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. 2006 Mar 17;341(3):882-8.
doi: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2006.01.038. Epub 2006 Jan 23.

Human adipose-derived stem cells display myogenic potential and perturbed function in hypoxic conditions

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Human adipose-derived stem cells display myogenic potential and perturbed function in hypoxic conditions

Jee-Hyung Lee et al. Biochem Biophys Res Commun. .

Abstract

Here, we enriched a human cell population from adipose tissue that exhibited both mesenchymal plasticity, self-renewal capacity, and a cell-surface marker profile indistinguishable from that of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells. In addition to adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation, these adipose-derived stem cells displayed skeletal myogenic potential when co-cultured with mouse skeletal myocytes in reduced serum conditions. Physical incorporation of stem cells into multinucleated skeletal myotubes was determined by genetic lineage tracing, whereas human-specific antibody staining was employed to demonstrate functional contribution of the stem cells to a myogenic lineage. To investigate the effects of hypoxia, cells were maintained and differentiated at 2% O(2). In contrast with reports on bone marrow-derived stem cells, both osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation were significantly attenuated. In summary, the relative accessibility of adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells from human donors provides opportunity for molecular investigation of mechanistic dysfunction in disease settings and may introduce new prospects for cell-based therapy.

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