1. [How can the haematopoietic stem cells from the umbilical cord blood be de-differentiated in vitro? Our first results using the co-cultivation systems]
- Author
-
P, Uher, R, Hüttelová, M, Králícková, Z, Novotný, Z, Rokyta, P, Vanderzwalmen, and N, Zech
- Subjects
Mice ,Animals ,Humans ,Cell Dedifferentiation ,Fetal Blood ,Hematopoietic Stem Cells ,Coculture Techniques ,Embryonic Stem Cells - Abstract
Aim of this study was to de-differentiate the haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) that originated from the umbilical cord blood. One of the ways to do it is to use a co-cultivation system.Prospective experimental study.Laboratory study - Institute of reproductive medicine and endocrinology, Pilsen.HSCs were co-cultivated with mouse embryonic stem cells (mESC) with and without feeder cells. After co-cultivation HSCs were analyzed using flow-cytometry for presence of haematopoietic markers (CD34, CD45, CD133) and using immunohistochemistry for presence of embryonic stem cell markers (SSEA-4, Tra-1-60, Tra-1-81).No de-differentiation was detectable in any our experiment, only the intensity of the HSC cell markers decreased.We suppose that there were two major reasons for the experiment failure: there was no direct cell to cell contact and there was a mixture of cell types that originated from two different species. To reach our goal of in vitro de-differentiation we will need to change our strategy towards a pure human culture system without any animal additives and with cell to cell contact.
- Published
- 2007