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Effect of leukemia inhibitory factor on the myelinogenic ability of Schwann-like cells induced from human adipose-derived stem cells

Journal: Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology (02724340)Year: March 2013Volume: 33Issue: Pages: 283 - 289
Razavi S.Mardani M. Kazemi M. Esfandiari E. Narimani M.Esmaeili A.a Ahmadi N.
DOI:10.1007/s10571-012-9895-2Language: English

Abstract

The Schwann cells (SCs) may be obtain from nerve biopsies for autologous transplantation. However, it is difficult to obtain sufficient amount of SCs for clinical applications. Human adipose-derived stem cells (ADSCs) can be induced to differentiate into Schwann-like cells (S-like cells) and used for autologous transplantation. However, effect of leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) on the myelinogenic ability of SC-like cells induced from human ADSC is not investigated yet. The aim of this study was to evaluate of the effect of exogenous LIF on myelinogenic potential of differentiated cells in vitro. ADSCs were harvested from human fat tissue and characterized using flow cytometry. Human ADSCs were treated for sphere formation and LIF was added to terminal differentiation medium. GFAP/S100β and MBP markers were used to confirm differentiation of human ADSCs, and myelinogenic ability of SC-like cells, respectively, using both immunostaining and real-time RT-PCR analysis. The analysis for GFAP+/S100β+ revealed that LIF can increase both differentiated cells rates and the percentage of myelinating SC-like cells (p < 0.05). Our data showed that SC-like cells induced from human ADSCs were able to generate myelin when exposed to LIF and these cells could be a potential source for the treatment of peripheral and central axonal injuries. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media New York.


Author Keywords

DifferentiationHuman ADSCsLIFMyelinizatationSchwann cell

Other Keywords

Adipose TissueAdultBiological MarkersCell DifferentiationCell SeparationCell SurvivalFemaleFlow CytometryHumansImmunohistochemistryLeukemia Inhibitory FactorMyelin SheathReal-Time Polymerase Chain ReactionSchwann CellsStem CellsYoung AdultCD14 antigenCD34 antigenCD45 antigenendoglinglial fibrillary acidic proteinHermes antigenmyelin basic proteinnestinprotein S100BThy 1 antigenadipose derived stem cellarticlecell functioncell proliferationcell transdifferentiationcell viabilitycontrolled studydown regulationhumanhuman cellhuman tissuein vitro studymyelinationpriority journalprotein expressionreal time polymerase chain reactionreverse transcription polymerase chain reactionSchwann cell