Cellular mechanical properties reflect the differentiation potential of adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells |
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Authors: | González-Cruz Rafael D Fonseca Vera C Darling Eric M |
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Affiliation: | Department of Molecular Pharmacology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA. |
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Abstract: | The mechanical properties of adipose-derived stem cell (ASC) clones correlate with their ability to produce tissue-specific metabolites, a finding that has dramatic implications for cell-based regenerative therapies. Autologous ASCs are an attractive cell source due to their immunogenicity and multipotent characteristics. However, for practical applications ASCs must first be purified from other cell types, a critical step which has proven difficult using surface-marker approaches. Alternative enrichment strategies identifying broad categories of tissue-specific cells are necessary for translational applications. One possibility developed in our lab uses single-cell mechanical properties as predictive biomarkers of ASC clonal differentiation capability. Elastic and viscoelastic properties of undifferentiated ASCs were tested via atomic force microscopy and correlated with lineage-specific metabolite production. Cell sorting simulations based on these "mechanical biomarkers" indicated they were predictive of differentiation capability and could be used to enrich for tissue-specific cells, which if implemented could dramatically improve the quality of regenerated tissues. |
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Keywords: | cell mechanics mesenchymal stem cell enrichment viscoelasticity single-cell characterization AFM |
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