immunitaria in vivo. La prima parte di questo lavoro è focalizzata sulle caratteristiche delle hAECs coltivate in un terreno privo di siero, in confronto a un terreno di coltura classico. Lo studio è concentrato sull’analisi delle caratteristiche biologiche, immunomodulatorie e differenziative delle hAECs. L’interesse verso le caratteristiche immunomodulatorie è legato alla possibilità che l’uso di un terreno serum free riduca il rischio di rigetto dopo trapianto in vivo. La maggior parte degli studi in vivo con cellule isolate da membrane fetali sono stati realizzati con cellule di derivazione umana in trapianti xenogenici, ma poco si sa circa la sopravvivenza di queste cellule in trapianti allogenici, come nel caso di trapianti di cellule di derivazione murina in modelli di topo. La seconda parte dello studio è focalizzata sulla caratterizzazione delle cellule derivate da membrane fetali di topo (mFMSC). Le caratteristiche biologiche, differenziative e immunomodulatorie in vitro e in vivo delle mFMSC sono state confrontate con i fibroblasti embrionali di topo. In particolare è stata analizzata la risposta immunitaria a trapianti di mFMSC nel sistema nervoso centrale (CNS) in modelli murini immunocompetenti.
Resumo:
The aim of this thesis was to investigate the regenerative potential of alternative sources of stem cells, derived from human dental pulp (hDPSCs) and amniotic fluid (hAFSCs) and, specifically, to evaluate their capability to be committed towards osteogenic and myogenic lineages, for the eventual applicability of these stem cells to translational strategies in regenerative medicine of bone and skeletal muscle tissues. The in vitro bone production by stem cells may represent a radical breakthrough in the treatment of pathologies and traumas characterized by critical bone mass defects, with no medical or surgical solution. Human DPSCs and AFSCs were seeded and pre-differentiated on different scaffolds to test their capability to subsequently reach the osteogenic differentiation in vivo, in order to recover critical size bone defects. Fibroin scaffold resulted to be the best scaffold promoting mature bone formation and defect correction when combined to both hDPSCs and hAFSCs. This study also described a culture condition that might allow human DPSCs to be used for human cell therapy in compliance with good manufacturing practices (GMPs): the use of human serum (HS) promoted the expansion and the osteogenic differentiation of hDPSCs in vitro and, furthermore, allowed pre-differentiated hDPSCs to regenerate critical size bone defects in vivo. This thesis also showed that hDPSCs and hAFSCs can be differentiated towards the myogenic lineage in vitro, either when co-cultured with murine myoblasts and when differentiated alone after DNA demethylation treatment. Interestingly, when injected into dystrophic muscles of SCID/mdx mice - animal model of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) - hDPSCs and hAFSCs pre-differentiated after demethylating treatment were able to regenerate the skeletal muscle tissue and, particularly, to restore dystrophin expression. These observations suggest that human DPSCs and AFSCs might be eventually applied to translational strategies, in order to enhance the repair of injured skeletal muscles in DMD patients.
Resumo:
Derivation of stem cell lines from domesticated animals has been of great interest as it benefits translational medicine, clinical applications to improve human and animal health and biotechnology. The main types of stem cells studied are Embryonic Stem Cells (ESCs), induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSCs) and Mesenchymal Stem/Stromal Cells (MSCs). This thesis had two main aims: (I) The isolation of bovine MSCs from amniotic fluid (AF) at different trimesters of pregnancy and their characterization to study pluripotency markers expression. Stemness markers were studied also in MSCs isolated from equine AF, Wharton’s jelly (WJ) and umbilical cord blood (UCB) as continuation of the characterization of these cells previously performed by our research group; (II) The establishment and characterization of iPSCs lines in two attractive large animal models for biomedical and biotechnology research such as the bovine and the swine, and the differentiation into the myogenic lineage of porcine iPSCs. It was observed that foetal tissues in domestic animals such as the bovine and the horse represent a source of MSCs able to differentiate into the mesodermal lineage but they do not proliferate indefinitely and they lack the expression of many pluripotency markers, making them an interesting source of cells for regenerative medicine, but not the best candidate to elucidate pluripotency networks. The protocol used to induce pluripotency in bovine fibroblasts did not work, as well as the chemical induction of pluripotency in porcine fibroblasts, while the reprogramming protocol used for porcine iPSCs was successful and the line generated was amenable to being differentiated into the myogenic lineage, demonstrating that they could be addressed into a desired lineage by genetic modification and appropriated culture conditions. Only a few cell types have been differentiated from domestic animal iPSCs to date, so the development of a reliable directed-differentiation protocol represents a very important result.